* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Basics of Investing 2012
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
The Basics of Investing Stocks, Bonds & Cash Accounts Why Invest (save) Money? • Purchasing power = amount of goods/services money buys • Money (savings) loses purchasing power over time – Prices for goods rise on average +2.5% per year – rising prices is called inflation • Investors must earn more than the rate of inflation for purchasing power to rise Types of Investments: 4 Asset Classes • Stocks: – Over 5000 individual stocks to choose from! • Bonds: – Government bonds, corporate bonds, mortgage bonds • Cash Accounts: – Savings accounts, CD’s, money markets • Real Estate – Residential, commercial, houses, apartments, etc…. Reading: Intro. To Investing ANSWER KEY: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) B C C B A C D Real & Nominal return per year by Asset Class 1925 - 2012 Returns before inflation = nominal return .= real return Savings Account Risk vs. Reward? • Holding period = when do you need your money back? – Time horizon determines which asset class you should invest in • The longer the holding period----the more risk you should take! – Stocks = long term investment (5-years or longer) – Bonds = medium term investment ( 1-3 years) – Bank CD’s = short term investment (30 days to 2 years) Asset Allocation Process of picking sectors to invest in Cash Account Bonds Stocks no risk med. risk high risk I think I’m brilliant very high risk Rule of “70” • 70 divided by RETURN = # Years for money to double • • • • • Money Doubles in: 70/2% 70/5% 70/10% 70/15% = 35 years = 14 years = 7 years = 4.6 years Average return of stock market over last 75 years How Money Grows! • Money grows exponentially as it compounds • $10,000 invested at 4% return for 30-Years: • $33,000 • $10,000 invested at 15% return for 30-years • $875,000 The power of compound interest! Bonds • Bonds: are a loan to a Gov’t or business where you earn interest every year until you are paid back. • If the company goes bankrupt => you usually will not be paid back! You buy a Bond $1,000,000 cash U.S. Gov’t 5-Year Bond Plus $1 million in 5 years $1.0 million turns into $1.1 over 5 Years Janet Yellen leaves rates at ZERO What does the Fed policy do to savers? 0.0% Bond Prices • U.S. Government sells bonds to “borrow money” • Bond prices move inversely with interest rates! • Interest rates ↓ => Bond Prices ↑ You buy a Bond $1,000,000 cash $20,000 interest per year U.S. Gov’t 5-Year Bond