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Showing posts from August, 2019

Insurance is not INVESTMENT! Part I

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                         Most of us fail to understand the fundamental purpose of life insurance. We are made to believe that insurance is saving or worse in most cases an investment. However, the whole idea of insurance is to cover the  risk of  loss. In simple terms, insurance is a financial backup for the family highly dependent on their breadwinner. To make it even simpler, let me give you an example as to how insurance should be looked at - You buy a two-wheeler or car and get it insured - what happens here? Your car is insured for a specific amount and in case of any loss/damage to your vehicle; the insurer will pay you, post the inspection and only for the quantum of damage . Wonder how would you feel if anybody asks you - "What is the return I will get for the premium I paid on my motor vehicle ". Won't it sound ridiculous?              The more we talk to people the more we understand that there is herd mentality, 10/10 people consider it as an investment

Direct Equity Investing - II

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        So we promised we will suggest a different (better) way of Direct equity investing in our previous blog . Here we are with our simple thoughts. Read on Build your Capital  1. Give yourself an 8 year time period. Well, the obvious question then would be "Don't stock markets make people rich in quick time?" Not really. One would have "made" the money in one year but by staying invested for decades. 2. In that 8 year period build your capital by saving in products that are exposed to stock markets. aka Equity Mutual funds. 3. Why Equity Funds and not something else? That is because, this will give the experience of "Market Volatility" + compound your capital at a better rate.  That's only about capital. So how about the knowledge?  Built your Knowledge 4. During this 8 year period, Start reading books relating to investing.  5. Based on what you read, Pick the Stocks and make a note of the reasons for your buying & you

How to spark a child’s interest in investing

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Read this interesting  article last week and thought of sharing it with all our readers. A client shared this story with us: It started at the grocery store. Every time we were shopping, my older son, then eight years old, would bug me to buy him a certain cereal he’d seen advertised on morning TV. The same thing would happen when we passed a toy store. He’d beg me for highly advertised action figures.  I realized it was time to teach him about how businesses work and decided that the stock market might be a fun way to do that.  We started small. I told him he could buy the stock of any company he wanted—so long as he paid with his allowance or with money received as a gift. I’d match his funds.   Of course, he was drawn to companies he could relate to: computer stocks, Manchester United, and the like. When we ate in a restaurant he liked, he started asking if it had stock, and if so, how we could invest.  Our stock market game not only taught him a little about comp