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- Lessons About Investing – Beginning Investing Mistakes to Avoid

wall street buildings.jpgOne of the first lessons about investing you should learn is never lose money. Seriously though, many people jump into investing without learning the basic lessons that can ensure their success. Your first lesson, is never forget Warren Buffet's rule number one for investors “never lose money”.

Lessons About Investing – 1
The first thing to determine when you're beginning investing is why you're investing. What are your goals? Only once you've determined your goals can you develop a plan to achieve them. Are you looking to create a future income stream to fund your retirement, do you want to invest as a business to create income for the present, or are you trying to fund a specific goal, such as college for your children. The other option is that you could be investing for fun, and investing can be an enjoyable hobby (when you do it right).

So, your first lesson is to set your specific investing goals before you begin investing. Be specific when you're doing this. For example, it's not enough to say “I want to fund my retirement”. You have to actually know how much money it will take to do so. One of the most common mistakes beginning investors make is failing to invest in such a way that will meet their goals, because they haven't really set any. So, if you're looking to invest as a retirement funding mechanism, your first task is to decide just how well you'd like to live when you stop working.

If a Jed, pre-Beverley Hills lifestyle suits you just fine, then you'll have an easier time than if you would like to retire and earn the same as your pre-retirement income. If you can feel comfortable at 75% of your pre-retirement income, that will give you a specific monetary goal. Obviously you'll have to know what your pre-retirement income will be to do this. Unless you spend time down at Zoltar's, you'll have to rely on a bit of educated guessing.

This is a bit more difficult now than your parent's day, because of the mercurial nature of most people's careers in our brave, new century. In any case, look at your career path, and determine how much your income will realistically increase over your working life. If for example, you are pretty sure you can count on roughly a 5% raise every year, use that number in your calculations.

Lessons About Investing – 2
Your second lesson about investing is to invest in vehicles that will meet your investing goals while taking into account other important factors. The two most important of these are probably your personal risk tolerance and time horizon. For example if you're risk averse, you will want to stay away from high risk investments, no matter if they promise high returns.

Looking at your time horizon is extremely important to help ensure that your investments will have the funds you need when you need them. Some investments tend to be fairly volatile, meaning they go up and down in fairly large swings. Volatile investments may generate pretty high returns over time. The problem arises if you are close to the time when you may need to begin withdrawing funds. If the investment has wide swings in value you risk it being in a trough, rather than a peak when you need the money. Not a good situation.

Lessons About Investing – 3
That leads into lesson about investing number 3. It's one that even the best, most experienced investors can have trouble learning. Don't try and time the market. That's it. Trying to guess exactly when to buy and sell in order to maximize your returns is not a trivial task even for the pros, most amateurs will just get killed trying it. Guess right and you'll make out like a bandit, but the more likely scenario is that you'll be wrong much more often that you'll be right and end up taking a bath.

Lessons About Investing – 4
This a lesson that can be very expensive if not learned. You have to diversify your holdings. If you are a fund investor much of the diversification will be handled for you, unless you invest only in sector funds in a limited scope of sectors. You want to avoid putting all your eggs in one basket, lest you end up in the situation Enron employees found themselves in. Actually this often happens to investors that mainly invest in their employer's stock. While that can be a great experience, just ask Google employees over the last few years, or Microsoft employees in the '90's, it can also be a horrifying ride if you're forced to watch you retirement funds evaporate.

Diversification is an investor's best defense against such a catastrophe. If you're well diversified, a calamity in a certain industry or sector will have much less of an effect on your portfolio, because you have holdings in other areas of the market that will, in theory, be unaffected.

Lessons About Investing – 5
An investing lesson you should learn early is to always do your due diligence. You should know all the factors about your investments that could come back to bite you if things go wrong or you need access to the money. You should know about tax and withdrawal consequences, fees, and other things that can affect your investments. In addition you should know as much as possible about the companies you're invested in, their businesses, and the economic factors that could affect them.

These are 5 of the top lessons you should learn before you start investing. The money you make (or save) will be your own.

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