海角大神

A little fuzzy on investing? Here's how to find your focus.

Getting started in investing can seem a little overwhelming, but there are guidelines to help you find your way.

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Henny Ray Abrams/AP/File
In this Aug. 19 file photograph, traders work on the trading floor of the New York Stock Exchange in New York. If investing seems overwhelming, try these tips to get started.

If you鈥檝e read the reader mailbags for a while, you鈥檝e noticed that I often get messages from people who have worked their way into a good financial place and now have some money to invest, often for the first time in their life.

They look around, watch CNBC, read investment advice online and in books, and still aren鈥檛 sure exactly what to do. Should they keep the money in cash, or buy a CD from the bank? Should they invest in stocks, and if so, should they buy individual stocks or put money in a mutual fund? What about bonds? What about real estate?

The options seem overwhelming, as do the potential risks and rewards. I鈥檓 going to offer a few ideas that I鈥檝e learned over the years that will help anyone that鈥檚 just starting to invest.

First of all, there is nothing that will guarantee you a great return. If anyone is guaranteeing you a large return 鈥 and by large, I mean more than a couple percentage points higher than what you鈥檙e getting in a savings account 鈥 be very, very wary. Such investments usually have some sort of giant drawback, like losing all access to your balance for a very long period, hidden and/or extensive costs, or hidden risks that aren鈥檛 being directly revealed. Leave such 鈥渢oo good to be true鈥 investments for people who are actually skilled investors 鈥 and they probably won鈥檛 be investing either.

Instead, most investments beyond a savings account or a CD offer potentially strong gains coupled with risk. That鈥檚 just part of the equation. What usually happens is that the better the estimated returns on an investment, the greater the risk.

Let me spell it out for you in detail using a specific example. The Vanguard 500 is a long-established index fund that essentially invests in 500 of the largest publicly traded companies in the United States. If you look at the , you鈥檒l see that (for the quarter ending June 30, 2010) money invested in the fund has earned 14.33% over the previous year. That鈥檚 a very nice return.

At the same time, though, money invested in the fund has earned an average of -9.84% the last three years. Yes, each year (on average), an investor has lost almost 10% over the past three. Even over ten years, the average is -1.67%. Over the lifetime of the fund, though (since the mid-1970s), money in the fund has returned an average of 10.10% per year.

So what does that mean for you? It means that over the course of some years, you鈥檒l have a 15% positive return. Other years will have a -30% return. Over some decades, it鈥檒l average out to a nice positive 鈥 10% or so. Over other decades, like the 鈥00s that had two economic downturns, it鈥檒l average out to a very low positive or even a negative.

Sometimes you can afford that kind of risk. If you鈥檙e many, many years from your goal, that kind of risk is fine. If you鈥檙e 25 and investing for retirement, you鈥檙e going to get enough great years between now and retirement that you鈥檙e pretty likely to make up for the losses of the bad years. The key is to just ignore the year-to-year losses and gains and just be patient.

However, if you鈥檙e closer to your goal, you can鈥檛 afford that kind of risk. If you鈥檙e saving for a goal that鈥檚 going to happen in five years and you need to have the balance you鈥檝e already saved up, you鈥檙e making a big mistake to put it at this kind of risk. You need to keep it safe, even if you鈥檙e losing the potential to have a big year.

You also have to look at your debts in comparison. Right now is a great time to pay down debt. Why? The 鈥渞eturn鈥 you get from debt repayments is equal to the interest on that debt. So, if you have a debt that鈥檚 costing you 8% interest, an early payment on that debt essentially earns a guaranteed 8% return. Why? If your balance is lower (and that鈥檚 what an early payment does), the lower balance will generate that much less interest that you鈥檒l have to pay. It鈥檚 important to note, of course, that actually acquiring new debt is really, really bad 鈥 I鈥檓 looking at debts here as water under the bridge and merely a problem to be solved.

Also, you can never, ever have too much money put away for retirement. It is never bad to over-save for retirement, because you can always use that money during the early years of your retirement for whatever things are most important to you knowing that you鈥檙e secure for life.

Thus, here would be my very general suggestions for someone with a chunk of money to invest.

The first thing I would do is aim for debt freedom. Why? Paying ahead on debts is probably the best stable investment that people have right now. Get rid of your debts 鈥 all of them.

If you鈥檙e debt free, I鈥檇 sit down and look at my life goals. Are there any big goals that I want to achieve in my life? Am I going to buy a house? Do I want to start a business, or launch a new career? Maybe you鈥檙e really happy with how things are right now. If you have a strong overriding goal, keep the money in savings and have it help you reach that goal a lot sooner. Most likely, the goal will be short term enough that you shouldn鈥檛 put it into stocks or other risky investments, for the reasons discussed above.

If you don鈥檛 have an obvious overriding goal, open up a Roth IRA and put the money in there. A Roth IRA is a simple retirement account that anyone can open 鈥 you just sign up for one with an investment house like Vanguard, much like signing up for a savings account at a bank. You put money in the account from your checking account, then tell the investment house how you want the money in the account to be invested. The best option for most investors is a Target Retirement fund that matches your estimated retirement date. You can contribute $5,000 a year to a Roth IRA 鈥 if you have more than that, put it in a savings account and make contributions each year.

There are two things that people virtually never regret: freedom from debt and plenty of money saved for retirement. If you have money just sitting around, you鈥檝e got two good things to do with it, right there.

A final tip: read. Pick up a well-regarded book on investing (here鈥檚 ) and read it at your own pace. Go slow and make sure you understand every sentence. Use Wikipedia and Google to help you understand terms. This is perhaps the best thing you can possibly do with your time as a beginning investor.

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