Vậy thì để dành mất bao lâu để bạn trở thành triệu phú?
(Vietsanhbuoc tóm tắt nội dung )
Thứ Nhất , bạn phải sống tiết kiệm, kế đến, bạn phải quyết tâm để dành một số tiền nhất định nào đó cho mỗi tháng và theo đuổi mục đích đó. Sau đó bạn phải chắc chắn mình đầu tư đa dạng- vừa stock cổ phiếu, bonds trái phiếu, và những dạng đầu tư khác như bất động sản và các kim loại quý(vàng,bac...), hàng hóa khác(về nông nghiệp :bắp,quặng mỏ, ..)để thăng bằng quỹ đầu tư cũa bạn phát triển theo mục tiêu ban đầu bạn đã vạch ra.
Vậy thì mất bao lâu để bạn trở thành triệu phú?
Nếu ban đầu bạn đầu tư $10,000 và quỹ đầu tư cũa bạn tăng 5% mỗi năm, dưới đây sẽ chỉ bạn để dành bao nhiêu để đạt được 1 triệu đô trước tuổi 70
theo bankrate.com tính toán như sau:
25 tuổi bạn phải để dành $450 đô cho một tháng, chỉ $15 cho một ngày cho toàn bộ khoảng thời gian những năm bạn làm việc
35 tuổi bạn phải để dành $850 đô cho một tháng
45 tuổi bạn phải để dành $1700 đô cho một tháng
55 tuổi bạn phải để dành $4000 đô cho một tháng
Tuy nhiên, với những người bắt đầu để dành rất sớm và để dành thừơng xuyên,thì giấc mơ triệu phú không phải là một giấc mơ hão huyền
( theo yahoofinance.com) by Sharon Epperson
What It Takes to Become a Millionaire
Thursday, September 22, 2011
The idea of becoming a millionaire may seem like a pipe dream.
More from CNBC.com: • What $1 Million Buys You • Billionaire Toys • Play CNBC's Million Dollar Portfolio Challenge |
Only one-fifth of U.S. respondents think it's likely that their net worth will total at least one million dollars in the next 10 years, while 62 percent said that is "very unlikely." The consensus from the majority of respondents (61 percent): It is "extremely" or "very difficult" to become a millionaire in the United States today.
But many are still trying to hit that million-dollar mark — and millions of Americans have already attained that goal.
The number of millionaires in the country is growing. The U.S. has more than 10 million. Despite the European debt crisis and worries about the U.S. economy, a May 2011 report from the Deloitte Center for Financial Services projects that the number of millionaire households in the U.S. will more than double to 20.5 million in 2020, with combined wealth of $87 trillion, up from $39 trillion in 2011.
Money makes money, but it can be tough to make that money grow in these rocky financial markets. The AP-CNBC poll found six in 10 U.S. residents (62 percent) say their confidence in investing has been shaken by recent volatility in the stock market. That sentiment has increased over the past 12 months. Today, 65 percent of those who own stocks, bonds and mutual funds are less confident about investing, compared with 61 percent last year.
Respondents in the AP-CNBC poll say they're making saving and investing a top priority. The survey asked people what they would do with a million dollars and found, on average, that Americans would spend 31 percent on saving or investing; 17 percent on giving to family; 14 percent on spending; 13 percent on paying down debt; 12 percent on buying real estate and 11 percent on charitable donations. Unfortunately, the reality is that mounting expenses, lower wages and job losses require many Americans to dip into those savings to pay for household bills or pay down debt.
[Click here to check savings products and rates in your area.]
The reality is that investors who stayed the course and did not pull their money out of the market in the last few months may actually have fared pretty well. Despite an almost 8 percent decline since mid-July, the broader stock market, represented by the S&P 500 Index, is up nearly 8 percent over the past 12 months. Certainly it's been a rough few years with the S&P 500, down 8 percent in five years. But over the past decade, the broader stock market is up by more than 10 percent.
In most cases, the road to financial security in retirement comes with steady savings, strategic investing, and probably a later retirement date than you may have envisioned at the start of your career. Keep these three rules in mind: First, you need to live within your means. Next, you have to commit to saving a certain amount every month and stick to that goal. Then, you have to make sure your investments are in a diversified portfolio — a mix of stocks, bonds, and alternative investments (commodities and real estate) and rebalance that mix to attain your goals for growth.
So how long will it take until you're a millionaire?
If you start with an initial $10,000 investment and your portfolio grows by 5 percent every year, here's how much you need to save each month to reach your $1 million goal by age 70, according to Bankrate.com's calculator.
• 25-year-olds have to save $450 a month. That's just $15 a day for the rest of your working years.
• 35-year-olds have to save $850 a month.
• 45-year-olds have to save $1,700 a month.
• 55-year-olds have to save $4,000 a month. (Of course, with an average inflation rate of 3 percent, that $1,000,000 nest egg will only be worth $642,000 in today's dollars. So that means you'll likely wind up having to save even more.)
Still, for those who start early and save often, becoming a millionaire doesn't have to be a pipe dream.
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