Streetwise
Lauren Rudd
Sunday, December 27,
2009
You Can Help Someone Learn About Investing
It is the most wonderful time of the year...although probably
not for the millions of unemployed...or the more than one million homeowners who
are in foreclosure. Oh, there is also that small problem of all those millions
of people without adequate health insurance or any health insurance at all.
Instead of providing a bit of hope and relief this holiday
season, the Senate has allowed partisanship and parliamentary procedures to
create a dysfunctional environment deprived of all rationality. However, this is
the holiday season and as critical as those issues are to our country’s future,
they are of a macro nature. On a more micro level is the matter of your personal
investment strategy.
Now don’t spill your eggnog but Wall Street is still the
place to be if you want to increase your wealth. Additionally, there is no “good
time,” or “bad time,” to invest. It is the methodology with which you allocate
your investment resources and the quality of what you invest in that determines
your level of success.
Furthermore, anyone can successfully establish and maintain a
profitable portfolio. And you can do it without the espoused professional
assistance, the myriad of newsletters, books, charts and the never ending series
of free meal seminars being hawked. To say you cannot is an excuse, not a
reason. Four decades of experience on Wall Street tells me otherwise.
Now as you sit back, eggnog in hand, take a moment to ask
yourself this question...have you have ever helped a child, teenager, or maybe
even an adult, learn the fundamentals of investing? It is never too early or too
late to introduce someone to the concept of investing in common stocks.
I mention this idea every year not because of the avalanche
of email I receive requesting that I do, but because the discipline of investing
regularly continues to play an ever increasing role in determining your future
financial security and well being.
For example, you cannot do better for a young child than with
a gift of a few shares of Disney. Whether Disney is the most sanguine investment
is not relevant. What is important is that you request the actual stock
certificate, which you can then frame and hang in a place where the recipient
can view it regularly.
Decorated with Disney characters, the certificate is almost a
piece of art. Besides, how many pictures can your child hang on the wall that
will increase in value?
For those family members who are too old for the Mouse and
crave a more exciting life, there are companies such as Apple, Microsoft, Adobe,
Intel, Cisco and Hewlett-Packard that will likely raise the level investment
interest in most teenagers.
If video games are more to their liking then companies such
as Electronic Arts, Take-Two Interactive Software, Activision Blizzard and THQ
become candidates. Those companies have not done all that well recently but your
kids probably know that better than you. They are also likely to be informed as
to what the future bodes for those companies. Finally, an enterprising teenager
might even uncover a lesser known name that is ready to outperform its brethren.
So how do you go about setting up an account for your
soon-to-be Wall Street prodigy? The shares should be in a deep discount
brokerage account that can be viewed on demand via the Internet. At the same
time you want to maintain the degree of supervision and restriction on both
trading and the withdrawal of funds that you deem necessary.
Ideally, you want to instill the idea of investing as opposed
to trading. However, if your budding analyst can make a case for moving out of
one stock and into another, go along with the idea. Learning should take
precedence over possible returns.
Finally, let your young investor go it alone. Try out your ideas on your
portfolio. The more a young person can learn about investing and investment
research, the greater the likelihood that they will be able to establish
themselves on a sound financial footing in their adult life.