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Making Smart Investments: A Beginner’s Guide

DBMS Global

Are you a saver or spender?


If you went with the former, then you’re in the majority. According to a 2019 Charles Schwab survey, around 59% of Americans said they considered themselves savers. Compare that to more recent findings, however, and you’ll see that 63% of respondents in a similar demographic are currently living paycheck to paycheck.


Clearly, there’s a disconnect between the financial goals we are setting and the steps we are taking to realize them.


Many of us are taught from a young age that saving is the most direct path to building wealth and achieving financial freedom. But this is a myth. While saving is key in the pursuit of both goals, making smart investments with your money makes them much more attainable.


The fear that stops most people from investing is a reasonable one: financial loss as opposed to financial gain. When we work hard and are disciplined enough to forgo consumption and save, the idea of losing our hard-earned dollars understandably makes us uncomfortable. As a result, we tuck our money away in an FDIC-insured bank account.


Here’s the problem: The money we put into our accounts is almost guaranteed to lose value. The low interest rates that savings accounts offer can’t even keep pace with inflation, meaning our money’s purchasing power decreases the longer we save.


There is some good news, though. If you make smart decisions and invest in the right places, you can reduce the risk factor, increase the reward factor, and generate meaningful returns without feeling like you’d be better off in Vegas.


Here are a few questions to consider as you get started.


Why should you invest?

Saving versus investing is an oft-heard debate in financial circles. But they’re two sides of the same coin.


When building wealth, saving is an indispensable part of the financial toolbox — not because it produces wealth on its own, but because it provides the capital necessary to invest. At a minimum, investing allows you to keep pace with cost-of-living increases created by inflation. At a maximum, the major benefit of a long-term investment strategy is the possibility of compounding interest, or growth earned on growth.


Read More at https://hbr.org/2021/08/how-to-make-smart-investments-a-beginners-guide

 
 
 

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