Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Your Worst Enemy To Successful Investing - The Media
How do you make your investment decisions and where do you get your information? If you're like most of the people I know, you look to the experts. That's fine, however it's important to be aware that for every expert, there's an opinion...

Exchange Traded Funds: 7 Reasons They Beat Most Mutual Funds
There's been a lot of recent talk in the financial press about exchange traded funds, or ETFs. Some of you may already be familiar with them, but my guess is for most individual investors, the term “exchange traded fund” is just another bunch of...

For Entrepreneurs A SIMPLE Plan May Be Best
Q: I own a small decorating business and I'll be the first to admit that I don't know anything about taxes or retirement plans. I'd like to set up a 401(k) or an IRA or some other kind of retirement plan for me and my three employees. What are the...

Planning for Your Future
With people living longer and healthier lives, it's important to save adequate funds to be able to live comfortably through retirement. Read about four families stories throughout different life stages and where they should be at financially. ...

How To Manage Your Mortgage Payment
Normally, banks and financial consultant will advice you to pay extra money into your mortgage. With this method, it will help you cut down the huge interest amount and reduce the period over which you pay back the loan. For example, if you...

 
Index investing - Going by the numbers

The Dow, the NASDAQ, the S&P 500 – these are stock indexes, company structures that keep track of the values of listed stocks and enable brokers and others to trade in them. Index investing involves holding a portfolio of stocks or a mutual fund spread across an index, so that the value of the stocks is relatively equivalent to the value of the index at any given time.

The three big funds aren't the only indexes available for investing; there are thousands of others, including not only American-based indexes but indexes specific to other countries and international indexes. When looking at index investing, you should keep in mind the wide variety of possibilities for your invested cash.

The most significant advantage to index investing is that it's easy to diversify your investments, reducing your risk for losing money. Index funds also have a lower expense ratio than other types of mutual funds, which ensures that you'll be able to keep more of your money.

Although index investing seems to be hard to target to your areas of interest, it's actually easier than you think. For instance, if your interest is in tech stocks, your index investing choice is a NASDAQ fund. If you believe that a market in another country, say India or South Korea, is getting ready to take off, then you invest in a fund from an index based in that country. You have more choice than you might think.

Choosing Your Index Investing Fund

You should educate yourself about the different indexes available before you choose a specific fund. If you're interested in blue chip stocks, you should invest in a fund based on the Dow Jones Industrial Average; this index tracks thirty crucial companies heavy in blue chips. If you want a more diversified portfolio that is based on a realistic picture of the American stock market, you should look for a fund based on the S&P 500.

If you've been looking overseas at the advances made there, you should look for an index investing fund based in a promising foreign economy. South Korea is emerging as a world leader in health technology, for instance, as well as a prime area for outsourcing by American companies.

As in any mutual fund, you should look to the long term rather than the short. Index investing funds may be volatile in the short term, but historically they've always gone up. Some analysts are predicting a tripling of stock value by 2020, in fact; this may be overly optimistic, but long term gains will be offset if you overcompensate for losses and sell your holdings early. Experts generally recommend that you leave your mutual funds and index investing funds alone most of the time, making adjustments on an annual or semiannual basis.

About the Author
Jakob Jelling is the founder of http://www.cashbazar.com. Please visit his financial website to learn more about investing.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.