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Investing For Dummies. Eric TysonЧитать онлайн книгу.

Investing For Dummies - Eric Tyson


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relatively static portfolio of securities, such as stocks and bonds (this is also true of some exchange-traded funds). They don’t attempt to beat the market. Rather, they invest in the securities to mirror or match the performance of an underlying index, such as the Standard & Poor’s 500 (which I discuss in Chapter 5). Although index funds can’t beat the market, the typical actively managed fund doesn’t, either, and index funds have several advantages over actively managed funds. See Chapter 8 to find out more about tax-friendly stock mutual funds, which includes some non-index funds, and exchange-traded funds.

       Invest in small business and real estate. The growth in value of business and real estate assets isn’t taxed until you sell the asset. Even then, with investment real estate, you often can rollover the gain into another property as long as you comply with tax laws. However, the current income that small business and real estate assets produce is taxed as ordinary income.

Short-term capital gains (investments held one year or less) are taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. This is another reason you shouldn’t trade your investments quickly (within 12 months).

      Diversifying your investments helps buffer your portfolio from being sunk by one or two poor performers. In the following sections, I explain how to mix up a great recipe of investments.

      Considering your age

      When you’re younger and have more years until you plan to use your money, you should keep larger amounts of your long-term investment money in growth (ownership) vehicles, such as stocks, real estate, and small business. As I discuss in Chapter 2, the attraction of these types of investments is the potential to really grow your money. The risk: The value of your portfolio can fall from time to time.

      The younger you are, the more time your investments have to recover from a bad fall. In this respect, investments are a bit like people. If a 30-year-old and an 80-year-old both fall on a concrete sidewalk, odds are higher that the younger person will fully recover and the older person may not. Such falls sometimes disable older people.

      

A long-held guiding principle says to subtract your age from 110 and invest the resulting number as a percentage of money to place in growth (ownership) investments. So if you’re 35 years old:

A guiding principle to subtract your age (say 35 years) from 110 and invest the resulting number as a percentage of money to place in growth (ownership) investments.

      If you want to be more aggressive, subtract your age from 120:

A guiding principle to subtract your age (say 35 years) from 120 and invest the resulting number as a percentage of money to place in growth (ownership) investments.

      Note that even retired people should still have a healthy chunk of their investment dollars in growth vehicles like stocks. A 70-year-old person may want to totally avoid risk, but doing so is generally a mistake. Such a person can live another two or three decades. If you live longer than anticipated, you can run out of money if it doesn’t continue to grow.

These tips are only general guidelines and apply to money that you invest for the long term (ideally for ten years or more). For money that you need to use in the shorter term, such as within the next several years, more-aggressive growth investments aren’t appropriate. See Chapters 7 and 8 for short-term investment ideas.

      Making the most of your investment options

      No hard-and-fast rules dictate how to allocate the percentage that you’ve earmarked for growth among specific investments like stocks and real estate. Part of how you decide to allocate your investments depends on the types of investments that you want to focus on. As I discuss in Chapter 5, diversifying in stocks worldwide can be prudent as well as profitable.

      Here are some general guidelines to keep in mind:

       Take advantage of your retirement accounts. Unless you need accessible money for shorter-term non-retirement goals, why pass up the free extra returns from the tax benefits of retirement accounts?

       Don’t pile your money into investments that have gained lots of attention. Many investors make this mistake, especially those who lack a thought-out plan to buy stocks. In Chapter 5, I provide numerous illustrations of the perils of buying attention-grabbing stocks.

       Have the courage to be a contrarian. No one likes to feel that he is jumping on board a sinking ship or supporting a losing cause. However, just as in shopping for something at retail stores, the best time to buy something of quality is when its price is reduced.

       Diversify. As I discuss in Chapter 2, the values of different investments don’t move in tandem. So when you invest in growth investments, such as stocks or real estate, your portfolio’s value will have a smoother ride if you diversify properly.

       Invest more in what you know. Over the years, I’ve met successful investors who have built substantial wealth without spending gobs of their free time researching, selecting, and monitoring investments. For example, some investors concentrate more on real estate because that’s what they best understand and feel comfortable with. Others put more money in stocks for the same reason. No one-size-fits-all code exists for successful investors. Just be careful that you don’t put all your investing eggs in the same basket (for example, don’t load up on stocks in the same industry that you believe you know a lot about).

       Don’t invest in too many different things. Diversification is good to a point. But if you purchase so many investments that you can’t perform a basic annual review of all of them (for example, reading the annual reports from your mutual and exchange-traded funds), you have too many investments.

       Be more aggressive with investments inside retirement accounts. When you hit your retirement years, you’ll probably begin to live off your non-retirement account investments first. Allowing your retirement accounts to continue growing can generally save you tax dollars. Therefore, you should be relatively less aggressive with investments outside of retirement accounts because that money may be invested for a shorter time period.

      Easing into risk: Dollar cost averaging

      Dollar cost averaging (DCA) is the practice of investing a regular amount of money at set time intervals, such as monthly or quarterly, into volatile investments, such as stocks and stock mutual funds. If you’ve ever had money deducted from your paycheck and invested it into a retirement savings plan investment account that holds stocks and bonds, you’ve done DCA.

      

Most people invest a portion of their employment compensation as they earn it, but if you have extra cash sitting around, you can choose to invest that money in one fell swoop or to invest it gradually via DCA. The biggest appeal of gradually feeding money into the market
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