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THE FOUNDATION FOR SUCCESS
1. Be different: Save money regularly.
This is so obvious that I shouldn’t have to write it and you
shouldn’t have to read it. But if you look around and seriously
observe your peers, you’ll see plenty of people who either don’t
know this or don’t care: To be an investor, you have to save
money.
Unless you come into a windfall inheritance, if you want to be an
investor you will have to save money from your income. You will
need to do this every payday, every month, every year. Get in this
habit and you’re on your way. Ignore this, and the rest of what you
read in this book won’t matter very much.
2. Be even more different: Live below your means.
I hate to saddle you with two pieces of bad news right off the bat,
but you can’t follow my first piece of advice unless you spend less
than you earn. The good news is that you can make this a habit,
and eventually it will become second nature.
Your friends may spend all the money they have and rack up big
debts in order to spend even more, all in order to live a lifestyle
they can’t afford. They will likely wind up with finances so fragile
that when a need comes along, they will have to either borrow
more money or sell the investments that are supposed to be
growing for the long term.
3. Make your money work for you.
There’s a terrible trend afoot in the land lately: Many young people,
rightly observing the damage to their parents’ and grandparents’
fortunes from what’s being called the Great Recession, have vowed
to avoid that fate by shunning stocks and seeking guaranteed
returns.
This happened after the stock market’s crash of 1929 and also after
1932, 1974 and 1987. After each of these crashes, many investors
were unwilling to trust the market again for decades. During those
decades, those spooked investors missed out on some of the most
productive years in the market.
So my advice to you is simple: Once you have saved money, don’t
just put it in the bank. Invest it is something that can grow over
time. That means owning something – most likely stocks of public
companies. When you put money in the bank or buy bonds or
First-Time Investor Grow and Protect your Money Autor Paul A. Merriman and Richard Buck