The biggest reason people don't start investing is they don't understand it!
Principles that seem basic to the professional, seem foreign to the amateur.
I'm on track to earn $1,000 in dividends payments from stocks. That's my money making money without me doing a thing! 👇
I have nearly $40,000 in my taxable account — money in ETFs, precious metals, growth stocks, and dividend paying stocks.
This money has grown FAR beyond what my bank savings accounts have.
None of this would have happened if I didn't understand market terms + concepts 👇
There are a ton of books out there you could read. Lots of online resources and articles. Classes at your local college.
But many of these are too boring or complex for the average person to spend time listening to.
So whats the way to get past the barrier to entry? 👇
@CJ_Johnson17th is the best at taking complex ideas FEW understand and boiling them down to entertaining and easy to understand pieces MANY will understand.
I've spent time reading books, online resources, and videos and I STILL learned something from Chris's course.
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Saving money is something you can get better at it the more you do it.
Eventually, you can save money without having to think much about it at all.
Here’s 5 tricks I’ve used to consistently save 50%+ of my income a month:
Number 1
Write it all down. In the beginning you need to understand what you spend and why. How often. On what. That means you need money data.
When I started this I’d carry a pen and small notebook with me and I’d write the date, what I bought, and how much I spent
Number 2
Start talking to your friends and family about saving money. Talk to strangers. Talk to anyone who will talk to you about saving and spending. How much is their cell phone bill? Where’s the cheapest place for groceries? What’s their favorite way to save?
We suck at money because we’re afraid to talk about money. Talk about it with people and you’ll learn what they know.
Here are 5 quick ways to hack your mindset so you’ll spend less and save more
#1: Put a ‘time roadblock’ in front of your spending
I always wait a few days before buying anything new (that’s a want vs need)
Often after a few days, I don’t even want it anymore
Mr. Money Mustache calls this putting stuff in the spending machine to slow it down
#2: Separate wants vs needs (and be honest!)
It’s okay to want something. But it’s not okay to pretend you NEED something you WANT. Basic necessities like food, shelter, clothing, etc. are needs. Most other things are wants.
The Dogs of the Dow is a high yield dividend technique that most investors don’t know about
Its outperformed the stock market in some years, and can be a great way to find high yield dividend stocks
I’ll walk you thru the steps here \\thread\\
At the beginning of the year, the investor picks out the 10 highest yielding stocks on the Dow Jones Industrial Average and invests an equal amount into each
Highest yield refers to the stocks yearly dividend payout percentage compared to its share price
It’s called the Dogs of the Dow because stocks with a high yield are thought of as down on their luck (aka in the doghouse)
But there are be times when stocks go up in dividend yield and are undervalued
Here are the Dogs of the Dow and their dividend yields
50% of my investing portfolio is in index funds/ETFs
This gives me a diversified base to invest from, so worst case I will still have those if my other investments fail
Here are my Top 5 ETFs:
$VTI
THIS is the fund. If I held just one, it’d be this one. It’s vanguards Total US stock market fund.
Owning shares of these mean I own small pieces of every publicly traded company in the United States.
This is a great long term hold with growth and a small dividend.
$VXUS
This is vanguards international fund (basically exposure to the world minus the United States). I hold less of this than VTI (I try to keep it to 20% of my $VTI exposure or less). I hope the US continues to outperform but if not this gives me exposure to the globe.