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5 Divident Stocks T0 Own Forever

Alessandro Bruno BA, MA

Alessandro holds a BA and MA in International Relations all at the University of Toronto. Alessandro has been published extensively and is a frequent guest on television news programs including the BBC, CBC, and CTV. Alessandro has worked as an industry analyst, lived and worked abroad extensively, and served as a United Nations officer in North Africa.

Alessandro was also an analyst in the global investment banking sector for a leading international advisory group responsible for putting sustainability and corporate responsibility on the finance map; specializing in aerospace, transportation, energy, and mining sectors.

Alessandro speaks many languages other than English and his native Italian, including Spanish, French, German, Arabic, Persian, Russian, and Portuguese, and has a working knowledge of Portuguese, Arabic, and German.

Get to know Alessandro…

How did you invest your first dollar, and what did you learn about investing?

I invested a fair bit after returning from my UN assignment in Libya. I had saved up a few dollars and cents thanks to low living costs and the lack of any entertainment over which to spend and enjoy my international official’s salary. As a result I had some success investing in aerospace and airlines, among others, though my inexperience caught up to me and I eventually lost quite a bit for my standards.

Since then, I have invested in mutual funds and also learned to consider more factors thanks to my experience in analyzing various sectors and new parameters such as sustainability and reputation risks. These, when addressed properly, serve as an indicator of good management. I invest only in what I know and understand or what I like. For example, I look forward to buying Ferrari shares after the IPO in October!

What has been the most memorable moment in your investing career?

When I lost a good chunk of my savings and when I read Nicholas Nassim Taleb’s Fooled by Randomness. I was happy to finally find a risk specialist who did not trust the new financial engineering approach to stock analysis. And of course, I also remember tripling my money on Canadian Airlines in 1998, after stubbornly holding on to the belief that the airline was better than Air Canada, based on service. Of course, we all know what happened a year later; Canadian Airlines exists only in the annuals of aviation history.

What is your investing philosophy?

I tend to shun technical analysis. Numbers fail to tell the story. And even when they do, they are merely a measure of performance rather than a predictor of one. Give me the facts, the background, the context; I don’t need the graphs. Also, I invest in a company rather than a market, both of which I must like, understanding the macro factors that can influence its performance.

Email: [email protected]

Alessandro Bruno's Articles

Has Fear of a Market Crash Driven Bitcoin to Record Highs?

Bitcoin Hits Highest Level Since 2013 on Fears of a Market Crash and Political Instability It’s a veritable cryptomania. The...

Could the U.S. Dollar Be Rising Too Fast Against the Euro?

Dollar Is Growing Too Fast; It Could Kill Eurozone and Emerging Economies Since Donald Trump won the U.S. presidential election,...

Goldman Sachs Should Praise Trump

There's a Lot of Goldman Sachs in the Forthcoming Trump White House If anyone were to analyze the makeup of...

The Last Time This Happened, There Was a 50% Stock Market Crash

Dow Hitting 20,000? Beware a Stock Market Crash On the eve of the U.S. presidential election, one in two investors...

Yuan to USD: The Yuan Could Reach 20-Year Low Against the Dollar

Should China Let Yuan to USD Keep Dropping Amid Increasing Capital Flight? Capital outflows from China are accelerating. That can...

USD to CAD: Prepare for a 65-Cent Canadian Dollar

Macquarie Bank Expects USDCAD to Drop to $0.65, But the Loonie Could Go Even Lower The spectacular decline in the...

Platinum Partners Boss Arrested on Ponzi Scheme Allegations

Platinum Partners Promised Hedge-Fund-Like Returns But Prosecutors Say It Was a Ponzi Scheme Prosecutors believe that Platinum Partners, an established American investment...

This Bank Could Drag Down the Entire Eurozone With It

It Looks like Monte dei Paschi Bank Will Need Taxpayers to Bail It Out Italy’s Banca Monte dei Paschi di...

Here’s Why the IMF Could Pull the Plug on Its Boss, Christine Lagarde

IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde's Tenure at Risk A French court has found the International Monetary Fund (IMF) boss, Christine Lagarde,...

Here’s Why 2017 Could Be Terrible for Facebook Stock

Facebook Stock Could Collapse Under Threat of Censorship and Fake News in 2017 Facebook, Inc (NASDAQ:FB) has not had its best...

U.S-China Tensions Surge Because of This Incident in South China Sea

Trump and Capture of U.S. Drone Raise Sino-American Tensions to Highest Level in Years A Chinese naval vessel has confiscated...

Alessandro Bruno BA, MA

Alessandro holds a BA and MA in International Relations all at the University of Toronto. Alessandro has been published extensively and is a frequent guest on television news programs including the BBC, CBC, and CTV. Alessandro has worked as an industry analyst, lived and worked abroad extensively, and served as a United Nations officer in North Africa.

Alessandro was also an analyst in the global investment banking sector for a leading international advisory group responsible for putting sustainability and corporate responsibility on the finance map; specializing in aerospace, transportation, energy, and mining sectors.

Alessandro speaks many languages other than English and his native Italian, including Spanish, French, German, Arabic, Persian, Russian, and Portuguese, and has a working knowledge of Portuguese, Arabic, and German.

Get to know Alessandro…

How did you invest your first dollar, and what did you learn about investing?

I invested a fair bit after returning from my UN assignment in Libya. I had saved up a few dollars and cents thanks to low living costs and the lack of any entertainment over which to spend and enjoy my international official’s salary. As a result I had some success investing in aerospace and airlines, among others, though my inexperience caught up to me and I eventually lost quite a bit for my standards.

Since then, I have invested in mutual funds and also learned to consider more factors thanks to my experience in analyzing various sectors and new parameters such as sustainability and reputation risks. These, when addressed properly, serve as an indicator of good management. I invest only in what I know and understand or what I like. For example, I look forward to buying Ferrari shares after the IPO in October!

What has been the most memorable moment in your investing career?

When I lost a good chunk of my savings and when I read Nicholas Nassim Taleb’s Fooled by Randomness. I was happy to finally find a risk specialist who did not trust the new financial engineering approach to stock analysis. And of course, I also remember tripling my money on Canadian Airlines in 1998, after stubbornly holding on to the belief that the airline was better than Air Canada, based on service. Of course, we all know what happened a year later; Canadian Airlines exists only in the annuals of aviation history.

What is your investing philosophy?

I tend to shun technical analysis. Numbers fail to tell the story. And even when they do, they are merely a measure of performance rather than a predictor of one. Give me the facts, the background, the context; I don’t need the graphs. Also, I invest in a company rather than a market, both of which I must like, understanding the macro factors that can influence its performance.

Email: [email protected]