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Time and Compounding are the Investor’s Best Friends
The Stock Tip that Wasn't
A No Risk, Guaranteed Return

Time and Compounding are the Investor’s Best Friends

When it comes to investing, the most important tool you have is time. A relatively small investment can become a sizable retirement fund given time and the impact of compounding. Compounding is the process of earning interest on interest and dividends on dividends, over time. At first, your money grows relatively slowly, then with increasing speed as compounding takes effect.

One of the all-time great examples of the impact of compounding is the question…Which would be the better compensation plan?

$100,000 per year with 10% annual increases
One penny the first month, with your pay doubling with each successive month?

In three years, the individual who chose the $100,000 salary with 10% annual increases would have received $331,000 in compensation. The individual who chose the penny and saw her income double each month would have received $687 million dollars. Naturally, that’s compounding to an extreme. But the same basic principle holds true at lower rates of appreciation.

Suppose you invested $100,000 for 20 years at 8% annually with earnings paid quarterly. In one scenario, you withdraw your earnings each year. In a second, you reinvest those earnings at 8%. Assuming no taxes are paid, in 20 years, the account that is allowed to compound will be worth $488,640 - a $388,640 increase in value. If you had simply withdrawn your earnings each month, you would have $260,000, an increase of $160,000 over your original investment.

Time and compounding are the investor’s best friends.

The sooner you put your savings and investment plan into action, the longer your money goes to work for you. And the longer compounding has to work its math, the more substantial your nest egg can become.

To enhance the power of compounding, you want to minimize the impact of taxes. After all, every dollar you pay in taxes reduces the amount you have to compound. For example, if you had to pay 15% capital gains taxes on your earnings each year, at 8% your account would grow to just $349,000 in 20 years. That’s why it’s important to invest as much as you can in tax-deferred retirement accounts, or better yet, a Roth IRA where earnings accumulate tax free.

Understanding the value of time and compounding is one step toward accumulating a healthy retirement fund, but the most important step is to do something. Until you set up a plan of steady contributions using an investment approach that works for you, you are letting time and the value it can bring slip away.

Nothing happens unless someone does something. Whether it’s for your own retirement or a young person’s, call me today and let’s put a plan in place to build financial security.

The compounding examples cited above are hypothetical and used for illustrative purposes only. Investment results fluctuate and past performance is not indicative of future results. The possibility of loss exists along with the potential for profit.

The Stock Tip that Wasn't

One of the oldest scams in the stock business has gotten even easier with the internet. It begins when a broker calls or emails you with a hot tip, a stock on its way up. Naturally you give it a pass, but when you find out the stock did go up and the broker is back with another hot idea, you'll probably listen a little closer. By the third winner, you start to think this guy really does have something and perhaps you should invest.

What the guy really has is a big list. Using classic marketing tactics, he breaks his list into two parts and pitches the same stock to rise with half the group and to fall with the other half. Those he gives the wrong forecast are crossed off the list and the con man calls the second half to tell them what a great job he did and how he has another hot idea. The list gets smaller with each call, but given a 50% chance of success, the caller is very likely to end up with a select group of people ready to entrust him with their money for all the wrong reasons.

 

A No-Risk, Guaranteed Return

Are you passing up a no-risk, guaranteed opportunity to increase your retirement savings? If you are not contributing the maximum to any retirement plan where your employer provides a matching contribution you are passing up a guaranteed means of increasing your money, without taking on any risk. And, you will not have to pay taxes on that money until it is withdrawn at retirement. There are very few "real deals" in investing, but employer matching contributions are an opportunity investors should never pass up.

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The Latte Factor

The next time you run into a friend or relative who never seems to be able to set aside money to begin saving for retirement or other goals, remind them that small amounts of money can have an outsized impact when compounded over a long period.

A Starbucks latte at $3.95 looks relatively inexpensive on a daily basis. Yet, over 10 years, a latte a day adds up to $14,000. Compounded annually at a 10% return, $3.95 a day could become nearly $25,000 in ten years. By year 20, a latte a day compounded annually at 10% is worth more than $88,000.

Naturally, 10% is a hypothetical return and there's no guarantee that an investor would earn 10% annually on their investment. But invested well, $3.95 a day can compound into a significant portfolio.