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![]() "Trying to predict the direction of the market over one year, or even two years, is impossible." Peter Lynch, investment fund manager, (1944 - ) BY JULIA ANDERSON Investor confidence is a must for women if they want to ever stop working, but it is in the area of investing that women say they are least comfortable. A business-owner friend of mine said that she just “can’t get her head around it.” It being the stock market, stock mutual funds, how publicly owned corporations are required by law to operate and even how quarterly stock dividends are paid and reinvested. Yet, understanding these the basics of investing is the way to successfully accumulate and grow savings for the long-term. It is especially important for women get in the game since they live longer and need more money in retirement. The only way to accumulate that kind of money is to be an investor. As Warren Buffett says, “this is not rocket science.” If you are late to the party and interested in becoming an investor, here’s how: 1 Start early, start small. These days there are several online brokerage firms that require zero or low minimum deposits to open an account. Their fees on transactions are usually 45 or less. And they offer zero expense ratios on index mutual funds. And you can move money electronically from your bank account to an investment account with one click. Among those online brokerage firms are: Ally Invest, TD Ameritrade, Fidelity, Vanguard, Charles Schwab Merrill Edge and E-Trade. Nerdwallet says the best online account for beginners is Ally Invest. 2. Do your homework. Read a few books that will give the big picture and not try to sell you anything. My two favorites: Burton Malkiel’s “A Random Walk Down Wall Street” and “One up on Wall Street,” by Peter Lynch. These two books will give you everything you need to know about big-picture, time-tested investing. Written in plain English, you find out how to determine if a stock is worth buying, what to stay away from and how to manage your fear. These books are a bit dated in terms of details, but the fundamentals haven’t changed. Do some reading. 3. Buy something. Inside your new Individual Retirement Account on line fund, buy something. If you are “risk-averse” as brokers like to say, start out with a stock index fund. That means your money (and your risk) is spread over all of the stocks held inside the fund. An S&P 500 index fund owns ALL the 500 largest publicly traded U.S.-based companies. According to historical records from 1928 forward, the S&P 500 has enjoyed an annual average return of about 10 percent. That doesn’t mean we won’t see swings. In 2017, the value of stocks in the S&P increased by 21 percent. In 2018, they dropped an overall 4.3 percent. But let’s say you want to buy stock in individual companies paying a good dividend of around 3 percent, which is 1 percent more than the average 2 percent a year inflation rate. Online research is at your fingertips, unlike the old says when you had to rely on a financial adviser with an office and all the data. Now you can look up a company, find out everything you need to know to make an informed decision: profitability, dividend rate, share price to earnings ratio, revenue growth and share price track record. All that may take 30 minutes online. Then push the buy button with the idea that you could own this stock for a long time, maybe a life time. 3. Give yourself permission to make (a few, small) mistakes. Those mistakes include selling too soon. I made that mistake when I sold O’Reilly Automotive (ORLY), retail automotive parts chain, because I saw that an analyst had “down-graded” the company’s stock rating. After I sold, the O’Reilly share price jumped. Despite a downturn, the share price is still up 31 percent from a year ago, when I sold. I should have looked at the company fundamentals and made my own informed decision. Mistakes are part of the learning process. I have learned to buy blue-chip (nationally recognized, well-established and financially sound) company. In my blue-chip portfolio, among others, are a couple of drug companies, an oil company, several big banks, utility companies, a coffee retailer and a consumer products company. All pay a good (3 percent) dividend. My losers include a capital venture company, a start-up computer chip company and an international drug company hurt by the changing currency values between Europe and the U.S. 4. Don’t panic when markets go down. I rolled my 401(k) into an Individual Retirement Account at the bottom of the 2008-2010 Great Recession. Since then I’ve doubled the value of my nest egg even though I’ve been withdrawing some of the earnings in that account. Fear is all around us all the time in this 24/7 world. Just remember the long-term nearly 100-year track record of the U.S. economy. When markets go down, stocks are on sale. Your reinvested dividends buy more shares at the cheaper price. How did I become a confident investor? Easy, no one ever told me that investing was complicated. I learned from my mother who was an enthusiastic investor. A child of the Great Depression, she was careful with money, paid off debt including the farm mortgage and lived with my father within her means. With just a high school education, you might think she would be intimidated by the investment world. Not so. She only bought shares in companies that she understood…utilities, consumer companies, businesses that made sense to her. She had me investing when I was in my 30s because she wanted to share her interest in the economy, in successful businesses. She loved McDonald’s hamburgers, so she bought shares in the company and let the dividends reinvest. She bought, Exxon and Merck and let the dividends reinvest. At the end of her 40 years of investing she had a $1 million portfolio. This is not rocket science. 5. Look into management fees and upfront trading commissions. It’s one thing to put money into the stock market, it is another to find out what management fees and upfront commissions are being charged against your investments. If you are in a 401(k), find out what the management fees are for those funds. Anything more than 1 percent is too high. You would do better with your own IRA at an online brokerage firm in a zero-fee index fund. The same goes for commissions on specific products sold by financial advisers where an upfront commission may be as high a 5 percent or more on the money you are investing with them. That’s it. Investing 101. As my readers know, I am passionate about financial literacy for women. Movies such as “The Big Short,” (2015) and “Wall Street,” (1987), “The Wolf of Wall Street,” (2013) and even “Trading Places,” (1983) give us the idea that the stock market is one big game for crooks. Meanwhile, with the fall of the Iron Curtain, the villain in move after movie is the corrupt and evil corporate tycoon who is either poisoning the world or stealing us blind. Why wouldn’t we be afraid to invest. Let’s not forget the Tulip Bulb Craze in Holland in 1593 that really happened or the Enron market manipulation disaster in 2000 that really happened. It's OK to be realistic and maybe a bit scared but not scared out of the market. In reality, modern markets, while still driven by the basic human emotions of fear and greed and occasionally abused by real crooks, are governed by rules, by reporting requirements and by the incentives of regulated capitalism. A sensible investing strategy means understanding risk-return trade-offs. Remember, the more glittery the investment, the higher the risk. I’ve learned that lesson more than once. Remember that past records are a good indicator of future performance. and remember that there’s a difference between investing and trading. “If you know you will either win or at least not lose too much, and if you index at least the core of your portfolio, you will be able to play the game with more satisfaction,” says Burton Malkiel, in “A Random Walk Down Wall Street.” My mother, the investor, stuck with blue chips, put money into businesses that she understood, reinvested the dividends and never lost her resolve. Her investing philosophy continues to guide my thinking. Thanks, mom. For more: U.S. NEWS. Stock market 101: Everything you need to know about buying, selling and trading, https://money.usnews.com/money/personal-finance/saving-budget/articles/2017-01-20/stock-market-101-everything-you-need-to-know-about-buying-selling-and-trading Stocks for Beginners, Motley Fool. https://www.fool.com/retirement/2018/04/27/stocks-for-beginner-investors.aspx 5 Easy Ways to Start Investing with Little Money, Money Under 30. https://www.moneyunder30.com/start-investing-with-little-money ![]() "Keep only those things that speak to your heart," Marie Kondo, Japanese organizing consultant and author. (1984 - ) BY JULIA ANDERSON Marie Kondo’s book, “The Life-changing Magic of Tidying Up,” will be delivered this week to my doorstep. I’ve watched three episodes of her eight-part Netflix series, “Tidying Up.” I am intrigued by her mantra, “Does this object bring you joy?” If not, say thank you and goodbye. Over the weekend, I decluttered the guest bedroom closet and a cupboard in the laundry room. I know, Kondo wants you to start with clothes, but I decided to start small. For me the experiment worked! I let go of the big-shouldered ‘80s gold silk blouse with the black swooshes across the front that I wore at my 40th birthday party. I thanked it for the joy it had brought me and said goodbye. My 40th is so far in the past it isn’t even in my rear-view mirror. I said goodbye to a couple of business suits I still held on to from nearly nine years ago when I left the 9-to-5 newsroom job. My thinking: I might need a classy business suit again someday. Not going to happen. De-cluttering hangs like a guilty fog over many in my Baby Boomer generation. We look around our houses and see sentimental connections to the past in our furniture, our dishware, art and certainly our family photos. Never mind all the stuff we’ve picked up here and there. After 18 years of living in the same house, every closet, all shelf space and every cabinet is full. I need to tidy up. Kondo’s technique asks us to organize according to preference. This is somehow freeing. I can let go if I say thank you. I can let go if it no longer “sparks joy.” The process worked with the blouse from my 40th. And it worked with the laundry room cabinet space where I have stashed stuff without any thought to category or why it went there. With nothing of high priority, items went either to the trash or to the downstairs shop with the rest of the paint supplies. Most of the laundry shelf space is now empty, a happy (if not unsettling) result. These small steps feel good. Maybe I can work my way to clothes in the over-stuffed master closet and to the big bin of “collectible” T-shirts from rock concerts that is hidden in the attic. According to media interviews, Kondo is shocked by how much stuff Americans have and how emotional we get when we unburden ourselves by letting go and throwing away. Her KonMari Method challenges us to ask the simple question, “Does this spark joy?” If not, goodbye. She breaks the de-cluttering process into categories, not by place: (Oops, I already violated that rule.) Those categories in order are: Clothes Books Papers Miscellany (How about bathroom cupboards?) Mementos (photos, scrap books etc.) She asks you to pile ALL your clothes in a big pile in a one location. Then ALL your books. ALL your kitchen stuff, and so on. Then you address each item in each pile by holding it and asking yourself, “does it spark joy.” If not, discard. She recommends discarding first, then storing later. Once the discarding is finished, designate a place for each thing that you keep. This worked for me with the closet and the cupboard. At least I tiptoed into the experience. But Baby Boomers may need a new revised book from Kondo. This new book would cover de-cluttering but also suggest how to handle the dispersal of tangible assets of real value (art, jewelry, books, dishware, cars). The new book might suggest a process for finding out what your heirs want. And a process for organizing a list to avoid fights later. Her new book might suggest how to off-load items of value such as art pieces that no family member wants, rugs that are too big for Millennial apartments, valuable furniture and collectibles. I can’t just give this stuff to Goodwill. For me, the pressure is growing. In her early 90s, my mother turned to me one day and said how sorry she was about leaving her house full of stuff for me and my sister to sort through. Her house was definitely full from top to bottom. Fortunately for me, my sister moved into the house. I only asked for a few things. My issue now with my own home is not so much clearing out clutter because I am not totally over-run but letting go of sentimental treasures. The clock is ticking. I don't want to end up with regrets, like my mother's. My pledge to myself this year is to: - Sell something on eBay. - Sell something on Craig’s list. - Invite all family members to tour the house and make a list of items they someday might want. Then update the tangible asset distribution list and give a copy to everyone affected. - Give away to charity certain items of value that might raise money for a worthy cause. According to Kondo’s book web site, she’s sold 5 million copies of “Tidying Up,” worldwide. Bless you, Marie. For MORE: For her book at Amazon.com, click here. My SMART MONEY show regarding tangible assets https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZeNE3F4PV4w text text
![]() BY JULIA ANDERSON During our Smart Money video conversations, co-hosts Joe Smith, Pat Boyle and I have covered many money-related topics. The short videos are distributed by TVCTV, the public television operation in Beaverton, Ore. Some shows include guests such as Alan Edwards from the Social Security Administration or J.D. Roth at www.getrichslowly.org. These have been great fun and are hopefully giving viewers useful information. Topics range from reverse mortgages to writing a will, selling a business to buying a franchise. We have discussed marrying after age 60 and how to keep your kids happy while doing it. Financial elder abuse and downsizing. Below are YouTube links to some of these shows. Why women should approach Social Security differently than men. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XVe2GL2p8NQhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iTPhkzjpugc Why have a will. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW60TvecB8Uhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mW60TvecB8U Timeshares: Buying and selling. What to watch out for. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDKNIszp0r8https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rDKNIszp0r8 Social Security 101 .https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiovwBv14Nchttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QiovwBv14Nc How to Hold a family money meeting. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWVYIqEBrJkhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xWVYIqEBrJk May to December relationships require special planning. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15YN57sTXQ8https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=15YN57sTXQ8 Reverse Mortgages: Questions to ask. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SIPSdRNB_NYhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rdvPU_yRL3A Charitable giving in Retirement https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnG-K5iTv_8https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jnG-K5iTv_8 Evaluating an Early Job Buyout Offer https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_58s0Xl4p0Ahttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_58s0Xl4p0A Should you buy a franchise in retirement? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ggPZVFtnVUg These are just a few of our shows: For More: Visit TVCTV public television, Beaverton, Ore. |
Julia anderson
I meet women all the time who face job and money transitions and who want to do them right. It’s about building confidence and taking charge of the future. This is your money. No one cares more than you do! Archives
February 2024
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