Step1
- The road to financial freedom is to
have great health so that you are in good shape
to learn.
Step
2 - An open mindset to start learning
and practicing what you have learned.
Step
3 - Investing your time in your
financial & health education so that you
are in control of your life to create wealth to
enjoy a better life.
Step
4 - Enjoy the wealth that you have
created because you have been taking care of
your health.
Step Eleven: Investing
in the Market
I thought it would be helpful to share my rules of
thumb for who should invest and who should not.
Why Invest?
First: let's review the basic reason any of us might
consider investing: Over the long term (and, my
friends, I mean 10, 20, or 30 years) stocks have, on
average, produced strong returns of about 10 percent.
That means stocks may be down 10 percent one year, up
20 percent the next, and the down 5 percent the next.
There are no smooth rides or guarantees, but there is
the historical pattern. That's why we all should
consider investing in stocks. But notice I said
"consider."
Why Not?
Here's my list of when it does not make sense to
invest in the stock market. If you...
don't have an eight-month emergency cash fund.
are paying off a car loan or credit card debt at an
interest rate of 6 percent or more.
will need the money in less than ten years.
don't have a stomach of steel.
And you have to be sure about that last point. Between
its high in 2000 and October 2002, the NASDAQ
index—which represents a lot of the big technology
stocks—fell 74 percent. How's your stomach feeling
now? The index would have to gain 9 percent a year for
15 years to get back to even. That's why you want to
have the time to weather downturns and to profit in up
markets.
Keeping Ahead of the Market
To help you avoid experiencing those huge losses, let
me share another favorite rule of thumb: If you make a
lump-sum investment and it falls 8 percent, sell and
reinvest the money in another (hopefully better!)
stock or mutual fund.
If the trend of the market is down, keep the money in
cash until it begins to rally. This rule doesn't apply
to those making regular investments in a 401(k),
403(b), or your own self-enforced savings plan. What
you're doing in those cases is dollar cost averaging (DCA):
Rather than investing $12,000 on January 1, you
invest, say, $1,000 each month. That means sometimes
the $1,000 will buy more shares—if the market has
fallen—and sometimes it will buy fewer shares. So if
you're committed to a DCA program, don't worry about
the 8 percent rule. Just keep up the investing.
By Suze Orman
2006 (c) creditplushealth.com
Credit Plus Health By Sean Toh All rights reserved.