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Informative Articles

A Beginner's Guide to Investing in Local Companies
With all of the fluctuations that can occur in stock investments, many people find themselves wishing that there was an investment alternative that allowed them to keep their money close to home while making sound investments in companies that...

A stock investing gadfly on a dinosaurs' butt!
Have you ever noticed how some words in the English language are so perfectly named for what they describe? And how some words seem to be, I guess you could say, backwards? For instance, the word sunflower! How wonderfully aptly named is the...

Important Things to Look at For Long Term Real Estate Investing
If you want to buy a house to own it for awhile, what are the things you should think about in knowing what the future value will be? It's often surprisingly easy to predict what areas are going to be "growth" zones that will produce high real...

Investing in Real Estate: A Second Home in New Zealand
Do you grow tired living in the same place year after year? Perhaps its the nomadic instincts within us that beckons us to move on to new places. To leave the old, familiar grounds and discover new adventures in distant lands. Sometimes the old way...

Investing the Right Way
The world of investments offers a dangerous draw: huge rewards with the chance of terrible losses. Investors love the idea of accumulating wealth, but no one likes losing money. The trick is to know how to invest with minimal risk. Nobody can...

 
Four Timeless Investing Tips

Uh oh. We're in trouble...

I just hosted our annual Investment U seminar, where a few hundred attendees came to learn to be better investors. With a laundry list of the stars in our business, attendees picked up a lot of great investment ideas. And that might have been the problem...

While picking up a few good investment picks might be a nice thing in the short run, it's not going to sustain you over the long run.

So in my closing remarks at Investment U, I tried to make sure attendees stayed on the right path. I turned investors' attention back to Investment U's "Twelve Timeless Rules of Investing." I pointed out a few that are particularly important right now...

Timeless Rule #1: An attempt at making a buck often leads to losing much of that buck.

"Wow, Exxon sure has soared. If only I'd bought call options on the stock instead of just buying the stock, imagine how rich I'd be... I'd be retired now. Or... If only I'd bought a tiny oil exploration company instead of the big blue chip, I'd also be retired."

It's a nice thought... but it just doesn't work in practice. As natural resources expert Rick Rule (http://www.gril.net) said: "Your risk is infinitely higher with a company looking for oil than a company that's already got it."

Everyone wants the big score. But chasing it is like playing the lottery - for a lucky few, it works. For everyone else, those lottery tickets expire worthless.

Timeless Rule #3: Cut your losers, let your winners ride.

This was a big theme of the conference. Most individual investors invest with a strategy that's doomed from the start. They invest in a limited upside, unlimited downside way. If a stock goes up 20%, they'll take a profit. If it goes down, they'll hold it. This leaves them with a portfolio of losers.

We recommend investing in an unlimited upside, limited downside way. If you use something like a 25% trailing stop, then your losers get sold, and you end up with a portfolio of winners.

Timeless Rule #7: Bear markets begin in good times. Bull markets begin in bad times.

I don't know about you, but times are good where I live. "You can't go wrong in real estate" is the common sentiment. Everyone is into it. And it's the same with the stock market. The Dow Jones average is like 10% away from its all time highs. Chances are, now's not the time to be buying stocks or real estate (on the coast of Florida, at least!).

Timeless Rule #10: Investing in what's popular never ends up making you any money. Buy an investment when it has few friends.

It makes sense. If you're doing what the average guy at a cocktail party is doing, you're doomed to average returns... at best.

In order to buy something cheap, you've got to buy when nobody wants it. So you can't be buying what everybody else at the cocktail parties are buying.

There's always something that everyone hates. I've been recommending gold coins and some stocks in Argentina and Israel recently. Now, those are conversation stoppers at the cocktail parties! And that's just what I want to buy...

If a few of your neighbors are bragging about how much money they made in "X," then chances are, it's time to avoid "X."

I picked these Timeless Rules out of our list of 12 because I felt they were the most pertinent rules for the attendees at our conference now. And if these reminders were good enough for attendees, they're probably good reminders for you, too.

Good investing,

Steve



About the Author
Investment U President and New York Times best-selling author Dr. Steve Sjuggerud received his PhD in International Finance and was formerly the VP of a $50 million global mutual fund, an analyst, broker, and offshore hedge fund manager. Today he shares with over 300,000 readers his investment advice in the www.investmentu.com web site and IU Newsletter.