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Investing. What is Investing?. Planning to use your money for the future Making Money with Money Risk is going to be involved Higher Risk=Higher Rate of Return (or Loss)! Return is the amount of money earned on an investment RATE OF RETURN Return (profit) / Investment
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What is Investing? • Planning to use your money for the future • Making Money with Money • Risk is going to be involved • Higher Risk=Higher Rate of Return (or Loss)! • Return is the amount of money earned on an investment • RATE OF RETURN • Return (profit) / Investment • $100 (earned) / $1000 (investment) = 10%
How to Make Investment Choices? • Consider: • Financial Situation • Risk Tolerance • Values • Goals • Diversification – spreading your money out over several different investments
Types of Stock • Common Stock • Voting share • No set dividend • Board of Directors (elected by shareholders) decide on dividends • No assets if company goes under (and after preferred stockholders) • Riskier than preferred stock (possibility of higher return) • Frequent price changes • Market Price of Common Stock is determined by the demand for the stock
Types of Stock • Preferred Stock • Non-voting share • Fixed dividend, unless company incurs loss • Receive assets if company goes under before common stockholders
Blue Chip Stocks • Large, well-established companies • History of steady sales and profits • Usually pay dividends • Dividends usually grow • Values do no change rapidly • AT&T • Ford • IBM • GE
Growth Stocks • Small/young companies • New products • Little to no dividends • Profits used to purchase new equipment or research • Expected to experience rapid growth • Higher risk
Making Money from Stocks • Dividends - Distribution of a portion of a company's earnings, decided by the board of directors to a class of its shareholders. The amount of a dividend is quoted in the amount each share receives or in other words dividends per share. • Selling • Capital gain • Capital loss
Remember.. • The only way to earn money is to sell the stock. • You are never guaranteed your investment back.. • No matter which stock you buy! • Stocks are better used as a long-term investment compared to a short term investment • Investigate a company before buying
Yield • Annual Dividend of an Investment/current market value (current price) • Yield = a % • Increase in current yield is healthy
Earnings Per Share • Corporations after tax earnings / the number of outstanding shares (shares people own) • Measure the amount of profit for each share • Increase is a good thing
PE Ratio • Price Earnings Ratio • Price of one stock/corporations earnings per share • Low PE is a good sign • Low PE indicates the company has a lot of earnings when compared to the price of the stock
Net Change • Difference between the close of a stock on one day and that of the opening on a new day. • You would want a high change because more people are demanding the stock.
Regulation • Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) – enforces laws concerning the trading of stocks and bonds and licenses stockholders • SEC prevents insider trading – trading stock based on info not available to the general public
Total Return • Original Investment = Shares * Cost • Dividend * Number of Shares * Years = Current Return • (Selling Price Per Share – Purchase Price Per Share)*Number of Shares Held = Capital Gain • Current Return + Capital Gain = Total Return$ • Total Return/Original Investment = Rate of Return /$6375 = 34%
Bonds • Bondholder is a creditor of the company issuing the bond • Bonds essentially a loan to a company or government for repayment in the future
Retirement • 401K plans through employer • Employee matching program • Portable • Choose investment plan • Can be tax deferred • Pension plans (not so common any more) • Offered by Corporations as a benefit for lengthy employment • Designed to provide retirement income • Usually a portion of what the employee was making before retirement
Mutual Funds • Group of investments owned by many investors • Investors buy shares of the fund • Fund pools money to buy a variety of stocks and investments • Diversify your investment • Benefit of services of investment professionals who make decisions for you • Value changes with the value of stocks or bonds
Finding Investment Information • Wall Street Journal • Info on businesses, banks, government, foreign nations • Quotes stocks (ticker symbol), bonds, mutual funds • Forbes, Fortune, Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine, Money • Internet
Advice • Invest through large, well established stock brokerage firms • Ask name, address, info of any company asking you to invest—check them out! • Get investment offer in writing • Avoid a hard sales pitch to buy NOW • “inside” information is dishonest and fraudulent • Immediate payment is NOT due (5 days)
Now What? • How does diversification help limit risk? • How does age and financial situation affect how you make investment decisions?
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