Tag: dividend

  • Should you should KISS your investment strategy?

    Should you should KISS your investment strategy?

    You know what K.I.S.S. stands for

    Keep It Simple Silly

    And you thought I was going to insult you!

    We’ve both heard that “serious investors” have complicated and advanced investing products and strategies which enable them to make more than us mere mortal investors.

    • Hedge Funds
    • REITs
    • High Yield Bonds
    • FOREX trading
    • Commodities
    • Penny Stocks
    • Etc, etc, etc

    I will admit that there is potential that someone could make a lot more with these. There is also the potential that you could loose it all!

    I have one overriding investment philosophy that I teach my clients:

    Never invest in anything you don’t understand well enough to teach it to someone else.

    Think about it; if you have a thorough understanding of your investments, how they work in the market, and what makes them ‘go up’ or ‘go down’ then you are a lot less likely to panic and worry when the Dow Jones dips. In fact, you might even see a silver lining in market drops!

    It is possible to learn all the ins-and-outs of the more complex investments, but what will it gain you? Do you have the time and desire to become an expert? Or the time and desire to manage those investments?

    I’ve been trained in all that stuff (through the Certified Financial Adviser program) and I could teach you a lot of it, but I still don’t have a “sophisticated” investment strategy.

    Because I don’t have the time to manage my portfolio every day and want to keep my risk to a manageable level, while taking advantage of the long term growth of the market, I stick with mutual funds.

    Mutual funds are easy to understand, have high diversification (my eggs are in lots of different baskets), and are easy to invest with. I even invest in mutual funds that cover different market sectors to increase my diversification even more! (If you are not sure what a mutual fund is, please ask!)

    Boring? Yes. Simple? You bet! Do I know enough to teach you how they work? Of course! Give me a call and I’ll teach you today! Then you, too, can have confidence in your investments!

    What are your thoughts?

  • What is a Stock?

    Stocks, bonds, Wall Street, investing, stock brokers, mutual funds, commodities, futures, options, and hedge funds; words we’ve all heard on the nightly news, TV shows, movies, and radio talk shows.  Do you really understand what they all mean, not just what popular culture says they are?  If not, you are in the majority of Americans.  Most people have never been taught much, if anything about them, and are content to grab bits and pieces of info from the news and political pundits, or maybe they just watched the movie “Wall Street.”

    But that’s not you; you are here trying to learn something, to expand your understanding of all things relating to Personal Finance.  Today I’ll do my best to explain a bit about Stocks.

    A stock is a share of ownership in a corporation.  The owner of a share of stock is a part owner of a company.  Yes, you can own (part of) Home Depot!  If a company has 100,000 shares of stock, each share represents 1/100,000 ownership of that company.  Most major corporations that are household names have many more than 100,000 shares; Home Depot has about 1.38 Billion!

    Because the stock represents ownership of a company, its value is based on the value of the company (I won’t go into stock valuation techniques here, it’s complicated enough to take a semester long college course to teach).  As the market values the company more or less (usually due to the company’s performance), the value of the stock increases or decreases, respectively.

    One way stock investors earn money is by the rise of the value of the stock (it’s ‘return’).  Another way is through dividends.  When a company makes a profit and decides to share it with it’s owners (stock owners), it pays out dividends.  The amount an investor receives is based on the number of shares he or she owns.

    That is basically what a stock is, pretty simple, right?  If you want to know a basic history of the stocks and the stock market, and what a stock market is, this short article on Investopedia.com  is written without a lot of industry jargon.

    Please let me know what you think of this post: was it too long, too short, too basic, too in-depth, etc.  Also, if you have any questions, post them below and I’ll respond with the answer!