Say I have $5000 that I can set aside to invest in something.
The goal is to maximize the growth at the end of 5 years. What should I do?
The goal is to maximize the growth at the end of 5 years. What should I do?
Excellent point! A lot of people get these 2 mixed up. Nothing wrong with either "strategy", but they are totally different. IMO "traders" are looking for capital gains i.e. buying low and selling high and thus have to time their investments. "Investors" look for cash flow through dividends, interest, etc and buy and hold for a long period of time if not forever. So they are looking at the fundamentals of a business before they buy or sell.define if you are going to be a "trader" or "investor".
Hello Spacealien 2,Say I have $5000 that I can set aside to invest in something.
The goal is to maximize the growth at the end of 5 years. What should I do?
Say I have $5000 that I can set aside to invest in something.
The goal is to maximize the growth at the end of 5 years. What should I do?
Buy a Mutual fund, a single stock is not investing
At 2.5% compound interest (GIC) about $657, at 10% about $3052. To double it you would need a 15% annual return (unrealistic without leverage). If your time horizon is less than 10 years and you buy equities, you are not investing, you are speculating. In fact you need 15 or more years to have a high probability of positive expected returns on equities.Here's my question to the gurus in this thread.
How much can a person realistically make in 5 years investing $5k?
A couple hundred dollars, a thousand, double it to $10k, more?
I dont think that's how I would differentiate btw "trader" and "investor"....trader is basically all about market timing i.e. buy, short-sell and close your position very very soon most times within days if not hours....where as investor you tend to have alonger time horizon, you are looking at the fundamentals of the company and hoping it will go to its true value....yes lots of bad advice hereExcellent point! A lot of people get these 2 mixed up. Nothing wrong with either "strategy", but they are totally different. IMO "traders" are looking for capital gains i.e. buying low and selling high and thus have to time their investments. "Investors" look for cash flow through dividends, interest, etc and buy and hold for a long period of time if not forever. So they are looking at the fundamentals of a business before they buy or sell.
I LOVE this! The OP has asked for financial advice and people have given it freely (and sometimes quite poorly), yet YOU say do not engage a financial advisor. Why? Because they are expensive? Because they are in it for themselves? Because they don't add value? Hmm, having been a financial advisor for over 20 years, I know that my clients are better off, having listened to my advice. And yes, they are content paying the fees I charge.Third step DO NOT engage a financial advisor.
I do find it ironic that the OP is looking for advice, gets it from so-called experts on here but then the absolute worst thing he can do is actually go to someone who does it for a living. Like any field, everyone is an expert in their own mind. But I've seen the work do-it-yourselfers have done in many areas: plumbing, car repair, taxes and yes financial advice and most times they do a poor job when compared to a professional.I LOVE this! The OP has asked for financial advice and people have given it freely (and sometimes quite poorly), yet YOU say do not engage a financial advisor. Why? Because they are expensive? Because they are in it for themselves? Because they don't add value? Hmm, having been a financial advisor for over 20 years, I know that my clients are better off, having listened to my advice. And yes, they are content paying the fees I charge.
Now, frankly, a $5000 account isn't worth my time, but that doesn't mean there isn't an advisor who is starting out that wouldn't love to sit down and help the OP. Recognizing that on an equity mutual fund, he'll make a whopping $50/year.
Or he can go it alone - judging by his initial question and obvious lack of experience and knowledge, I'm sure he'll do soooo much better than he would if he consulted someone who's livelihood is dependent on providing reasoned and suitable advice.
Timbit