Suze Orman
Suze Orman
Susan Lynn "Suze" Ormanis an American author, financial advisor, motivational speaker, and television host. Orman was born in Chicago and pursued a degree in social work. She worked as a financial advisor for Merrill Lynch. In 1983 she became the vice-president of investments at Prudential Bache Securities. In 1987, she founded the Suze Orman Financial Group. Her program The Suze Orman Show began airing on CNBC in 2002. In 2006 she won a Gracie Award for Outstanding Program Host on...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionAuthor
Date of Birth5 June 1951
CountryUnited States of America
What's keeping you from being rich? In most cases it's simply a lack of belief. In order to become rich, you must believe you can do it, and you must take the actions necessary to achieve your goal.
I am a big believer that orderliness begets wealth.
In order to create lasting security you must learn to stand in your truth.
In order to live a rich life, everything about who you are must be one, in alignment, and in pure harmony.
Structured settlements are a common way for people who have been injured to receive an insurance payout. The periodic payments provide ongoing income and reduce the risk of blowing a lump sum through poor financial choices.
The middle class has disappeared. We have a highway to poverty and no roads coming out.
Courage is not always about action. It takes courage to do nothing rather than do something that you do not believe in or understand.
A reverse mortgage is available to anyone who is at least 62 years old and owns a home outright, or has a small mortgage balance remaining.
Sometimes your mind lets you do things with your money that make no sense.
You should keep a copy of your tax return indefinitely, but you need to save supporting documents for only three years.
Raise your auto and home deductibles to $1,000 or more, and your premium cost falls at least 10 percent.
One journalist estimated my liquid net worth at $25 million. That's pretty close. My houses are worth another $7 million.
Money is kind of just like air - if you don't have air, you can't breathe. If you don't have money, I don't think you'll want to breathe - you won't want to live.
My greatest pleasure is still flying private. I spend between $300,000 to $500,000, depending on my year, on flying private.