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fortunes disappear through a bad distribution
of risks.
As long as matters prosper all is serene,
but the first financial disaster makes a breach
in the stronghold ; the endeavours to repair
the breach lead to dabbling in more speculative
investments, and these again are followed by
speculation pure and simple, with the final
result of a complete catastrophe.
It is too late to lock the stable door after
the steed has been stolen ; it is much wiser to
see to the lock whilst the animal is still on the
premises. Therefore every holder of a ques
tionably distributed list should at least
consider his position in its true light. After
all, this can be done without much trouble or
expense, and it is no great matter, even if
ultimately no change is made. It will clear the
air at all events, and serve to illuminate the
investor’s real position. An exact knowledge
of his true position is the first essential of a
business-like investor.
Sometimes the reconstruction of an Invest
ment List is delayed on account of the expense
which it involves. This objection rests on a
most shallow foundation, for in most cases
reconstructions can be so carried out that while
the new list offers greater capital safety and a
safer and larger future annual income than the