It’s never too early to start building wealth

The earlier you start, the better off you’ll be. This applies to many things in life, and certainly to personal finance. Here are some specific steps you can take:

  1. Whether it’s your first paycheck or the first time you get money for your birthday, put some of it away into a brokerage account. A simple savings account is better than buying stuff, but you are much better off investing in stocks. The $100 you invest early in your life will do a lot more work for you than the same amount of money later in your life through this amazing thing called compounding (like a snowball, your money will grow faster and faster because it will keep adding to the base).
  2. Set up an automated way for you to invest. I put money away towards investing every month automatically, and so should you. This will protect you from yourself and from human nature. The future you will really thank you for it. One of the coolest things about investing regularly is that it lets you dollar cost average (essentially, if a stock price for a given investment goes down, you are able to buy more of it with the same $100 and less of it if the price goes up).
  3. Stocks is probably the asset class that will give you the highest return, so I recommend putting whatever you can allocate to investing to stocks. I think it’s fine to spend a little money on individual stocks of companies you know and in which you see potential. However, I recommend you invest in index funds (these funds simply track a number of companies). Key reasons why I like index funds are: a) they give you an easy way to diversify your risk across many companies, b) they are inexpensive because they are not actively managed.
  4. Vanguard is my favorite brokerage company. John Bogle, who founded the company, is one of my heroes. He invented the concept of index funds and set up his company in such a way that really benefits investors with low costs and simplicity. Check out the index fund VTSAX (Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund). This fund basically covers the full United States stock market.
  5. Consume content from which you can learn about personal finance (books, blogs, videos), especially from people who know what they are talking about: Warren Buffett, John Bogle, Napoleon Hill, JL Collins.
  6. Invest your time wisely. You will spend most of your time in your job/career, so make sure that it’s something you love doing. Financially, if you pursue the business field like I did, strive to not just work for a paycheck. You can do this by either owning your own business or by working in companies, which give you stock as part of the compensation package. I have done the latter and have seen a significant return on my investment of time in the companies where I’ve worked.

Key takeaways and actions:

Always put away some portion of your income and do it regularly, ideally into a Vanguard index fund, such as VTSAX. Be a sponge and learn everything you can about personal finance. Be very strategic about your job and lean towards having ownership of the company stock.

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