The Basics of Getting Rich
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The Basics of Getting Rich is simpler than you think
By Harry Domash
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Blend
three ingredients -- a paycheck, discipline and time -- and, you,
too, can be a millionaire. It's not always easy, but it's simple.
And you have no excuse not to do it.
Here
is the single most important thing you will ever hear about investing:
Getting rich is simple.
Not
easy, but simple.
And
here is the second most important thing you will ever hear about investing:
You have no excuse not to do it.
Only
three ingredients are needed: income, discipline and time. Chances
are, you already have two of them, income and time. All you need to
do is add the third, discipline. And armed with the following knowledge,
that key third ingredient may be a lot easier to find.
Here's
how it works: Say you start with nothing, invest $500 (of your income)
a month (a healthy discipline), and let your money ride (over time)
in diversified investments. Long term, the stock market returns at
least 10% annually. Assuming a 10% return, you'd have $102,000 after
10 years, $380,000 after 20 years, and $1.1 million in 30 years.
Here's
a similar scenario: If you start with a nut of $50,000 and add only
$250 per month, you'd have $180,000, $516.000 and $1.4 million after
10, 20, and 30 years, respectively. All this happens through the power
of regular investing and a simple-but-powerful concept called compounding.
Compounding
What
is compounding?
Compounding
is the reinvestment of the interest you receive from the money you
set aside. For example, if you invest $1,000 and earn 10% interest
on your principal at the end of each year, you'll get in $100 interest
at the end of the first year. If you reinvest that interest, the second
year you would start with $1,100, and thus would earn $110 interest.
If you stay with it, you'd more than double your money every eight
years.
"Compounding,"
Albert Einstein said, "is mankind's greatest invention because
it allows for the reliable, systematic accumulation of wealth."
Einstein was a smart man. But you hardly have to be a genius to make
this concept work for you.
The
real magic of investing comes when you combine the surprising power
of compounding with continuous and regular investments -- in other
words, discipline.
The
best way to make these continuous investments happen is by setting
up an account with a broker or mutual fund that automatically deducts
a fixed amount from your bank account every month. "Automatic"
is the operative word here. Trust me, if you don't set it up that
way, it won't happen. Instead, you'll end up pouring money in when
the market is soaring and skipping payments when it's heading down.
Eventually you'll get discouraged and give up.
Dollar-cost
averaging
The
process of continuously investing a fixed dollar amount is called
dollar-cost averaging -- a term that sounds much more technical than
it is. Through dollar-cost averaging, you'll end up buying more shares
when a stock or fund is down, and fewer when it's up. For instance,
say you're investing $500 monthly in a stock trading initially at
$50 per share; so the first time, you buy 10 shares. If the next month
the stock moves up to $62.50 your regular purchase will net you only
eight shares. However, if the stock drops to $41.67, you'll get 12
shares (not including any transaction fees).
It's
easy to set up regular-investment mechanisms, thus harnessing the
power of dollar-cost averaging. Mutual funds are the traditional way.
But there are other outlets, as well, that allow you to apply the
strategy with individual stocks or exchange-traded funds, which are
baskets of stocks that identically track standard market indexes,
such as the Dow Jones Industrial Average ($INDU).
Risk
Sure,
investing in the stock market has risk. There's always the chance
the market will go nowhere for the next 20 or 30 years and you'll
end up no better than where you started. But there's risk in everything,
even CDs.
With
CDs, your original investment isn't in danger. Most CDs are insured,
and the federal government will step in and make you whole, even if
your bank goes belly up.
But
a problem crops up when something more sinister surfaces: inflation.
At this writing, inflation, running at around 2%, is considered relatively
benign. But is it?
Let's
do some math. Your real return is the interest you receive less the
inflation rate. If your CD is paying 3% and the inflation rate is
2%, you're only making 1% in real terms. If inflation takes off, say
to 5%, your CD will probably be paying around 4%. In inflation-adjusted
terms, you've lost 1%.
But
it can get worse. Inflation hit 14% in the early 1980s. In such times,
CDs and similar fixed-income investments don't even come close to
the inflation rate, meaning you're losing serious money, in real terms.
By
contrast, assets such as real estate and stocks tend to move with
prices, and, over time, the stock market has outpaced inflation. For
instance, in the 20-year period ending Dec. 31, 2001, the cumulative
return of the market, as measured by the S&P 500 Index ($INX),
was 1,606%, compared to 88% cumulative inflation over the same period.
What's
the point? Yes, there's risk in investing in the market, but the odds
are that continuous, regular investing combined with the power of
compounding will make you rich.
The
odds
If
you count yourself a member of the "I want it now" generation,
the idea of waiting 20 or 30 years to get rich probably sounds like
a dumb idea.
Sure,
there are faster ways to get rich. You could win the lottery, or pick
the next Intel (INTC, news, msgs) or Wal-Mart Stores (WMT, news, msgs).
But don't quit your day job just yet. Your chances of winning big
in the lottery run around 15 million to 1, at best.
Meantime,
naturally, you would be sitting pretty if you had had the foresight
to plunk significant cash into Intel or Wal-Mart 20 years ago. But
consider this: You would have lost money if you'd picked Advanced
Micro Devices (AMD, news, msgs) instead of Intel, and you'd be broke
if you'd picked Kmart (KMRT, news, msgs) instead of Wal-Mart. In both
instances, your retirement plans would be history.
Here's
the bottom line, like it or not: The fate of your retirement, your
comfort in older age, probably lies in your commitment to the concepts
laid out in the paragraphs above. For the vast majority of us, wealth
creation is a slow and steady -- and powerful -- process. The tortoise
almost always beats the hare.
It's
not easy. But it's very, very simple.
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