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		<title>Get Rich Slowly</title>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 04 Mar 2010 15:29:56 +0000</pubDate>
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Is it hard to get rich?  Not really, if youre young.
Its fun to play with financial calculators and see what might happen.
Assume you have just graduated from college, are about 22 years old and I just started your first real job. If you put $100 a month in an IRA that grows at 10% [...]]]></description>
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<p>Is it hard to get rich?  Not really, if youre young.</p>
<p>Its fun to play with financial calculators and see what might happen.</p>
<p>Assume you have just graduated from college, are about 22 years old and I just started your first real job. If you put $100 a month in an IRA that grows at 10% a year, you will have about $865,000 at age 65. 10% a year compound growth is about what you should exect if the money was invested in a no-load S&#038;P 500 Index Fund.</p>
<p>So for about $23 a week or $3.30 a day you would be close to being a millionaire. </p>
<p>If you contributed the full $4000 a year allowed  right now to an IRA (rising to $5000 in 2008), you would have $2,600,000. For about $11.00 a day, you would have a small fortune.</p>
<p>If you didnt want to take a chance with the stock market because it goes down sometimes, you would still have over $600,000 if you could get a 5% return.</p>
<p>If your grandmother leaves you $10,000 in her will and you invest it for the same 43 years at 10% without adding another cent, youd also have over $600,000 if you placed it in a tax sheltered account.</p>
<p>Time and the power of compound interest are on your side. So if youre in you twenties and want to get rich, do whatever you have to scrape together that IRA contribution. Every day you procrastinate is another day your money is not working for you.</p>
<p>However, most people in their twenties need the money for more important things, like new cars and HDTVs. You also have school loans to pay, children to raise and the new mortgage to pay off. But if you prioritize your life and stick to a budget, $11.00 a day is doable, although you might have to scrimp here and there.</p>
<p>Consider that most people are spending their lives paying the freight for borrowing <i>other peoples money</I>. If you save and invest, other people are paying you to use your money. Its a lot more fun to see your money working to help you get rich than<br />
having to work yourself.</p>
<p>Think about the effect expenditures have on your financial future. If you bought a late model used car instead of new one, you would probably save $10,000 or more depending on the model. That $10,000 as noted above, would grow to almost $600,000 by the time youre 65 if invested in tax sheltered accounts. </p>
<p>Now look at it from the opposite angle, the extra money you spend on that new car you yearn for and <b>must have</b> now, will cost you $600,000 by the time youre 65<br />
and the car has long since been recycled into tin cans. </p>
<p>Id probably buy the car too, but its useful to consider the consequences.</p>
<p>It gets harder to get rich slowly as you get older. If you wait until youre 32 and put away $4000 at 10%, you would have about $975,000, still a respectable amount.<br />
At 42, youd only be able to accumulate approximately $350,000. If youre 50 and<br />
can start putting $5000 away today, youll have around $175,000 at age 65.</p>
<p>Everyone knows that Social Security is not going to allow for a comfortable retirement. Even if the plan can continue  to pay out forever, which is questionable  right now, the money you receive will be far from generous and is subject to taxation. And you might have a good pension plan at work now, but will you be able to hold your current job to<br />
retirement?</p>
<p>If you have a Roth IRA, you can withdraw the money tax free after age 59 .  Imagine having a million tax free dollars you can play with. It will well make up for the small sacrifices you have to make to get rich.</p>
<p>No matter what your age, start saving what you can now &#8211; today.  Even if you only amass $100,000, youll be better off than most people entering retirement.</p>

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		<title>Dealing With Stock Market Corrections: Ten Do&#8217;s and Don&#8217;ts</title>
		<link>http://www.bestinvestmentsguide.com/investing/dealing-with-stock-market-corrections-ten-dos-and-donts/</link>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2010 10:23:30 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.bestinvestmentsguide.com/investing/dealing-with-stock-market-corrections-ten-dos-and-donts/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[
A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally, big or small. Theoretically, even technically I&#8217;m told, corrections adjust equity prices to their actual value or &#8220;support levels&#8221;. In reality, it&#8217;s much easier than that. Prices go down because of speculator reactions to expectations of news, speculator reactions to actual news, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>A correction is a beautiful thing, simply the flip side of a rally, big or small. Theoretically, even technically I&#8217;m told, corrections adjust equity prices to their actual value or &#8220;support levels&#8221;. In reality, it&#8217;s much easier than that. Prices go down because of speculator reactions to expectations of news, speculator reactions to actual news, and investor profit taking. The two former &#8220;becauses&#8221; are more potent than ever before because there is more self-directed money out there than ever before. And therein lies the core of correctional beauty!  Mutual Fund unit holders rarely take profits but often take losses. Additionally, the new breed of Index Fund Speculators is ready for a reality smack up alongside the head. Thus, if this brief little hiccup becomes considerably more serious, new investment opportunities will be abundant!</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s a list of ten things to think about doing, or to avoid doing, during corrections of any magnitude: </p>
<p>1. Your present Asset Allocation should be tuned in to your long-term goals and objectives. Resist the urge to decrease your Equity allocation because you expect a further fall in stock prices. That would be an attempt to time the market, which is (rather obviously) impossible. Asset Allocation decisions should have nothing to do with stock market expectations.</p>
<p>2. Take a look at the past. There has never been a correction that has not proven to be a buying opportunity, so start collecting a diverse group of high quality, dividend paying, NYSE companies as they move lower in price. I start shopping at 20% below the 52-week high water mark&#8230; the shelves are beginning to become full.</p>
<p>3. Don&#8217;t hoard that &#8220;smart cash&#8221; you accumulated during the last rally, and don&#8217;t look back and get yourself agitated because you might buy some issues too soon. There are no crystal balls, and no place for hindsight in an investment strategy. Buying too soon, in the right portfolio percentage, is nearly as important to long-term investment success as selling to soon is during rallies.</p>
<p>4. Take a look at the future. Nope, you can&#8217;t tell when the rally will come or how long it will last. If you are buying quality equities now (as you certainly could be) you will be able to love the rally even more than you did the last time&#8230; as you take yet another round of profits. Smiles broaden with each new realized gain, especially when most Wall Streeters are still just scratchin&#8217; their heads.</p>
<p>5. As (or if) the correction continues, buy more slowly as opposed to more quickly, and establish new positions incompletely. Hope for a short and steep decline, but prepare for a long one. There&#8217;s more to Shop at The Gap than meets the eye, and you run out of cash well before the new rally begins.</p>
<p>6. Your understanding and use of the Smart Cash concept has proven the wisdom of The Investor&#8217;s Creed (look it up). You should be out of cash while the market is still correcting&#8230; it gets less scary each time. As long your cash flow continues unabated, the change in market value is merely a perceptual issue.</p>
<p>7. Note that your Working Capital is still growing, in spite of falling prices, and examine your holdings for opportunities to average down on cost per share or to increase yield (on fixed income securities). Examine both fundamentals and price, lean hard on your experience, and don&#8217;t force the issue. </p>
<p>8. Identify new buying opportunities using a consistent set of rules, rally or correction. That way you will always know which of the two you are dealing with in spite of what the Wall Street propaganda mill spits out. Focus on value stocks; it&#8217;s just easier, as well as being less risky, and better for your peace of mind. Just think where you would be today had you heeded this advice years ago&#8230;</p>
<p>9. Examine your portfolio&#8217;s performance: with your asset allocation and investment objectives clearly in focus; in terms of market and interest rate cycles as opposed to calendar Quarters (never do that) and Years; and only with the use of the Working Capital Model (look this up also), because it allows for your personal asset allocation. Remember, there is really no single index number to use for comparison purposes with a properly designed value portfolio.</p>
<p>10. So long as everything is down, there is nothing to worry about. Downgraded (or simply lazy) portfolio holdings should not be discarded during general or group specific weakness. Unless of course, you don&#8217;t have the courage to get rid of them during rallies&#8230; also general or sector spefical (sic). </p>
<p>Corrections (of all types) will vary in depth and duration, and both characteristics are clearly visible only in institutional grade rear view mirrors. The short and deep ones are most lovable (kind of like men, I&#8217;m told); the long and slow ones are more difficult to deal with. Most recent corrections have been short (August and September, &#8216;05; April though June, &#8216;06) and difficult to take advantage of with Mutual Funds. So if you over think the environment or over cook the research, you&#8217;ll miss the party. Unlike many things in life, Stock Market realities need to be dealt with quickly, decisively, and with zero hindsight. Because amid all of the uncertainty, there is one indisputable fact that reads equally well in either market direction: there has never been a correction/rally that has not succumbed to the next rally/correction&#8230;</p>

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