Your Money Dilemmas, Solved
Follow our advice when you’re in a financial quandary.
Should I Invest a Lump Sum Once a Year or in Monthly Installments?
If you always knew the best time to put your money in the market, you would be well on your way to joining Bill Gates and
Warren Buffett on a list of the world’s richest people. Of course, no one—nope, not even Mr. Buffett—can predict the market’s
future with total accuracy, says Christine Benz, a Chicago-based director of personal finance for the investment research
firm Morningstar. That’s why most financial pros are proponents of stashing money in the stock market on a regular basis—a
practice that is called dollar-cost averaging.
Here’s how it works: You invest a set sum—say, $100—each month for 12 months rather than plunking down $1,200 all at once.
In the process, you spread your risk out across the entire year. As long as you invest the same amount every time, you should
be fine. You’ll usually end up buying more shares when the market slumps and fewer shares when prices are high. So you will
be protected from huge ups and downs in the market.
What’s more, investing on a schedule makes it easier to be disciplined about setting money aside, says Dawn Brown, a senior
financial adviser with Altfest Personal Wealth Management, in New York City. Keep making regular deposits and you’ll find
your financial goals are closer than you think.
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