What’s the Point of Investing?
Apr 11th, 2008 | By Steve Sjuggerud | Category: Politics & Economics“Nice to meet you… Hang on a sec… Let me text my husband.” My wife and I stand there waiting. The girl busily taps out a text message on her new iPhone. She’s not so quick with the typing, but we know what’s going on… She’s just showing off that she owns a $500 phone – hot stuff in rural Georgia.
We saw her arrive… She drove a black Suburban of some sort, with enough chrome to make a Detroit drug dealer blush.
She and her husband are young… probably in their late twenties. He’s apparently a builder in Georgia. Of course, homebuilding in Georgia died about two years ago… But even though their income must be down, their spending hasn’t changed.
This young couple isn’t the only one out here sporting an iPhone and a blingy black Suburban. What’s going on here?
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Me? I don’t have an iPhone… Or a blingy Suburban… But I probably have one thing these conspicuous consumers don’t: The house I live in is fully paid for.
I handle my money differently. I could buy an iPhone or a Suburban tomorrow. I wouldn’t need a penny of debt to do it. But I won’t… Why? Because I know those things won’t make me the slightest bit happier. I’d be the same dolt I was before… only now, I’d be $50,000 poorer!
It took me a while to get to this point in my life. But I’m glad I made it… I’m at the point where I can buy what I want. But I don’t. It’s an important point to reach.
I don’t try to keep up with the Joneses. I’m doing the opposite, actually. I’m downsizing. I’m reducing my “stuff.”
Think about this… What good is all this stuff, really? You can’t take it with you when you die… Doug Casey, the legendary newsletter writer who joined us last week on Jekyll Island, says it best:
“I’ve never seen a hearse with luggage racks.”
Doug is extremely wealthy, and has been for a while. But he didn’t arrive at Jekyll Island in a blingy Suburban, and he wasn’t chatting on an iPhone.
My friend Bob Bishop is a wealthy guy like Doug. Bob wrote the excellent Gold Mining Stock Report newsletter for a few decades. He recently retired. Bob decided to sell some of his extraordinary possessions… for no particular reason I could see. He didn’t need the money. And they weren’t really taking up space. I asked him why he was selling. He said:
“After a while, you don’t own your stuff… Your stuff owns you. Steve, you’re young… so you’re probably in the accumulation phase. Me? I’ve been there. Now I want to downsize and simplify. I don’t need all this stuff.”
Bob can buy anything he wants. But, like Doug, he doesn’t drive a blingy Suburban, and I doubt he’s got an iPhone. It’s just stuff!
This brings me to the point of this essay… What’s the point of saving money anyway? What’s the point of investing?
When you get older (if you’re not already older!) just what are you going to buy with that money you’ve saved?
Jonathan Clements gave a good answer to this in his farewell column for the Wall Street Journal this week (Clements has written more than 1,000 columns for the Wall Street Journal).
Clements says your savings “can deliver three key benefits.” Even better, he says, “You can enjoy this trio of benefits even if you don’t have great wads of cash.” Here’s how:
1. If you have money, you don’t have to worry about it.
2. Money can give you the freedom to pursue your passions.
3. Money can buy you time with friends and family.
When I think about it, these three things are exactly what Doug and Bob are doing with their lives. The great thing is, it doesn’t (usually) take millions to spend time with friends and family or pursue your passions. You don’t need a fortune to live well.
But in order to get there, the Georgia homebuilder couple needs to skip out on his and hers blingmobiles.
The quicker you grasp this about saving versus spending, the quicker you’ll be able to start living like Doug and Bob… even if you don’t have many millions in the bank.
You might think it’s hard to stop buying ultimately useless stuff… You might think it’s hard to stop keeping up with the Joneses.
But actually, it is quite liberating… And even better, you’ll be financially free much quicker. So give it a try…
Good investing,
Steve
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Dr. Steve Sjuggerud runs his own investment advisory services called True Wealth and DailyWealth. True Wealth is one of the fastest-growing investment newsletters in the country, with more than 60,000 subscribers worldwide. DailyWealth is a free and, as you might have guessed, daily advisory service in the spirit of "Buy Low, Sell High." Steve received his Ph.D. in International Finance and has the "real world" experience that comes from having been vice president of a $50 million global mutual fund as well as an analyst, broker, offshore hedge fund manager and diligent world traveler.
