How Successful Investors Get RICH

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How to Invest In Stocks Guide: Find 10 factors that make your investments safer and stronger.

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Topic: How To Invest

Investor Toolkit: Easy investing tips for greater stock market profits

Whether you’re a beginning or experienced investor, it’s always a good idea to review the fundamental points of successful investing. That’s what we give you in our new “Investor Toolkit” series. Every Wednesday, we’ll give you a new fundamental easy investing tip and show you how you can put it into practice right away. We hope you enjoy and profit from it.

Today’s tip: “Sound investor habits and attitudes are as important as good investments.”

To succeed as an investor, you need to cultivate three personal mental strengths:

  • A healthy sense of skepticism: A cardinal rule: If an investment sounds too good to be true, it probably isn’t true. Recognize too that some of your most promising investments will disappoint you, since no one can predict the future.

    Remember, the investment business deals in intangibles and relies on trust, so it attracts more than its share of crackpots, dreamers and crooks. They have an uncanny ability to home in on trusting investors who accept dubious claims at face value. But if you follow an easy investing strategy of diversifying and focusing your investments on well-established companies, your gains will overwhelm your losses.

How Successful Investors Get RICH

Learn everything you need to know in 'The Canadian Guide on How to Invest in Stocks Successfully' for FREE from The Successful Investor.

How to Invest In Stocks Guide: Find 10 factors that make your investments safer and stronger.

 I consent to receiving information from The Successful Investor via email. I understand I can unsubscribe from these updates at any time.

  • Persistent curiosity: Investment professionals know more about investing than you do, because they devote their lives to it. But you can get more knowledge than most investors if you simply read widely and ask lots of questions.

    Read books and visit investing web sites. It pays to read as widely as possible, especially when you’re just starting out and need good easy investing advice. Most local libraries have at least a six-foot shelf of investment books. Browse that shelf and borrow an investment book on each visit.

    You’ll also find a wide range of Canadian and international investing information online. You could start with our web site, TSI Network (www.tsinetwork.ca), which boasts more than 5,000 articles on investment strategies and individual investments.

    Make it fun. Don’t feel obligated to study every web site you visit or finish every book you borrow. The easy investing knowledge you need appears in many places, but quality and readability vary widely. You might as well absorb the knowledge from sources that are pleasant to read.

  • A realistic sense of optimism: To succeed as an investor, put matters in perspective. Despite wars, recessions and market setbacks, stock prices generally reach successively higher levels over long periods.

    You can’t foresee the next downturn. But you can buy high-quality investments gradually during your working years, sell them gradually in retirement, and reinvest your dividends along the way. Follow that easy investing strategy and you will automatically buy more shares when prices are low, and fewer when they are high.

Next Wednesday, May 26, 2010, Investor Toolkit will examine how to pick the right stock broker.

As a member of TSI Network, you may have already seen Canadian Stock Market Basics: How to Trade Stocks and Make Good Investments in Canada. If you haven’t yet read this free report report, click here to download your copy today. I’d also encourage you to share the report with a friend. It’s my “thank you” just for signing up for my free daily updates.