A letter from sage investor Richard Russell (Dow Theory Letters) titled "Rich Man, Poor Man."
In the investment world, wealthy investors have one major advantage over the little guy, the stock market amateur, and the neophyte speculator. The advantage wealthy investors possess is they DON'T NEED THE MARKETS. I can't begin to tell you what a huge difference that makes, both in one's mental attitude and in the actual handling of one's account. The wealthy investor doesn't need the market, because he already has all the income he needs. He has money coming in via bonds, T-bills, money market funds, real estate, and stocks. In other words, the wealthy investor never feels pressured to 'make money' in the market.
The wealthy investor tends to be an expert on values. When bonds are cheap, and bond yields are irresistibly high, he buys bonds. When stocks are on the bargain table and stock yields are attractive, he buys stocks. When real estate is a great value, he buys real estate. When great art or fine jewelry is on the 'giveaway table,' he buys them. In other words, the wealthy investor puts his money where the values are. And if there are no outstanding values, the wealthy investor waits. He can afford to wait. He has money coming in daily, weekly, monthly. In other words, he doesn't need the market. He knows what he is looking for, and he doesn't mind waiting weeks, months or years (they call it patience).
What about the little guy? This fellow always feels pressured to 'make money,' to 'force the market to do something for him.' When this fellow isn't buying stocks at 3% yields, he's off to Vegas or Atlantic City trying to win at craps or he's spending ten bucks a week on lottery tickets or he's 'investing' in some crackpot real estate scheme with an outfit that his bowling buddy told him about. And because the little guy is forcing the market to do something for him, he's a consistent and constant loser. The little guy doesn't understand values, so he always overpays. He loves to gamble, so he always has the odds against him. He doesn't understand compounding and he doesn't understand money. He's the typical American, and he's perpetually in debt.
The little guy is in hock, and he's always sweating, sweating to make payments on his house, his refrigerator, his car or his lawnmower. He's impatient, and he constantly feels pressured. He tells himself he has to make money fast. And he dreams of 'big bucks'. In the end, the little guy wastes his money on the market, he loses his money on gambling, and he dribbles it away on senseless schemes. In brief, this 'money-nerd' spends his life running up the down-escalator. Now here's the ironic part of it. If, from the beginning, the little guy had adopted a strict policy of never spending more than his income, if he had taken that extra income and compounded it in safe, income-producing securities - in due time he'd have money coming in daily, weekly, and monthly - just like the rich guy. Then in due time, he'd start acting and thinking like the rich guy. In short, the little guy would become a financial winner instead of a loser.
h/t Brian Feroldi:
The stock market declines:
- 10% once a year
- 15% ever 2 years
- 20% every 4 years
- 30% every 10 years
Volatility is perfectly normal
Debt compounds in the wrong direction. Investments compounds in the right direction.
Eliminate the former. Plow everything you can into the latter.
Earn -> Save -> Invest -> Repeat
Do that consistently for 20 years and you can't help but end up wealthy
-- Compound interest is ready, willing, and able to do the heavy lifting for you.
But only if you let it.
-- It's always a great time to buy if your holding period is long enough
-- A short-term mindset will inevitably lead to problems with your health, relationships, investments, and life.
A long-term mindset will inevitably lead to success with your health, relationships, investments, and life.
-- 99% of investing is doing nothing
-- The secret to health: Exercise more and eat better
The secret to wealth: Save more and invest better
-- Investors focus on fundamentals. Speculators focus on price. Be an investor, not a speculator
-- Teaching your kids to be life long savers is the most important money lesson