Investing


If you’re new here, you may want to learn what this site is about. I encourage you to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!Writing for Kiplinger.com last month, Erin Burt laid out some tips to help conquer your fear of investing. This article is specifically aimed at those who are nervous about [...]

[read all of How to Conquer Your Fear of Investing]

This is a guest post by G.E. Miller, head author of the personal finance blog 20-Something Finance. It’s a nice companion to my article this morning about the extraordinary power of compound interest. Both articles are a part of Financial Literacy Month.
Before we fire off the gun to start the ‘Compound Return Marathon’, let’s cover [...]

[read all of The Compound Return Marathon: Which Retirement Strategy Will Win?]

If you’re young, you may not think you need to open a retirement account. You probably think it’s easier to worry about it five years from now. Or ten. You’re wrong. No matter what your age, now is the time to begin saving for retirement. In The Automatic Millionaire, David Bach writes, “The single biggest [...]

[read all of The Extraordinary Power of Compound Interest]

Because I thought it would be a great source of material for Get Rich Slowly, last fall I enrolled in a lifetime membership to the American Association of Individual Investors. AAII is a non-profit founded in 1978 to provide individual investors — people like you and me — with tools and knowledge to better approach [...]

[read all of The Individual Investor’s Guide to the Top Mutual Funds]

“What’s the safest possible thing that I can do with my money?” wonders Afroblanco over at Ask Metafilter:

I take bearishness to an extreme. Having witnessed the 2000 tech crash, I have no faith in the stock market or the US economy. I keep all of my money (USD) in a savings account. However, with [...]

[read all of What’s the Safest Thing I Can Do with My Money?]

This is a guest post from Kent Thune, The Financial Philosopher, who applies timeless wisdom and inspiration to investing, personal finance, and the economy.
“God grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change, courage to change the things I can, and the wisdom to know the difference.” — Reinhold Niebuhr
Recent volatility in the [...]

[read all of The Number One Impact on Your Investments is YOU]

As you might expect, most of my personal investments are safely tucked away in index funds, those mutual funds designed to track the performance of a particular stock market index. This is a smart way for the average investor to achieve solid growth over the long-term.
However, I continue to hold about 5% of my investment [...]

[read all of The Kitchen-Table Investor: Wealth-Building Strategies for Working Families]

This is a guest-post from Dylan Ross. Dylan is a Certified Financial Planner and owner of Swan Financial Planning, LLC a registered investment adviser in New Jersey. He is an active commenter at Get Rich Slowly, both on the blog and in the forums.
“Fees are the investor’s enemy,” J.D. recently told me. He’s right. There [...]

[read all of How Lower Fees and Expenses with Index Funds Could Mean 33% More to Spend in Retirement]

When the Federal Reserve cuts short-term interest rates, as it did yesterday, you feel the pinch in your savings account. My ING Direct account, for example, has dropped from 4.50% when I opened it to 3.65% today. It may drop again.
Brian from The Job Bored dropped a line with a money hack for those who [...]

[read all of Money Hack: Use CDs to Beat Falling Interest Rates]

Vintek pointed me to a Bill Moyers interview with John Bogle, founder of The Vanguard Group and patron saint of index funds. (He’s also one of my financial heroes.) Mostly, the conversation revolves around the problems with the modern U.S. economy:

BILL MOYERS: What is the job of capitalism?
JOHN BOGLE: Well, ultimately, the job of [...]

[read all of Does the Financial Industry Subtract Value from the Economy?]

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