Langsung ke konten utama

Donavan Group Wealth Building in Singapore and Tokyo, Japan’s Services


Donavan Group Services Offered:

Donavan Group collaborates directly with our clients in seeking unbiased solutions to their biggest and most difficult problems. The company offers services which merge investment experience with strategic expertise and sound fundamentals to achieve potential returns.

Consulting

Donavan Group help companies pinpoint potential investment options and anticipate hazards along the way to delivering value to our clientele. Specifically, we provide business strategy planning advice and management guidance to build their wealth from the bottom up, if necessary. With our many years of actual experience and investment knowhow, Donavan Group can assure our clients’ financial future.

Mergers & Acquisitions

Donavan Group also provide M&A services, particularly in implementing a merger-&-acquisition, confidential sale and value assessment of small to medium-sized private firms. Donavan Group delivers high-level consultancy services often exclusively provided only to much bigger firms. Hence, whether you are selling or buying, our primary role is to help our clients build, improve or protect their wealth.

Additional Services

Likewise, Donavan Group serves our clients through additional support in consulting and M&A tasks, including business and chattel appraisal, business real estate consultancy and worker salary-and-benefits packages.

Postingan populer dari blog ini

How do you tell when it's the right time to retire?

How will I know when it's the right tie to retire? Is there a barometer that experts rely on to know when it's the right time to go?--B.K. I don't know of any generally recognized gauge or barometer for calling it a career, but I can tell you that the decision to retire definitely isn't just about reaching a certain age. I recently took personal finance guru Suze Orman to task for suggesting as much when she recently asserted in no uncertain terms that "70 is the new retirement age -- not a month or year before." She's right that many people may need to stay on the job longer these days to accumulate a large enough nest egg to support them in retirement. But to say that 70 -- or any single age, for that matter -- is the right age to retire? That's far too simplistic. The decision to retire involves too many subjective factors that can vary significantly from person to person to be boiled down a single number. So how can you tell when i

Money saving tips - Expert says THIS is the worst way to pay for Christmas

CHRISTMAS is approaching fast and the all too familiar feeling of pressure on our wallets is coming around quick. The last thing you want at Christmas is the burden of how you’re going to pay for your loved ones Christmas presents or how you’ll afford the turkey. There are certain things you ought to try to avoid when you pay for Christmas to make sure you don’t start a new year with bad debt hanging over you. It sounds obvious but before you start spending, if you’re going to have to borrow make a conscious effort to spend less. This doesn’t mean people will think you’re Scrooge; you just need to be savvy. By making tweaks to  how you pay for things , you’ll save yourself money and avoid the 2018 Christmas hangover. Hannah Maundrell, Editor in Chief of money.co.uk revealed  the best and worst ways to pay  for Christmas. Avoid: Store cards: Not to be confused with loyalty cards, store cards are often flogged at the till with the promise of 10% off y

How can I invest in bitcoin?

There are at least three ways, though only one of them looks rational today. First, you could mine your own bitcoins. Second, you could buy some from an exchange. Third, you could buy shares in a fund that has invested in bitcoins. Please note that answering your question is not a recommendation, and I am not qualified to give advice on investments . However, as electronic payments expert Dave Birch put it to me on Twitter: “one doesn’t invest in bitcoin, one gambles on bitcoin”. The problem is that people can make money by buying things that are essentially worthless, such as used postage stamps, Beanie Babies, and (historically) tulip bulbs. Tulipmania operated on the “bigger fool” theory, also known among stock traders as “momentum investing”. For example, tulip bulb prices may be insane but they keep going up. I may be a fool to buy them, but I expect a bigger fool to buy them from me. Simply replace “buy low, sell high” with “buy high, sell higher”. This works until y