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Neil George

Neil J. George has worn many hats during his years as an insider in the bond and banking communities, learning the ropes with Merrill Lynch International Bank and serving as Chief Economist at Mark Twain Bank, Mercantile Bank and British-based Guinness Flight.

A few years ago Neil left institutional investing to concentrate on managing and living off his own personal portfolio, but that doesn’t mean he spends all of his days on the golf course or relaxing on a private island. Since exchanging Wall Street for Main Street, Neil has dedicated his expertise and attention to helping individual investors make a splash in the world’s financial markets without getting soaked.

A sought-after speaker at investment conferences nationwide, Neil’s shares his keen insight and sound market intelligence through a number of newsletters in KCI Communications’ stable. Neil is editor of Personal Finance, Inner Circle, The Yield Letter and Pay Me Weekly and co-editor of The Partnership. His market perspectives are also regularly featured in some of the most respected financial publications and on prominent financial networks such as CNN, CNBC and Bloomberg.

Neil earned a Bachelor’s degree in Economics from Kings College and a Master’s degree in International Finance from Webster University in Europe. A longtime native of St. Louis, Neil also serves as an adjunct professor and board member of Webster University's School of Business and Technology. Neil is a committed philanthropist, finding time to serve on the boards of several foundations. His charity work centers on raising awareness of animal rights and welfare as well as supporting study-abroad programs for American students.

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 Articles by this Author

Let's Dance

Election years bring investors all sorts of anxieties. Aside from the various campaign promises designed to attract us to a particular candidate, we must also consider which nominee’s policy changes threaten to erode our financial well-being. Such considerations give new meaning to the term political plank, and pocketbook politics always hit home during times of economic and market malaise.

The US Dept of Labor reported this week that consumer prices spiked to a multiyear high. Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index (CPI) hit 5.6 percent for the month of July. And the headline number, which includes food and fuel costs, is in fact the focus of many dramatic, eye-grabbing article titles in the print and electronic media.


Face the Music

The week ended up with a lot of folks all smiles-and-happy faces as they headed out to kick off one of the remaining summer weekends. Oil’s down, the dollar’s up, and the S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrials are getting a respite from the downturn plaguing market optimists.

Why is it that we can’t seem to allow another country to be successful without demonizing it? Next week marks the beginning of the Summer Olympics in and about Beijing. Although many of us might not care about the competitive sports, we do seem to have an insatiable appetite for news and commentary that takes pot-shots at the Chinese.


The thought may have occurred to you last week that all is well again, the bears are back in their cages and the bulls are running free, not through the streets of Pamplona but those of Lower Manhattan.

Short People

Lots of folks--including Randy Newman--have a problem with short people. And Wall Street and Capitol Hill apparently want to do something to rid us of the pain of dealing with them.

Keep the Checks Coming

The way to avoid getting mauled, slashed and slaughtered by a bear market is to abide by my No. 1 rule of investing: Make sure the foundation of your portfolio is rooted in investments you can count on to send regular checks.

Send Out the Clowns

Is anyone who lived through and remembers the 1970s working at the Federal Reserve or the US Treasury Dept? How about the White House’s Council of Economic Advisors? You wouldn’t think so the way the feds are clowning around amid the current economic and financial mess.


With the leading indexes of the US stock market heading to one of the worst Junes since The Great Depression, it’s getting harder to bird-dog for stocks that won’t just come apart but will actually do something for us.

I don’t take my job of picking stocks, bonds and funds lightly. But to hear some of my subscribers tell it, you’d think sometimes I’d grabbed some darts and tossed them at the stock tables in the papers.

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