Posts with keyword Investing

Today’s CNN Money discusses three easy steps to becoming a millionaire:

Step 1. Time: There is really no shortcut to getting rich. The sooner you begin saving and investing (steps # 2 and 3 below), the faster you get there. If you cannot begin soon enough, retire late – the idea is to give your money enough time to grow.
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In the recent annual meeting of the Berkshire Hathaway shareholders held last Saturday, CEO Warren Buffett was asked about the best investment idea he would recommend to an investor in his 30′s. In his own words:

I would just have it all in a very low-cost index fund from a reputable firm, maybe Vanguard. Unless I bought during a strong bull market, I would feel confident that I would outperform…and I could just go back and get on with my work.

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We all need to know the three “ing’s” of managing money – spending, saving and click to enlargeinvesting. The first two – spending and saving – are easy to track. Looking up your credit card statements from time to time will give an idea where most of your paycheck is going. And because what is not spent is saved, these statements will also tell you where some of your paycheck should not be going.
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Keeping it simple

September 5, 2007 in Investing 

“I did not know enough to be scared”

69-year old Earl Crawley, while making $20,000 a year as a parking-lot attendant, still amassed over $500,000 in investment asset. His secret? Two, in fact. The first is his good old habit of saving every “nickel and dime”, and the second is his lack of investing knowledge, summed up in his quote that I borrowed above.
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And it is all in our brain. Greed and panic – the two primal human emotions – are regulated by specific regions in our brain, and they in turn control how we as investors react to market unpredictability. In an insightful article today, Jason Zweig discusses the latest advances in neuroeconomics, the branch of science that probes human brain to understand investor behavior.
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There is an important difference between the two biggest single expenses in your life (if you live in America): buying a car, and making down-payment for a house. While a house appreciates in value (price goes up with time, usually outpacing inflation), the value of a new car starts depreciating the moment it leaves the dealership lot. Thus, paying 20% down for a house (the median house price was $232,000 last year) is a sound investment, whereas forking out $20,000 for a family car is not necessarily so.
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