Wednesday 2 April 2008

REGEN MED FROM STEM CELL RESEARCH





The Extraordinary Power of Compound Interest
Posted: 02 Apr 2008 07:00 AM CDT
If you’re young, you may not think you need to open a retirement account. You probably think it’s easier to worry about it five years from now. Or ten. You’re wrong. No matter what your age, now is the time to begin saving for retirement. In The Automatic Millionaire, David Bach writes, “The single biggest investment mistake you can make [is] not using your [retirement] plan and not maxing it out.”
Saving is the key to wealthIf you do not spend less than you earn, and if you do not save the difference, you cannot build the wealth you desire. The rich are not rich because they earn a lot of money; the rich are rich because they save a lot of money.
You may be skeptical — I was once skeptical, too. But over the past three years I’ve read a lot on the subject of wealth-building. Books like Stanley and Danko’s The Millionaire Next Door make it abundantly clear that it’s not a high income that leads to wealth — though obviously a high income does not hurt — but the ability to save. Those who become wealthy do so by spending less than they earn.
If saving is the key to wealth, then time is the hand that turns the key to unlock the door. There is no reliable method to quick riches. There are, however, proven methods to get rich slowly. If you are patient, and if you are disciplined, you can produce a golden nest egg that will hatch later in life.
The power of compoundingThe best way to ensure your future financial success is to start saving today.
“The amount of capital you start with is not nearly as important as getting started early,” writes Burton Malkiel in The Random Walk Guide to Investing. “Procrastination is the natural assassin of opportunity. Every year you put off investing makes your ultimate retirement goals more difficult to achieve.”
The secret to getting rich slowly, he says, is the miracle of compound interest. Even modest returns can generate real wealth given enough time and dedication.
On its surface, compounding is innocuous, even boring. “So what if my money earns 3.85% in a high-yield savings account?” you may ask. “What does it matter if it averages 8% annual growth in a mutual fund? Why is it important to start investing now?”
In the short-term, it doesn’t make a huge difference, but on the slow, sure path to wealth, we take the long view. Short-term results are not as important as what will happen over the course of twenty or thirty years.
For example, if 20-year-old Britney makes a one-time $5,000 contribution to her Roth IRA and earns an average 8% annual return, and if she never touches the money, that $5,000 will grow to $160,000 by the time she retires at age 65. But if she waits until she’s my age (39) to make her single investment, that $5,000 would only grow to $40,000. Time is the primary ingredient to the magic that is compounding.
Compounding can be made more powerful through regular investments. It’s great that a single $5,000 IRA contribution can grow to $160,000 in 45 years, but it’s even more exciting to see what happens when Britney makes saving a habit. If she contributes $5,000 annually to her Roth IRA for 45 years, and if she leaves the money to earn an average 8% return, her retirement savings will total over $1.93 million. A golden nest egg indeed! She will have more than eight times the amount she contributed. This is the power of compound returns.





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