Sec Guide To Savings and Investing
Sec Guide To Savings and Investing
Sec Guide To Savings and Investing
• a home
• a car
• an education
• a comfortable retirement
• your children
• medical or other emergencies
• periods of unemployment
• caring for parents
Make your own list and then think about which goals are the
most important to you. List your most important goals first.
Decide how many years you have to meet each specific goal,
because when you save or invest you’ll need to find a savings or
If you don’t know where you are going, you may end up somewhere you don’t want
to be. To end up where you want to be, you’ll need a roadmap, a financial plan.
1. ____________________________ _______
2. ____________________________ _______
3. ____________________________ _______
4. ____________________________ _______
5. ____________________________ _______
Sit down and take an honest look at your entire financial situ-
ation. You can never take a journey without knowing where
you’re starting from, and a journey to financial security is no
different. You’ll need to figure out on paper your current situ-
ation—what you own and what you owe. You’ll be creating a
“net worth statement.” On one side of the page, list what you
own. These are your “assets.” And on the other side list what
you owe other people, your “liabilities” or debts.
The next step is to keep track of your income and your ex-
penses for every month. Write down what you and others in
your family earn, and then your monthly expenses.
If you are spending all your income, and never have money to
save or invest, you’ll need to look for ways to cut back on your
expenses. When you watch where you spend your money, you
will be surprised how small everyday expenses that you can do
without add up over a year.
Monthly Expenses
Savings ________________
Investments ________________
Housing ________________
Rent or mortgage ________________
Electricity ________________
Gas/oil ________________
Telephone ________________
Water/sewer ________________
Property tax ________________
Furniture ________________
Food ________________
Transportation ________________
Loans ________________
Insurance ________________
Education ________________
Recreation ________________
Child care ________________
Health care ________________
Gifts ________________
Other ________________
TOTAL ________________
If you buy a cup of coffee every day for $1.00 (an awfully good price
for a decent cup of coffee, nowadays), that adds up to $365.00 a year.
If you saved that $365.00 for just one year, and put it into a savings
account or investment that earns 5% a year, it would grow to $465.84
by the end of 5 years, and by the end of 30 years, to $1,577.50.
That’s the power of “compounding.” With compound interest,
you earn interest on the money you save and on the interest that money
earns. Over time, even a small amount saved can add up to big money.
If you are willing to watch what you spend and look for
little ways to save on a regular schedule, you can make money
grow. You just did it with one cup of coffee.
If a small cup of coffee can make such a huge difference, start
looking at how you could make your money grow if you de-
cided to spend less on other things and save those extra dollars.
If you buy on impulse, make a rule that you’ll always wait
24 hours to buy anything. You may lose your desire to buy it
after a day. And try emptying your pockets and wallet of spare
change at the end of each day. You’ll be surprised how quickly
those nickels and dimes add up!
Saving
Your “savings” are usually put into the safest places, or prod-
ucts, that allow you access to your money at any time. Sav-
ings products include savings accounts, checking accounts, and
certificates of deposit. Some deposits in these products may be
insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation or the
National Credit Union Administration. But there’s a tradeoff
for security and ready availability. Your money is paid a low
wage as it works for you.
After paying off credit cards or other high interest debt,
most smart investors put enough money in a savings product to
cover an emergency, like sudden unemployment. Some make
sure they have up to six months of their income in savings so
that they know it will absolutely be there for them when they
need it.
But how “safe” is a savings account if you leave all of your
money there for a long time, and the interest it earns doesn’t
keep up with inflation? What if you save a dollar when it can
buy a loaf of bread. But years later when you withdraw that
dollar plus the interest you earned on it, it can only buy half
a loaf? This is why many people put some of their money in
savings, but look to investing so they can earn more over long
periods of time, say three years or longer.
Investing
When you “invest,” you have a greater chance of losing your
money than when you “save.” The money you invest in se-
curities, mutual funds, and other similar investments typically
is not federally insured. You could lose your “principal”—the
amount you’ve invested. But you also have the opportunity to
earn more money.
Savings Investments
Real estate
Stocks Bonds
If the company profits or is perceived as The company promises to return money
having strong potential, its stock may go plus interest.
up in value and pay dividends. You may
make more money than from the bonds.
Risk: The company may do poorly, and Risk: If the company goes bankrupt,
you’ll lose a portion or all of your invest- your money may be lost. But if there is
ment. any money left, you will be paid before
stockholders.
You take your time and make a careful decision. Only time
will tell if you made the right choice. You’ll keep a close eye on
the company and keep the stock as long as the company keeps
selling a quality car that consumers want to drive, and it can
make an acceptable profit from its sales.
One way that investors can obtain for themselves nearly the full
returns of the market is to invest in an “index fund.” This is a
fund that does not attempt to pick and choose stocks of indi-
vidual companies based upon the research of the fund managers
or to try to time the market’s movements. An index fund seeks
to equal the returns of a major stock index, such as the Standard
& Poor’s 500, the Wilshire 5000, or the Russell 3000. Through
computer programmed buying and selling, an index fund tracks
A ROADMAP TO YOUR JOURNEY TO FINANCIAL SECURITY | 17
the holdings of a chosen index, and so shows the same returns as
an index minus, of course, the annual fees involved in running
the fund. The fees for index mutual funds and ETFs generally are
much lower than the fees for managed funds.
Historical data shows that index funds have, primarily because
of their lower fees, enjoyed higher returns than the average man-
aged fund. But, like any investment, index funds involve risk.
Before You Invest Always Check with the SEC and Your State’s
Securities Regulator:
Is the investment registered?
Have the people who own or manage the investment been in trouble in the past?
Has that person been in trouble with the SEC, my state, or other investors in the past?
1. Who will make the final decisions about what you buy and
sell in your account?
You will have the final say on investment decisions unless you
give “discretionary authority” to your broker. Discretionary au-
thority allows your broker to invest your money without con-
sulting you about the price, the type of security, the amount,
and when to buy or sell. Do not give discretionary authority to
your broker without seriously considering the risks involved
in turning control over your money to another person.
SEC NASAA
100 F Street, N.E. 750 First Street, N.E., Suite 1140
Washington, D.C. 20549-0213 Washington, D.C. 20002
Toll-free: (800) SEC-0330 Phone: (202) 737-0900
Website: Investor.gov Website: www.nasaa.org
1-800-732-0330
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