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Stock Market

Investing in the stock market has always been an effective way to build wealth. In fact, it’s consistently proven to be the most effective wealth generator over the long term.

And, with persistent inflation an ongoing issue and the Federal Reserve poised to cut rates sooner rather than later, investing in stocks may be one of the few places investors will be able to generate consistent, inflation-beating returns for their savings.

Of course, stock market investing comes with more risk than a safe, low-yield savings account. Inevitably, not all of your investments will be winners.

In investing, no one really knows for sure what’s going to happen. Over time, however, stocks tend to rise. History tells us this. Since 1928, the average annual return in the S&P 500, the benchmark U.S. stock index, is 10%. So historically, a well-diversified portfolio of stocks should allow you to just about double your investment once every seven years.

Now, there are periods where returns in the stock market underperform the average. Every few years we encounter corrections and bear markets, as we did in 2022 and 2018, and the years after the Great Recession and dotcom bust.

But over a longer time horizon, those off years are more than offset by the performance in bull markets. If you invested in the S&P 500 at the beginning of 2014 and simply held that investment, you would have weathered the 2018 correction, the pandemic sell-off, and the 2022 bear market. And you’d have generated 16.5% annual returns.

You wouldn’t think that, with a correction, a pandemic and a bear market, the last decade would be anything to write home about, but those numbers speak for themselves. Despite the fear and negative headlines, investing over the last 10 years has beaten the historical average by more than 50% each year.

But, of course, your return would have depended on what stocks you actually bought. Take General Electric (GE), for example. GE is an iconic American company. As recently as 2009 it was the largest company in the world.

But had you bought GE at the beginning of 2014, you would have lost 0.7% every year, and that’s assuming you reinvested your dividends. Without dividend reinvestment, your returns would have been even worse.

That kind of unpredictability scares some people away from investing in the stock market. The track record over time should be enough to convince you otherwise.

The stock market is a vast and ever-evolving place, and there are many ways to approach stock market investing.

Want to invest in safe companies that offer a steady stream of income? You’re probably a dividend investor.

Are you willing to take on a bit more risk to go after bigger, faster rewards? Growth investing is likely for you.

Value investing is for investors who like to bargain shop.

Options trading is for those who like to invest based on statistical probabilities. And so on.

At Cabot Wealth Network, we have something for every investor. Our investment advisories cater to a variety of risk tolerances and timetables, depending on your preference. Since 1970, we’ve been helping investors of all experience levels achieve market-beating returns, helping our readers double their money more than 30 times over.

When done right, investing in the stock market can be a hugely profitable endeavor. For more than a half-century, we’ve been helping investors maximize those profits—and hope to continue doing so for another 50 years.

Stock Market Post Archives
Investors should be looking for great growth stocks that can multiply their investment many times.
The worst of the European crisis has passed. While many of the overleveraged countries on the continent still have major problems to solve, the European Central Bank’s actions last year have succeeded in keeping the monetary union together. And with uncertainty surrounding the eurozone’s fate removed, European equities are already...
Cabot ETF Investing System uses market timing indicators to minimize losses in bear markets and maximize gains in bull markets.
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times . . . While most of you recognize this famous line as the opening to Charles Dickens’ A Tale of Two Cities, you could use the line to describe dividend investing in 2012. On the one...
The market’s main trend is still up, but day-to-day action is getting choppier and the prospect of volatility looms. In today’s Stock Market Crash Course, the experts weigh the market’s oversold condition, which suggests a correction, against the indicators for further upside, including sentiment, acquisition activity and technical factors.

Click below...
I encourage you to develop a checklist to use before you decide to buy stocks. It should be strict enough to keep you out of trouble.
Although we’re now about five years removed from the sub-prime mortgage crisis and ensuing financial collapse, financial stocks are still in the doghouse as far as many investors are concerned. They have valid reasons: it has taken years for the large banks to deleverage their balance sheets, there remains a...
Renren, Inc. (RENN) is currently known as the Facebook (FB) of China. It is down some 80% since it went public almost three years ago. But the company is much more than a Chinese Facebook (which is blocked in China). Half of its revenue comes from its gaming...
Michael Dell has succeeded in his bid to buy out investors in the company he founded, Dell (DELL), and take it private with help from private-equity firm Silver Lake, Microsoft (MSFT) and a group of investment banks. Shareholders will be getting about $13.65 per share, which is 25% above where...
A 30-second commercial during this year’s Super Bowl, broadcast on Sunday, reportedly cost around $3.8 million. What kind of company can afford to shell out that much for half a minute of the nation’s attention? Historically, beverage and car companies, as you can see in the infographic from Harvard Business Review...
I correspond with investors who know all of the sound rules of growth stock investing but do not follow them.
A person stops being a chump by finding a successful investing system that makes sense to them and then following it!
“The ProShares Ultra FTSE China 25 Fund (XPP) delivers twice the return of the FTSE China 25 Index. The FTSE China 25 is an index that follows the performance of the largest 25 Chinese stocks. [It’s] the Chinese equivalent of the Dow Jones Industrial Average, a measure designed...
We’ve covered a lot of the important elements of dividend stock investing here in the last few months, from the importance of buying at low valuations to the benefits of increasing dividends. Regardless of what other factors you consider as part of your investing system, there are a few good metrics...
There is no perfect method of investing in stocks. What really matters is matching the system’s pros and cons with your own personality. I base this on meeting and corresponding with hundreds of other investors.