πΌ The case for investing
It takes money to make money.
I never quite understood that saying when I was younger β until I learnt about investing.
If you invested S$10,000 for a year, youβd get back S$700 based on a very realistic 7 per cent annual return.
But suppose your rich parents gave you S$1,000,000 as a graduation gift, and you invested that whole sum. Youβd make S$70,000 in a year and earn more than I do without ever stepping foot in an office.
Okay, so investing makes rich people richer. Why should regular people bother?
Inflation.
What it means is that whatever money you have saved up thatβs sitting idle in a bank or in a Milo tin will always be worth less as time passes.
Letβs say you figure that you need S$3,000 a month when you retire and save accordingly, forgetting inflation.
In 50 yearsβ time, that S$3,000 would be worth S$890.22 in todayβs dollars, going by Singaporeβs past inflation rate over the same time period. Could you survive on that?
Investing (responsibly) wonβt get you rich quickly. But even if you donβt have much to invest with, the small sum of money you get in return should at least protect your savings from being eroded away by the rising cost of living.
βBut my parents didnβt invest, and they did well for themselves,β you say.
Well, even if they didnβt buy any stocks or bonds, they probably did make investment gains if they owned any sort of housing.
Our parents lived in an age when property prices rose so quickly that they likely made more from buying and selling an HDB flat than if they put that money into local stocks.
Hereβs what He Ruiming, co-founder of the hugely popular financial comic The Woke Salaryman, has to say about this during our interview:
βNowadays, as a young person, you will find that property can be quite out of reach, or maybe the property market might not boom so much in the futureβ¦
βSo I would say, for most people, you need to invest in some way. It could be the stock market, it could be the property market if you have enough money, it could be something like your CPF Special Account.β
The only people who can probably get by without investing these days are high-income earners, he says.
βIf youβre a median earner and you spend a median amount, you probably need to invest.β
ποΈ But waitβ¦
Of course, all of what has been said above assumes that your investments make money. However, as we know, investments can lose money, too.
Generally speaking, the stock market makes money more often than not.
The US stock market accounts for the majority of the worldβs stocks. When we look at the S&P 500 index, the de facto benchmark for the US marketβs performance, it has made around 10 per cent in returns every year over the long term.
The emphasis here is on βlong termβ. In reality, your investments could go up 10 per cent in one year, down 20 per cent the next, and so on.
So itβs important that youβre not investing money youβll need in the near future because you donβt want to be in a situation where youβre forced to sell off your investments in a downturn only for the market to recover when youβre ready to invest again.
There are generally two things you need to settle before youβre ready to invest, He says.
-
Do you have an emergency fund set aside in an account that you can readily access?
-
Do you have any high-interest loans, like credit card debt, thatβll cost more in interest fees than you can make with investments?
If you answered βyesβ to the first question and βnoβ to the second, then youβre pretty much set.
βSome people say you need like hundreds or thousands of dollars to start investing. I think thatβs not true,β says He.
π The magic of starting early
Thereβs this powerful chart that really drives home the magic of compound interest and why itβs important to start investing early.
There are countless variations of the same idea but hereβs one showing how someone who starts investing a regular sum every year for 10 years at age 25 ends up saving more than someone else who invests the same amount every year for 30 years.
Thereβs another reason why He believes young adults should start investing even if they only have S$500 to spare every month.
A good way to start is to use the famous 50-30-20 rule, which involves setting aside 20 per cent of your salary for investments once youβve saved up enough for your emergency fund.
βSometimes, while investing, you also learn what itβs like to actually put money in the stock market. Sometimes the money goes up, sometimes the money goes down. It trains you so that you get used to how the market behaves,β he says.
βThis is, as opposed to, letβs say, you wait until youβre 40 years old and start investing, then your first market crash, you get scared, and then you sell at a loss.β
It takes time, he adds, to build the temperament, mindset and philosophy required to become a good investor.
TL;DR
-
Every year you leave your money idle, youβre effectively losing money because of inflation
-
Unless youβre earning a fat salary, it can be hard to build your finances without investing
-
You donβt need thousands of dollars to start investing; even S$500 a month is enough
-
By starting early, your investments will grow larger than someone who starts later with a larger capital