Secrets to Building Wealth in the 21st
Century
This article is about how to build personal
wealth in the 21st century. However, if you’re expecting hot stock tips
or a nifty new way to use the Internet to invest your money, you’ve come
to the wrong place. In fact, there are no new secrets for building wealth
in the new millennium. They’re really the same old secrets smart people
used in the last century to get wealthy.
Have a goal.
"I wanna build wealth" and "I wanna
retire rich" aren’t goals. They’re
dreams, and vague ones at that. To build wealth, you first need to determine
what you want that wealth for. Do you need the money to buy your own business
or retire in a certain place by a certain time? Then you can decide how
much money you actually need to accomplish those goals.
Instead of thinking about becoming
"wealthy," a better concept might be to become "financially independent."
That suggests enough money to allow you to make the choices you want to
make. Perhaps you want to have enough money to quit the job you’re in so
you can pursue another career that you love more but that doesn’t pay as
well. You may not need a lot of "wealth" to accomplish that goal.
Spend less than you earn.
There isn’t a millionaire on the
planet who got that way by spending all the money they made. That means
living below your means. It doesn’t have to be far below your means, but
it does mean not spending every penny you earn. Take housing, for example.
People often buy the maximum amount of home they can afford. Yet for every
dollar they don’t spend on a house, they save approximately RM2.40 over
the life of a 30-year mortgage.
One trick is to design and follow
a spending plan, or budget, so your money goes exactly where you want it
to. Another key is to spend wisely. Research has found that Malaysians
waste 20 to 30 percent of their money by not getting the most for their
dollars through such simple steps as using coupons, comparative shopping
for the best buys from food to auto insurance, and a zillion other money-saving
tricks.
Minimize your debt.
It’s difficult and not always wise
to avoid debt entirely. Yet too many Malaysians saddle themselves with
needless debts. It’s little wonder bankruptcies are near an all-time high
despite a booming economy. Too many consumers can’t wait to spend. One
key is to avoid consumer debt that pays nothing in return (unlike mortgage
or college debt), provides no tax breaks and is often high priced. This
particularly applies to credit-card debt.
Invest early, wisely, often and
as much as you can afford.
"Early" is especially the key. Nothing
consistently makes money like time. Investments that return even modestly
over the years will usually make far more money than investments made hurriedly
at the last minute. Other "old fashioned" 20th century secrets to investing
include maximizing investments in tax-deferred accounts and investing regularly
every month. And skip the day-trading and market timing. A recent study
of mutual fund or investment
linked fund investors by a services research firm found that investors
who bought and held their funds over the past 15 years earned 17.9 percent
a year. The average investors, who switched in and out of funds every three
years, earned just 7.25 percent a year.
Protect your wealth.
As you build wealth, the last thing
you want to do is lose it to an unexpected financial catastrophe. Most
of us get the basic insurances - life, auto,
home. But some of us skip medical coverage
because it’s expensive and tough to get sometimes, even though a serious
medical illness can wipe you out financially. Many of us overlook disability
coverage - insurance that replaces income lost because of sickness or disability.
Only a small percentage buy long-term care insurance, and many overlook
liability insurance and the use of asset protection trusts to protect us
from someone suing us for all we’re worth. You don’t want others becoming
wealthy on the money you worked so hard to save. |