Money (1-year)
from: The Time Inc. Magazine Company
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Product Description:
Money offers a wide range of investment and money-management advice through articles, interviews, and regular columns. Issues include practical information on increasing the value of your home, financing vacations, planning for retirement, paying taxes, protecting finances, investment strategies for building wealth, remodeling and refinancing homes, life insurance, and tips on getting the best life at the best price. The magazine also covers family matters regarding money, including how to teach children good money-management habits and how to blend finances after marriage. Money has the highest circulation of any financial publication in the U.S.
Money offers a wide range of investment and money-management advice through articles, interviews, and regular columns. Issues include practical information on increasing the value of your home, financing vacations, planning for retirement, paying taxes, protecting finances, investment strategies for building wealth, remodeling and refinancing homes, life insurance, and tips on getting the best life at the best price. The magazine also covers family matters regarding money, including how to teach children good money-management habits and how to blend finances after marriage. Money has the highest circulation of any financial publication in the U.S.
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Customer Reviews
Average Rating:

Rating:
- Very Good Financial Periodical
Money magazine is better than all of the others simply because it provides pragmatic information in an easily digestible form.It offers financial advice that just makes sense for most people to at least consider.Over the years I have had subscriptions to many of the other financial periodicals like Fortune, Smart Money, Forbes, Kiplinger's, WSJ, FT, IBD, etc. and with the exception of Barron's I have found most of those to be highly unuseful and full of advice that just makes little sense to ... Read More
Rating:
- OK Magazine
I had subscriptions to Money, Smart Money and Kiplinger's. All of them seem to have articles about the same topics each month. Money seemed more geared to the 30 something and younger age group so I dropped my sub and stuck with the others since they seemed to have a bit more "meat".
Rating:
- Good general financial education for those new to investing.
I ordered Kiplinger's and Money magazine for my mom who is nearing retirement age. She's relatively inexperience when it comes to personal finance and retirement planning. She does use an investment adviser, but hasn't seen much growth in her accounts, and is confused by much of what the adviser tells her. My recommendations to her were, first, find a new adviser, and second, to do some reading to educate herself with the basics. With my second suggestion in mind, I signed her up for a year of both ... Read More
Rating:
- Maney Magazine
10 weeks with no magazine.
Seller wants 5 more days to investigate.
Future Amazon purchases are on Hold.
Rating:
- (Easy) Money
Not real bright on financial matters?Need commen-sense broken down into even simplier terms? Then, this magazine is for you.Written by what I suspect are a bunch of journalism graduates in New York City with no idea about what they are writting, living in New York City (a stupid idea on writer's salary), I am ashamed to say that I will continue subscribing just to see the monthly picture of the female editor's slender legs.
Parents, get this magazine for your teenage daughters because ... Read More
- Very Good Financial PeriodicalMoney magazine is better than all of the others simply because it provides pragmatic information in an easily digestible form.It offers financial advice that just makes sense for most people to at least consider.Over the years I have had subscriptions to many of the other financial periodicals like Fortune, Smart Money, Forbes, Kiplinger's, WSJ, FT, IBD, etc. and with the exception of Barron's I have found most of those to be highly unuseful and full of advice that just makes little sense to ... Read More
- OK MagazineI had subscriptions to Money, Smart Money and Kiplinger's. All of them seem to have articles about the same topics each month. Money seemed more geared to the 30 something and younger age group so I dropped my sub and stuck with the others since they seemed to have a bit more "meat".
- Good general financial education for those new to investing.I ordered Kiplinger's and Money magazine for my mom who is nearing retirement age. She's relatively inexperience when it comes to personal finance and retirement planning. She does use an investment adviser, but hasn't seen much growth in her accounts, and is confused by much of what the adviser tells her. My recommendations to her were, first, find a new adviser, and second, to do some reading to educate herself with the basics. With my second suggestion in mind, I signed her up for a year of both ... Read More
- Maney Magazine10 weeks with no magazine.
Seller wants 5 more days to investigate.
Future Amazon purchases are on Hold.
- (Easy) MoneyNot real bright on financial matters?Need commen-sense broken down into even simplier terms? Then, this magazine is for you.Written by what I suspect are a bunch of journalism graduates in New York City with no idea about what they are writting, living in New York City (a stupid idea on writer's salary), I am ashamed to say that I will continue subscribing just to see the monthly picture of the female editor's slender legs.
Parents, get this magazine for your teenage daughters because ... Read More
