1# Saving is a
prerequisite to investing. Unless you have wealthy, benevolent relatives, living within your means
and saving money are prerequisites to investing and building wealth.
2# Know the three best
wealth-building investments. People of all economic means make their money grow in ownership assets - stocks, real estate, and small business - where you share in the success and
profitability of the asset.
3# Be realistic about
expected returns.
Over the long term, 9 to 10 percent per year is about right for ownership
investments (such as stocks and real estate). If you run a small business, you
can earn higher returns and even become a multimillionaire, but years of hard
work and insight are required.
4# Think long term. Because ownership investments are
riskier (more volatile), you must keep a long-term perspective when investing
in them. Don’t invest money in such investments unless you plan to hold them
for a minimum of five years, and preferably a decade or longer.
5# Match the time frame to
the investment.
Selecting good investments for yourself involves matching the time frame you
have to the riskiness of the investment. For example, for money that you expect
to use within the next year, focus on safe investments, such as money market
funds. Invest your longer-term money mostly in wealth-building investments.
6# Diversify. Diversification is a powerful
investment concept that helps you to reduce the risk of holding more aggressive
investments. Diversifying simply means that you should hold a variety of
investments that don’t move in tandem in different market environments. For
example, if you invest in stocks, invest worldwide, not just in the U.S.
market. You can further diversify by investing in real estate.
7# Look at the big picture
first. Understand
your overall financial situation and how wise investments fit within it. Before
you invest, examine your debt obligations, tax situation, ability to fund
retirement accounts, and insurance coverage.
8# Ignore the minutiae. Don’t feel mystified by or feel the
need to follow the short-term gyrations of the financial markets. Ultimately,
the prices of stocks, bonds, and other financial instruments are determined by
supply and demand, which are influenced by thousands of external issues and
millions of investors’ expectations and fears.
9# Allocate your assets. How you divvy up or allocate your
money among major investments greatly determines your returns. The younger you
are and the more money you earmark for the long term, the greater the
percentage you should devote to ownership investments.
10# Do your homework before
you invest. You work
hard for your money, and buying and selling investments costs you money.
Investing isn’t a field where acting first and asking questions later works
well. Never buy an investment based on an advertisement or a salesperson’s
solicitation of you.
11# Keep an eye on taxes. Take advantage of tax-deductible
retirement accounts and understand the impact of your tax bracket when
investing outside tax-sheltered retirement accounts.
12# Consider the value of
your time and your investing skills and desires. Investing in stocks and other
securities via the best mutual funds and exchange-traded funds is both
time-efficient and profitable. Real estate investing and running a small
business are the most time-intensive investments.
13# Where possible,
minimize fees. The
more you pay in commissions and management fees on your investments, the
greater the drag on your returns. And don’t fall prey to the thinking that “you
get what you pay for.”
14# Don’t expect to beat
the market. If you
have the right skills and interest, your ability to do better than the
investing averages is greater with real estate and small business than with
stock market investing. The large number of full-time, experienced stock market
professionals makes it next to impossible for you to choose individual stocks
that will consistently beat a relevant market average over an extended time
period.
15# Don’t bail when things
look bleak. The
hardest time, psychologically, to hold on to your investments is when they’re
down. Even the best investments go through depressed periods, which is the
worst possible time to sell. Don’t sell when there’s a sale going on; if
anything, consider buying more.
16# Ignore soothsayers and
prognosticators.
Predicting the future is nearly impossible. Select and hold good investments
for the long term. Don’t try to time when to be in or out of a particular
investment.
17# Minimize your trading. The more you trade, the more likely
you are to make mistakes. You also get hit with increased transaction costs and
higher taxes (for non-retirement account investments).
18# Hire advisors
carefully. Before
you hire investing help, first educate yourself so you can better evaluate the
competence of those you may hire. Beware of conflicts of interest when you
consider advisors to hire.
19# You are what you read
and listen to. Don’t
pollute your mind with bad investing strategies and philosophies. The quality
of what you read and listen to is far more important than the quantity. Find
out how to evaluate the quality of what you read and hear.
20# Your personal life and
health are the highest-return, lowest-risk investments. They’re far more important than the
size of your financial portfolio.
[Investing For Dummies, 6th Edition - Eric Tyson # Page: Introduction]
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