Investing All-in-One For Dummies. Eric Tyson

Investing All-in-One For Dummies - Eric Tyson


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LIKE A MILLIONAIRE?

      Having a million dollars isn’t nearly as rare as it used to be. In fact, according to the Spectrem Group, a firm that conducts research on wealth, more than 11 million U.S. households now have at least $1 million in wealth (excluding the value of their primary home). More than 1.5 million households have $5 million or more in wealth.

      Interestingly, households with wealth of at least $1 million rarely let financial advisors direct their investments. Only one of ten such households allows advisors to call the shots and make the moves, whereas 30 percent don’t use any advisors at all. The remaining 60 percent consult an advisor on an as-needed basis and then make their own moves.

      Besides ownership investments (which are discussed earlier in this chapter), the other major types of investments include those in which you lend your money. Suppose that, like most people, you keep some money in a bank, either locally or online — most likely in a checking account but perhaps also in a savings account or certificate of deposit (CD). No matter what type of bank account you place your money in, you’re lending your money to the bank.

      

How long and under what conditions you lend money to your bank depends on the specific bank and the account that you use. With a CD, you commit to lend your money to the bank for a specific length of time — perhaps six months or even one or more years. In return, the bank probably pays you a higher rate of interest than if you put your money in a bank account offering you immediate access to the money. (You may demand termination of the CD early; however, you’ll usually be penalized.)

      As Book 4 discusses in more detail, you can also invest your money in bonds, another type of lending investment. When you purchase a bond that’s been issued by the government or a company, you agree to lend your money for a predetermined period of time and receive a particular rate of interest. A bond may pay you 4 percent interest over the next ten years, for example.

      An investor’s return from lending investments is typically limited to the original investment plus interest payments. If you lend your money to Netflix through one of its bonds that matures in, say, ten years, and Netflix triples in size over the next decade, you won’t share in its growth. Netflix’s stockholders and employees reap the rewards of the company’s success, but as a bondholder, you don’t; you simply get interest and the face value of the bond back at maturity.

      

Many people keep too much of their money in lending investments, thus allowing others to reap the rewards of economic growth. Although lending investments appear safer because you know in advance what return you’ll receive, they aren’t that safe. The long-term risk of these seemingly safe money investments is that your money will grow too slowly to enable you to accomplish your personal financial goals. In the worst cases, the company or other institution to which you’re lending money can go under and stiff you for your loan.

      THE DOUBLE WHAMMY OF INFLATION AND TAXES

      Bank accounts and bonds that pay a decent return are reassuring to many investors. Earning a small amount of interest sure beats losing some or all of your money in a risky investment.

      The problem is that money in a savings account, for example, that pays 1.5 percent isn’t actually yielding you 1.5 percent. It’s not that the bank is lying; it’s just that your investment bucket contains some not-so-obvious holes.

      The first hole is taxes. When you earn interest, you must pay taxes on it (unless you invest the money in municipal bonds that are federal and state tax-free or in a retirement account, in which case you generally pay the taxes later when you withdraw the money). If you’re a moderate-income earner, you may end up losing about a third of your interest to taxes. Your 1.5 percent return is now down to 1 percent.

      But the second hole in your investment bucket can be even bigger than taxes: inflation. Although a few products become cheaper over time (computers, for example), most goods and services increase in price. Inflation in the United States has been running about 2 percent per year over recent years (3 percent over the much longer term). Inflation depresses the purchasing power of your investments’ returns. If you subtract the 2 percent “cost” of inflation from the remaining 1 percent after payment of taxes, you’ve lost 1 percent on your investment.

      Cash equivalents are any investments that you can quickly convert to cash without cost to you. With most bank checking accounts, for example, you can conduct online transactions to pay bills or do the old-fashioned writing of a check or withdraw cash through an ATM machine or from retailers like a grocery store that enable you to get cash back when making a purchase.

      Why shouldn’t you take advantage of a higher yield? Many bank savers sacrifice this yield because they think that money market funds are risky — but they’re not. Money market mutual funds generally invest in safe things such as short-term bank certificates of deposit, U.S. government–issued Treasury bills, and commercial paper (short-term bonds) that the most creditworthy corporations issue.

      Another reason people keep too much money in traditional bank accounts is that the local bank branch office or online bank makes the cash seem more accessible. Money market mutual funds, however, offer many quick ways to get your cash. Most money market mutual funds can be accessed online, just like most bank accounts. You can also write a check (most funds stipulate the check must be for at least $250), or you can call the fund and request that it mail or electronically transfer your money.

      

Move extra money that’s dozing away in your bank savings account into a higher-yielding money market mutual fund. Even if you have just a few thousand dollars, the extra yield more than pays for the cost of this book. If you’re in a high tax bracket, you can also use tax-free money market funds. (See Chapter 4 in Book 2 to find out about money market funds.)

      Selecting the firm or firms through which to do your investing is a hugely important decision. So is the decision about from whom to get or pay for investing advice. The following sections address both of these topics.

      Finding the best fund companies and brokers


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