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Source: Center for Research in Securities Prices
JUDGING BY THE FACT you're actually reading this Web page, our guess is you're ready to learn about the wisdom of investing.

You've probably heard that you need to start early to prepare for your retirement or save for big expenses (house, car, school). And you've likely heard your fill about the fortunes being made in the stock market -- some of them by people you figured were dumb as the day is long.

But even if you are excited about getting started, jumping in can be scary. That's why this set of investing courses begins with a simple dose of encouragement: With enough time and a little discipline, you are all but guaranteed to make a considerable amount of money in the markets. All you need is patience and a willingness to put your savings to work in a balanced portfolio of securities tailored to your age and circumstances.


Sources: Bankrate.com, Center for
Research in Securities Prices
To see why, you have to understand how investing works. It's not about throwing all your money into the "next Microsoft," hoping to make a killing. And it has nothing to do with getting a stock tip from your homeboy and clicking over to E*Trade to buy as many shares as you can get.

Investing isn't gambling -- it's taking reasonable risks to earn steady rewards. As we'll see, it works because buying stocks and bonds allows you to participate in the relentless growth of the world's economy, which hardly follows a straight line, but does trend upward over time. It's also true that the longer you stay invested, the faster your money will grow. This neat trick -- called the Power of Compounding -- is a mathematical certainty, something you can bank on.

We'll explore these concepts in the following two sections, but before you move on, we encourage you to take a moment -- if you haven't already -- to play with the applets on this page. The first is simple. It lets you see how much you'd have today if you had invested your money in stocks back in 1980. Given that this group has an average yearly return of 16.3%, the growth is remarkable -- and much higher than usual. The other compares the yearly rate of return for all stocks (which is 11% from 1926 through 2000) with that of a typical savings account (2%). As you can easily see when you zoom out to 25 years, if your money is sitting in a bank somewhere, you're definitely missing out big.



 


 

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