Tips and Tricks of the Pros |
Conventional wisdom argues that you need a pile of cash
before you may begin to invest successfully in stocks. Low-cost
brokers
and dividend reinvestment plans (DRPs) turn this
notion on its head and prove the opposite can be true. Whether you have
$100 or $100,000, what's most important is how soon in
life you start to invest and where you invest. A Fool
starting out with $100 can be in a better position to succeed than a Wise
man with $100,000.
How can this be?
Because discipline,
time, and compounding are the three main contributors to successful
investing, not the amount of money you start
with.
Discipline
Enter: one great solution.
Dollar-cost
averaging (through dividend reinvestment plans or on your
own) provides a ready framework for successful investing. The
discipline includes staying invested at all times, not actively trading,
and -- for most investors -- consistently saving more money and buying
more shares.
Dollar-cost averaging supports all three of these
disciplines. You steadily buy more stock in the interest of asset
accumulation, so it is rare that you make snap decisions when the market
swings. Through investment plans or discount
brokers, dollar-cost averaging is easy and cheap (free with
many DRPs), which means you see dips as buying opportunities. Every
month, you're socking away more money in stocks or index funds for
long-term gain.
Time
As we all know, the stock market declines many years, but it
is unpredictable, so trying to make forecasts is costly. Studies show
a majority of the stock market's annual gains take place during a
condensed period -- over a number of combined weeks in any given
year. If an investor misses those weeks, her results suffer. An investor
needs to stay invested -- and keep investing -- in leading
companies, and history demonstrates the longer you're invested, the
better.
When you couple the power of a good investment
discipline with time, you get a one-two punch. Discipline combined with
time results in your desired outcome:
compounding.
Compounding
Value when annually growing: 7% 11% 15% Year 1 $1,775 $1,820 $1,866 Year 5 7,868 8,816 9,911 Year 10 18,313 23,194 29,741 Year 15 33,120 48,052 71,528 Year 20 54,112 91,031 159,581 Year 30 126,055 293,806 736,098 Year 40 270,637 899,929 3,295,955
Value when annually growing: 7% 11% 15% Year 1 $3,550 $3,640 $3,732 Year 5 15,736 17,632 19,822 Year 10 36,626 46,388 59,483 Year 15 66,241 96,105 143,057 Year 20 108,224 182,062 319,163 Year 30 252,110 587,612 1,472,196 Year 40 541,274 1,799,589 6,591,911
There are two important lessons to take from these tables:
1. Time is the most necessary asset to successful investing.
2. Your annual return is crucial.
A 4% difference in your annual rate of return can make the difference between a $3.2 million portfolio and a $900,000 portfolio over 40 years. As for time, notice how most of the value is created in the later years.
That is how compounding works, especially when you buy a company at a good value that becomes more and more successful (imagine owning such household names as Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT), Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT), or Intel (Nasdaq: INTC) over the last 10 years). Most of your wealth is created at the back end of an investment's life due to compounding. You need to let your money be invested long enough so that it can compound.
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