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Steckbrief von 
Suze Orman

Geburtsdatum

Dienstag, 05. Juni 1951

Geburtsort

Chicago, Illinois, U.S.

Sternzeichen

Beschreibung

Susan Lynn "Suze" Orman (/ˈsuːzi/ SOO-zee; geboren am 5. Juni 1951) ist eine amerikanische Finanzberaterin, Autorin und Podcast-Moderatorin. Im Jahr 1987 gründete sie die Suze Orman Financial Group. Ihre Arbeit als Finanzberaterin erlangte Bekanntheit durch die Suze Orman Show, die von 2002 bis 2015 auf CNBC lief.

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Wie alt ist Suze Orman heute?

73 Jahre

Welches Sternzeichen hat Suze Orman?

Wo wurde Suze Orman geboren?

Wo hat Suze Orman studiert?

University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign

Bekannte Zitate von Suze Orman

The last thing family and friends want is for you to spend money on them that you don't have or that you can't really spare.
No one's ever achieved financial fitness with a January resolution that's abandoned by February.
The foundation of a financial fresh start actually has nothing to do with money or specific financial dos and don'ts.
Opposites may attract, but I wouldn't put my money on a relationship of financial opposites.
When you're happy you find pure joy in your life. There are no regrets in this state of happiness - and that's a goal worth striving for in all areas of your life.
Rather than saying, 'My checking account is a wreck,' change it to 'I will learn how to track my spending and balance my checkbook.'
Your goal should be to pay off your credit card bills in full at the end of each month and set aside money toward your emergency savings.
Money is such an amazing teacher: What you choose to do with your money shows whether you are truly powerful or powerless.
They got married, they got divorced, and half their money goes out the window.
The less money you owe, the less income you'll need and the less you'll have to save for tomorrow.
In all realms of life it takes courage to stretch your limits, express your power, and fulfill your potential... it's no different in the financial realm.
If you wait until your children are high school seniors to spring it on them that there's not a whole lot of money for school, they won't have too many options.
Owning a home is a keystone of wealth - both financial affluence and emotional security.
It's easy to underestimate the real cost of home ownership.
You must recognize, embrace, and be honest about what is real for you today and allow that understanding to inform the choices you make. Only then will you be able to build the future of your dreams.
A wise woman recognizes when her life is out of balance and summons the courage to act to correct it, she knows the meaning of true generosity, happiness is the reward for a life lived in harmony, with a courage and grace.
People first, then money, then things.
I get so frustrated when people tell me it's unrealistic to create an eight-month emergency savings fund, or have money saved for a home down payment, or pay off their $5,000 credit card balance.
The key to making money is to stay invested.
A big part of financial freedom is having your heart and mind free from worry about the what-ifs of life.
Never, ever invest money that you will need prior to three to five years - minimum.
The most important loan to pay is your student loan. It's more important than your mortgage, car and credit card payments. You cannot discharge student loan debt in the majority of cases.
If you are worried about job security and do not have an adequate emergency fund (ideally eight months' worth of living expenses stashed away in a federally insured bank or credit union), you need to focus more on saving money than paying down the balance on your credit cards.
If you're not staying on top of your money, you are putting your financial well-being at risk.
Those carrying a credit card balance should scale back to making the minimum payment each month so they have more money to put into savings.
Who would you want to be giving you advice? Somebody who doesn't have any money?
A wise woman knows how to summon her courage and do what is right, rather than what is easy.
To make the most of your money, I recommend sticking with mutual funds that don't charge a commission when you buy or sell.
Like your home's closets, your financial clutter needs an overhaul every now and again, and the payoff will go far beyond the psychic satisfaction of neatening up.
I always say, 'People first, then money, then things.'
So many financial dreams are thwarted by the failure to act upon good intentions.
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