Investing in Stock Market Is a Process not a Gamble
Investing in the stock market is either the most dangerous use of your money or a guaranteed (almost) path to millionaire status.
Which depiction of investing in the stock market you hear depends on whether the market is rising or falling and whether you are listening to uninformed media outlets or over-zealous investment sales people.
Obviously, neither view of investing is correct. While you may know this is true, the frequent exposure to each can warp your thinking.
In a rising market, watch out for uninformed optimism that suggests the market will continue rising forever. Likewise, in a falling market the pessimists are sure there is no bottom and prices will continue falling.
Long-term investors understand that investing is a process that seldom is concerned with whether the stock market is up or down on any given day.
That distinguishes investing with trading, which is only concerned with short-term changes in prices.
Incidentally, traders feed on uninformed investors who jump into and out of the market with no plan other than it seemed like a good idea at the time.
Investing in stocks carries some benefits and some dangers, however if you approach the stock market with a long-term strategy you may be able to increase the benefits and reduce the dangers.
Investing is the proactive use of your money to make more money or, to say it another way, it is your money working for you.
Investing is different from saving. Saving is a passive activity, even though it uses the same principle of compounding.
Saving is more focused on safety of principal (the amount you start out with) and less concerned with return.
Your focus in investing is on return and can run the spectrum from conservative to very aggressive in terms of risk. One way you measure results is by the expected return weighed against the anticipated risks.
It is easy to slip into an unnecessarily complex discussion about whether a particular financial transaction was an investment or a savings deposit. However, it is important to understand that investing has some distinctive characteristics, which separate it from pure savings. Since we are discussing stocks, I'll limit the characteristics to that type of investment:
Each of these characteristics sets investing in stocks apart from savings in several different ways.
Ownership
When you buy stock, you are buying a piece of a company - you become a part owner. This ownership gives you certain rights, including voting on important matters before the company and participating in the profits if the company distributes dividends.
Virtually no savings instruments give you ownership. You may own a bank CD, but you don't own part of the bank. You may own a U.S. Treasury bond, but you don't own the government.
Upside Potential
When you own stock, you participate in the growth of the company. As the value of the company increases, so does you investment. If profits increase, you may receive bigger dividend checks. The stock price may continue to rise for a long period. Many of the early employees of Microsoft are millionaires because their stock has gone up dramatically.
If you have a bank CD that pays 3%, it is unlikely the bank's president is going to call you one day and say, 'we've had a great year, so I'm raising your interest rate to 6%.'
Risk
Along with the potential for extraordinary gain is the potential for loss. These two go hand in hand. You can lose money investing in stocks.
If the thought of losing money makes your stomach knot up, stick to savings instruments. However, you should know that even the safest savings instrument carries unseen risks. Most savings instruments trade security for return, meaning they pay very little. When you factor in inflation and taxes, many so-called safe savings instruments return almost nothing and some can actually lose ground.
Which depiction of investing in the stock market you hear depends on whether the market is rising or falling and whether you are listening to uninformed media outlets or over-zealous investment sales people.
Obviously, neither view of investing is correct. While you may know this is true, the frequent exposure to each can warp your thinking.
In a rising market, watch out for uninformed optimism that suggests the market will continue rising forever. Likewise, in a falling market the pessimists are sure there is no bottom and prices will continue falling.
Long-term investors understand that investing is a process that seldom is concerned with whether the stock market is up or down on any given day.
That distinguishes investing with trading, which is only concerned with short-term changes in prices.
Incidentally, traders feed on uninformed investors who jump into and out of the market with no plan other than it seemed like a good idea at the time.
Investing in stocks carries some benefits and some dangers, however if you approach the stock market with a long-term strategy you may be able to increase the benefits and reduce the dangers.
Investing is the proactive use of your money to make more money or, to say it another way, it is your money working for you.
Investing is different from saving. Saving is a passive activity, even though it uses the same principle of compounding.
Saving is more focused on safety of principal (the amount you start out with) and less concerned with return.
Your focus in investing is on return and can run the spectrum from conservative to very aggressive in terms of risk. One way you measure results is by the expected return weighed against the anticipated risks.
It is easy to slip into an unnecessarily complex discussion about whether a particular financial transaction was an investment or a savings deposit. However, it is important to understand that investing has some distinctive characteristics, which separate it from pure savings. Since we are discussing stocks, I'll limit the characteristics to that type of investment:
- Ownership
- Upside potential
- Risk
Each of these characteristics sets investing in stocks apart from savings in several different ways.
Ownership
When you buy stock, you are buying a piece of a company - you become a part owner. This ownership gives you certain rights, including voting on important matters before the company and participating in the profits if the company distributes dividends.
Virtually no savings instruments give you ownership. You may own a bank CD, but you don't own part of the bank. You may own a U.S. Treasury bond, but you don't own the government.
Upside Potential
When you own stock, you participate in the growth of the company. As the value of the company increases, so does you investment. If profits increase, you may receive bigger dividend checks. The stock price may continue to rise for a long period. Many of the early employees of Microsoft are millionaires because their stock has gone up dramatically.
If you have a bank CD that pays 3%, it is unlikely the bank's president is going to call you one day and say, 'we've had a great year, so I'm raising your interest rate to 6%.'
Risk
Along with the potential for extraordinary gain is the potential for loss. These two go hand in hand. You can lose money investing in stocks.
If the thought of losing money makes your stomach knot up, stick to savings instruments. However, you should know that even the safest savings instrument carries unseen risks. Most savings instruments trade security for return, meaning they pay very little. When you factor in inflation and taxes, many so-called safe savings instruments return almost nothing and some can actually lose ground.
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