5 Things You Need To Do Before You Start Investing

in investing •  7 years ago 

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1: Have Cash

You need to have enough cash to pay for your normal expenses. You need to have an emergency fund.

What you want to avoid is having your day to day finances affect your investment portfolio.

You can research and find out exactly why you think an investment will increase in the future, but experience tells me that it often goes down even further and can certainly take longer than you predicted.

So that means you have to be financially secure enough to let your investments grow unhindered by your normal finances.

To do this you have a few months to a years' worth of living expenses set aside. Exactly how much depends on your personal situation and how secure your income is. But I will say that 3 months worth is probably a good amount to aim for.

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2: Pay Off Debt (Especially High-Interest Debt)

Debt is an investment return killer.

Whatever the highest interest rate debt you currently hold is the amount you need to beat to turn a profit. On the other side, if your investment loses money your debt interest rate magnifies your losses.

Let me explain.

If you have a credit card debt at 15% then you need to earn at least 15% just to break even! This is because you have to pay that 15% interest on your loan. Effectively, just by paying off that debt you are earning a guaranteed 15% return on your money!

Now if your investment LOSES money (it happens to us all), not only do you lose whatever percentage the investment went down you also lost the interest rate you are paying on your debt.

So if you lost 5% on your investment and you have credit card debt at 15%, your effective loss is NOT just that 5% but a full 20%!

So you see, paying off high-interest rate debt is something you must do before you start investing. I know it is not as sexy as investing, but it is the smart thing to do.

A great place to track your debt, expenses, and investments is Personal Capital. I use it almost daily to keep tabs on my net worth.

If you haven't signed up yet, use this link to get $20 when you do (I will too).

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3: Know Yourself (Risk)

Before you start investing you need to understand at least two things about yourself, your risk capacity and your risk tolerance.

Your risk capacity is your financial ability to take a loss on your investments. This means that you can afford to lose every single dollar you invest. You don't want to risk not meeting your current financial obligations because you were counting on your investments to pay for it.

Your risk tolerance is your emotional capability to take a loss. You don't want to be a panic seller. Investments should be made based on logic and fundamentals, not emotions.

You can improve your risk tolerance by improving your financial situation. By having little to no debt and a healthy emergency fund you insulate yourself from these market fluctuations.

Another way you can improve your personal risk tolerance is by thoroughly researching your investments before you put in one penny. This brings me to the next point.

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4: Research and Plan

It's easy to start investing, but just dropping your hard-earned money in whatever sounds good will lead to mistakes.

  • First, you need to know how much of your income you are going to set aside for investing.
  • Second, how are you going to split your money into your different investments. Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Crypto, Precious Metals, Collectibles – what percentage for each?
  • Third, what type of investing strategy do you want to follow? Growth, Income, Dividend Growth, Landlord or Flipper are some strategies. You also want to decide upon your investment timeline – how long you plan to hold any particular investment or at what price you will sell.
  • Then you need to know what type of investment vehicle you are going to put that money in. You have plenty to choose from, Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, 401(k) – 403(b) – TSP etc., Brokerage, and even how you are going to store some physical or crypto assets.
  • Fifth, you need to know how much time you are going to put into picking your investments. Are you going to index, pick sector ETFs, mutual funds, or pick individual investments?

There is a lot to consider and it is easy to make mistakes. However, don't get overwhelmed and then just not invest. It is still better to invest than to not invest. When you are just starting out with small amounts, it is the best time to be making mistakes and learning from them.

Plus, most aren't life-shattering.

For instance, when I started investing I held some REITs (Real Estate Investment Trust)in my brokerage account when it is more beneficial tax-wise to hold them in an IRA or rIRA.

I now hold all my REITs in a Roth IRA.

See, no real biggie. It cost me some time and some transaction fees, but I had a lot more money than if I had not started investing at all.

5: Pick your Investment Platform

Interactive Brokers, TD Ameritrade, Charles Schwab, Ally Invest, TradeStation, Coinbase, Bitfinex, and plenty more.

Some things to consider are ease of use, services, the information presented about each investment, and fees.

Avoiding high fees is of particular importance. You want to invest on a platform that has little to no fees. That is why I invest mostly with Robinhood, as they have ZERO fees.

Imagine you have $200 to invest and you are charged $5 for each buy and sell. That means that your investment has to go up by 5% just for you to break even! ($5 for the buy and $5 for the sell is $10. $10 is 5% of $200)

Now with Robinhood rolling out an integrated zero-fee crypto trading platform, they are only getting better.

If you haven't signed up for Robinhood yet, you can use this link and get a free random share of stock when you do (I will too). There is even a small chance of getting a share of Apple or Warren Buffet's Berkshire Hathaway.

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  1. Don't be greedy. Greed can blind your judgement even if you did all things right that you wrote. Nice article :-)

…says the man who self-upvoted his own comment.

Self Upvoting would be greed in my view, only if you reward author less than your comment. I am upvoting with same voting power articles that I like and my comments. Like this I am supporting authors and monetizing my investment in STEEM. Maybe you think different and that is OK...

Upvoted ($0.21) and resteemed by @investorsclub

Join the Investors Club if you are interested in investing.

Thanks!

Indeed..high payment for crypto exchange..and i experienced that..so im looking for some crypto exchange that has low of payment.😊

Let me know what you find.

How fast are the trades excuted on RobinHood for cyrpto? One of the reasons I stayed away before was the batch processing on the buy or sell side was too risky for me. I like to know and control my price a bit more.

I don't know the exact times, but it is quick for me. You can set a price limit and it will buy at that price for more control.

Some nice advice here.

On the credit card thing... there are some good interest free deals out there... I've currently got $10K on a 2 yr inteterest free deal - and enough easily liquifiable investments to pay it off when the term ends, of course!

Seemed rude not to take them up on the offer - that $10K invested at 5% a year is another $100 for basically doing naff all!

Dyou do peer to peer? I've got about $10K in - to small businesses - 6.9% return - quite secure I think if you set the risk level appropriately!

$100?

$10K at 5% is 500 per year, so over two years that is $1K!

I do have some peer to peer personal loans, but am slowly getting out of it. Too much crap to deal with for the effort. I still am interested in the peer to peer real estate platforms though.

Oh yeah... $1000 - even better!

I just put my business peer to peer an auto invest. Funding Circle is what I use... it works well for me, but you'll get a similar thing with property I guess.

I might have a punt on some precious metals too. Feel like this is missing from my portfolio, gold silver platinum and the like.

P.S. If you want a nice hussle, I can recommend matched betting, that'd keep you occupied for a few months! And world cup season is a great time to start out.

very good tips on what to do before investing :)especially the research and planning

Thanks, Melissa! Hope it helps :)

You really said well and i believe its now the time to invest more money and enjoy latter.

Your risk tolerance is your emotional capability to take a loss. You don't want to be a panic seller. Investments should be made based on logic and fundamentals, not emotions.

This is real and ended we should be risk takers

You got it, Jona :)

Avoiding high fees is of particular importance

This is particularly important, I wonder if you ROI has been higher than a simple investment in SP500?

Hmm, I wonder?

Greetings from Sydney, Australia! You are a prolific poster, getonthetrain! I am in the process of starting my own personal investment tutoring sessions as I realise there is an untapped market. Many people hire financial advisors to take care of their cash and end up being fleeced as these advisors help themselves rather than their customers.

Perhaps rather than letting them part with their cash, would it not be a better idea to teach people the basics and let them take matters into their own hands?

After all, no one should be more concerned about your money than yourself!

After all, no one should be more concerned about your money than yourself!

Exactly! I never understand those that make huge amounts and yet don't understand financial basics.

All the best on your new hustle!

Great tips on investing #getonthetrain. I know I liked listening to Dave Ramsey in the past. He's pretty good as well.

Dave Ramsey is good for getting out of debt, but I would look elsewhere for investing advice as he just says mutual funds.

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

And here I am - broke as a joke and holding tiny amounts of a bunch of coins now! How did this happen? I think I have 8 coins in various places now lol. I'm not buying any of it at least. I guess I got sucked into the crypto world.

I'm here - way off topic - to ask you to support my son and I in a contest for qurator.

Can you please go to this post I'm linking and NOT vote for
@bxlphabet
@fitinfun

And then please DO vote for any of the other contestant comments.

This is a non-popularity contest and my son and I want to lose.

The best of the other comments to vote for are those at the bottom besides us. It's the number of votes - not the value - that counts. Only qurator peeps can vote. The two losers with the least votes are really the winners.

You are also eligible for this contest. If you enter – I promise we will not vote for you either :)

My strategy will be to go vote for all of my rivals over time and then bug my friends to do the same each week. This type of lobbying is not frowned upon in the contest, but let me know if you do not want reminders.

It looks like qurator contests are going to be a thing now. They have good ones!

Qurator's Toss Up Thursday #7 - Free-for-all promotion competition

Done!