Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Invest Every Month, No Matter How Small the Investment

Savings Being a successful investor is all about keeping your money in play, especially during various cycles in the economy.  When you’re starting out, it’s reasonable to believe that you must deploy your large pile of savings to buying stocks and be done with the process in a matter of minutes.  Success in investing is hardly a one and done activity.  What builds true wealth is investing on a regular basis (at least once a month).

Investing means you’re not spending.

When you don’t invest regularly, you’re not keeping your money in play.  Money that’s not in the market doesn’t reap the benefits of time and compounding.  Of course, many will argue that it would be safer to stay on the sidelines for now, because of current economic conditions.  But the fact is, money that’s not invested in some way is eventually money that’s spent on worthless stuff.  And money that’s spent creates a negative return.

I’m guilty of it too and I still spend on worthless stuff, but the spending on me has been replaced with spending on ‘them’ (i.e., kids).  The stuff you buy usually costs more than the initial price tag.  Homes require insurance, maintenance, utilities, and furniture.  Autos require gasoline, insurance, and maintenance.  Clothing requires cleaning and mending, not to mention new clothes to go with the clothes you just bought.  Computers require Internet connections, printers, toner cartridges, software, and paper.  And so on.  It’s rare to find something that costs no more than the initial price you paid.

If you spend instead of invest, you’re not just losing returns on the money you spend.  The money you spend generates negative return because you spend more money to support the stuff you buy.  That’s why spending is so dangerous (and I won’t even go into the dangers of spending on credit)!  It has a negative multiplier effect and it’s the opposite of compounding rate of returns. 

If you invest every month, even if it is only a few bucks, you rid yourself of money that, if spent, will cost you even more money in the long run.  That’s why it pays to invest even a little amount each month, $15, $100, whatever you can afford.  Don’t wait until you save a larger amount to invest.  The problem with waiting until you accumulate funds is that the money is readily available and tempts you to spend on some foolish toy.  Get the money into your investment account as soon as possible, automate it whenever necessary so it becomes part of your daily life.  You’ll be much better off in the long run.

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