The markets are volotile, and you lose in the long run. It's better and safer to keep cash and incest in savings, instead of buying stocks.
Markets do fluctuate. But, since 2009, the S&P 500 has seen average gains of about 15% annually (and it's risen more than 70% of the time over the last century).4 Keeping your savings in cash means growth won't necessarily keep up with inflation. Over the long-term. that could reduce the value of savings, whereas stock investments have far more potential to grow, earn, and work harder for you.
I can't thing about investing until I have a certain amount of money (only wealthy people can afford to invest).
If you want to invest or start building wealth for the future, you don't have to meet any financial threshold to make it happen. There are all sorts of opportunities and flexible options to fit different needs and goals.
The market is like a casino, and investing means i'm really just blindly "betting" on "winners" - and that I could lose it all at any second.
Although investing always involves some risk, you CAN manage risk and dial it in based on your own risk appetite. Gambling is a flashy, fast, zero-sum game – there's lots of action, and the house usually wins. Building an investment strategy based on your goals and personal circumstances is a lot more like farming.
Did any of the facts surprise you?
At one time or another, we can all end up buying into a myth about investing.
They can be really convincing, especially if they line up with our values and beliefs.
When that happens, we can use those myths to draw from our own experiences and create connections. It's one way we try to make sense of things.
Yet, the myths about investing can be incredibly misleading.
They can dupe us into making decisions that get in the way of what we really want for our financial future.
That's why investing myths are like a Siren's Song. They're enticing and deceptive, and they lure you down a path of choices that lead to unfavorable results or even terrible outcomes.
And that's not just a risk for the naive or those who are less experienced with investing.
Regardless of IQ, any of us can anchor ourselves to information we want to be true. And anyone can decide to make choices based on "rules of thumb," even if, deep down, they know better.
We're far more open to doing that whenever we're struggling with uncertainties or complex decisions. It's natural.
But it's not going to bring the clarity you need to make better financial decisions.
What can, however, are the facts and a fresh perspective.
Sources:
1 - https://corporatefinanceinstitute.com/resources/knowledge/trading-investing/narrative-fallacy/
2 - https://www.npr.org/sections/heaIth-shots/2020/04/11/815573198/how-stories-connect-and-persuade-us-unleashing-thebra
in-power-of-narrativePAGE9of37
3 - https://www.brainfacts.org/neuroscience-in-society/the-arts-and-the-brain/2021/why-the-brain-loves-stories-030421
4 - https://www.enbc.com/2 02 2/01/25/long-term-investors-shouldnt-worry-too-much-about-stocks-being-10percent-offtheir-highs.html
5 - https://www.enbe.com/2021/09/25/did-you-panic-sell-during-the-latest-stock-market-dip-heres-when-to-get-back-in.htmI
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