Originally posted by: shortylickens
Invested in a few other minor things, but I'll be honest and say I dont entirely understand them, other than they are a heck of a lot more reliable than Mutual Funds. I also acknowledge I am not nearly smart enough for stocks.
It's really not difficult.
All the Moden Portofolio theory says is to diversify your assets into uncorrelated parts of the market. There's size: Large, Mid, Small. There's style: Growth (companies growing quickly, Google), Value (not much growth, but dividends are higher, Kmart), and Equity (blend of value/growth).
Put your money in low cost index funds. Index means it's just following a particular market size/style. A company called Vanguard has some very low cost index funds.
An example:
15% International large cap
15% International small cap
20% US small cap
20% US large cap
10% REITs
20% Fixed income
Each year, you rebalance your assets so that you have the original percentages in each asset allocation. Or if there's a huge change, say 5%, then rebalance.
This effectively allows you buy low and sell high. There's very detailed mathematical models showing how this increases returns and lowers risk. The people that designed it won the Nobel Prize in 1990.
Do you remember all that fuss about tech stocks in the late 90s? If you used MPT, you would have made about 12% average annualized between 1995-now.
Just pick up a book and read it. It'll make a huge difference for just 10-20 hours of careful reading.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0071429581?v=glance
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0071362363?v=glance
That's it. That's all you do. The people that push for active management and daily stock trading eventually lose. There may be a very small percentage of people that make money that way, but no one can predict the market. All of those financial magazines are full of sh1t. If they could predict the market, they'd be billionairs and have absolutely no need to sell you a magazine.