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couldwrite this article the usual way --
by showing you how to turn your thousands into
millions through investments in solid, well-known
companies.
Procter & Gamble (NYSE: PG), for example,
has grown by a compound average of 13% annually over the past
20 years, while
Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) has averaged 28% over
the past decade! Not too shabby.
But can such returns turn your thousands into millions?
Yes, eventually. A single investment of merely $10,000 would
turn into $1 million in 30 years if it grew at an annual
average of 17%. But that's a fairly steep rate to count on
for your stock investments -- a number to which only a select
few master investors can aspire. It's safer to have more
conservative expectations -- perhaps closer to 10%, the stock
market's historical average annual return over most of the
past century.
A fine balance
So what should you do if you don't want to wait 50
or more years to make millions? Here's one option:
Take a few chances.
With most of your money, you shouldn't take crazy risks.
Consider socking much of it away in a broad-market index
fund, such as the
Vanguard 500 Index (VFINX). That
low-cost fund should earn you close to the market's
historical return over long periods of time. You might also
try
S&P 500 Depositary Receipts , an
exchange-traded fund also known as SPDRs. Either of these
options will instantly invest your money in 500
major American companies, such as
Disney (NYSE: DIS),
Harley-Davidson (NYSE: HOG), and
Motorola (NYSE: MOT).
But once you've done that, take a few chances and
supplement your index with growth-stock picks. That's what
I'm doing in my own investment account. I don't want all of
my money in an index fund, because I'd like my portfolio to
grow faster than average. Instead, a chunk of my nest egg
sits in a variety of individual stocks.
This strategy should help moderate volatility, and it can
also allow you to do well with carefully chosen stocks. It
definitely aided me in
turning $3,000 into
$210,000. (It can also help you zero in on
great stocks the Street misses.) If you don't believe me,
read fellow Fool Paul Elliott's account of
how one stock can change everything. He
describes how $1,800, the cost of a fancy TV, can turn into
$190,000, the value of an entire home -- provided you break
some rules.
Aiming for the stars
Such returns, which come from
classic Rule Breaking
companies, are too tempting for me to ignore. That's why
I'm still on the lookout for young, dynamic companies that
are breaking the rules as they grow and prosper.
The kinds of companies I'm talking about are tomorrow's
Amazon.com ,
H&R Block (NYSE: HRB), and
Wal-Mart (NYSE: WMT). Think about how
different the world was before them. It would have been odd
to think of storefront businesses where people would fill out
your tax returns for you. We couldn't imagine buying books
(and cookware and lawnmowers) on our computers. We wouldn't
have been able to find low-cost discount stores in small
towns across America. These are all companies that broke
their industries' molds and introduced newer, better
systems.
Even
Ford was a Rule Breaking company once, daring
to make a luxury item available to the masses at an
affordable price. Just try to imagine our world without
cars. Continued... |