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10 tips fro creating wealth from
the stock market
1. Do not
spread your money too thin.
My friend
has a little over $200,000 invested in the stock market through 27
different Mutual funds. In my opinion, 27 Mutual funds is 27 too
many collecting load fees, management fees, commission fees,
operating and advertising fees. Diversity is important, but just as
important is over-diversification. Also, in my opinion, $200,000
should not be put into more than 12 stocks, let alone 27 different
Mutual funds.
2. Do not
pay commission fees to purchase a stock.
If you
are going to invest your hard earned dollars into a company, the
least the company could do is provide you a way to invest in their
company commission free – and they do!
3. Only
purchase those companies that pay a dividend.
The same
company that you invest in commission free should also offer you
another incentive for you to invest – a dividend for the use of your
money.
4. Only
purchase those companies that have a history of raising their
dividend every year.
The same
company should continue rewarding you for your faith in their
company by increasing the amount of their dividend every year.
Rising dividends are also the proof that the company is dong
something right.
5.
Dollar-cost average into each stock position.
By
dollar-cost averaging (buying the same stock at different prices
through the years) you’ll never pay too much for the company’s
stock, even if the initial purchase is at a 52 week high. Have all
the dividends from each company rolled back into more shares of each
company, until retirement. The companies you invest in should do
this for you, automatically, commission free.
6. Forget
making a profit; instead focus on the income provided from your
stock portfolio.
That’s
right! Forget making a profit. The burden is now lifted - no more
pressure on making a buck in the stock market (Instead of trying to
bend the spoon, that is impossible, instead just think of the spoon
as – omigosh! - I’m in the Matrix). When you focus on the amount of
money your holdings are providing in dividends – and when those
companies selected have a history of raising their dividends each
year – a lower stock price allows the dividends that are being
rolled back into the stock to accelerate your income. The total
value of your portfolio may go lower, but your income from that
lower priced portfolio would increase dramatically. Profit by
income!
7. Make
every stock purchase with the intent that the purchase will be a
long-term investment.
Do not
trade in and out of your holdings. There have been many up and downs
in the stock market. The down markets only accelerate your income.
GE has raised their dividend for 28 years in a row. Why sell it? 100
shares of GE ten years ago has turned into 1200 shares today due to
stock splits, and that is not counting how many shares you would
have now if the dividends were being rolled back into more shares of
the stock through those years.
8.
Understand that a lower stock price, after your initial purchase may
be a blessing in disguise.
The
income from your stock holdings should grow every quarter, no matter
what the total amount of your stock portfolio is worth. (If your
Mutual fund declines in price from one year to the next and if your
income is not increasing (accelerating) from that fund, why are you
in that fund?) A company pays their dividend not on how much their
stock is worth in the market place. For example, a company pays a
quarterly dividend of 50 cents a share. A company has little control
on how much its stock price is worth in the market place on any
given day. You will receive 50 cents a share per quarter whether the
stock price is at 50 dollars a share, or drops to $40 a share or
goes up to $70. While the stock is down at $40 a share your dividend
reinvestment is loading up on more shares.
9.
Develop a savings plan to add to your holdings each quarter to help
your dividend reinvestments to accumulate more shares on a
dollar-cost averaging basis.
The
savings could be as little as $5.00 a week. Why put that savings in
a savings account at 1.2 percent, when there are so many companies
out there that are paying a 4 to 5% dividend yield and increasing
their dividend every year? And since none of the companies you are
investing in charge a commission, all of that $60.00 a quarter you
saved and invested would help your dividend reinvestments to
dollar-cost average into your holdings. Every cent you save and
invest would work toward your ROI (Return on Investment).
10. Read
my book ‘the Stockopoly Plan’ soon to be released by American Book
Publishing.
I believe
it will profit you and your family for the rest of your lives.
For more
excerpts from the book ‘The Stockopoly Plan’ please visit
http://www.thestockopolyplan.com
You have
permission to this article either electronically or in print as long
as the author bylines are included, with a live link, and the
article is not changed in any way (grammar and typos, excluded).
Please provide a courtesy e-mail to
charles@thestockopolyplan.com telling where the article was published.
Charles
M. O’Melia is an individual investor with almost 40 years of
experience and passion for the stock market. Author of the book ‘The
Stockopoly Plan’, soon to be released by American Book Publishing.
chassmo99@yahoo.com
Charles
M. O'Melia
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