Succeed in Stocks Even if you Don’t Know Where to Start

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Succeed in Stocks Even if you Don’t Know Where to Start, How an Illiterate 18-Year-Old McDonald’s Cook Becomes a Millionaire in 50 Years.

Course Description

I recently interviewed one of the three most famous value investors in the world.  The first two are Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger.

Mohnish Pabrai draws wisdom from both.  He describes a librarian who died with an estate of $4 million.  The librarian donated it to the University of New Hampshire (UNH) in 2015 according to CNBC.

Mohnish explains that any normal eighteen-year-old with very few skills who can only get a minimum wage job can make it.

The young McDonald’s worker earns minimum wage of $15,000 for 2,000 hours of work per year. He can save ten percent because he is living at home and contributing 90% to the household budget.

The young man sets aside ten percent of $15,000 before taxes each year. The 18-year-old saves $1,500 each year into a Roth (after taxes) or employer sponsored IRA (before taxes).

This is a conservative example. The young man (for ease of example) does not get a boost from employer matching if he saves in an employer sponsored 401(k). This would allow him to save much more.

He earns 9% on a simple investment choice.  His income rises modestly with inflation.  For instance, if inflation is 2% this year he will save $1,530 in the next.

When he retires 50 years from now at the age of 68 he will have saved $75,000 over the years from his salary.

At 9%, the account doubles every 8 years as per the rule of 72.  The approximate time to double an account is the number 72 divided by the rate of return on the investment.

How Much Does $75,000 of Drip Savings Grow at 9% in 50 Years? Answer: $1,332,662

Bankrate website has a calculator that shows that this scenario will produce a retirement account for the unskilled, minimum wage 18-year-old of $1,332,662.

Is this reasonable?

The most respected textbook on investments is “Essentials of Investments” by professors Bodie, Kane and Marcus.  The chapter on portfolio theory reports that a portfolio of small U.S. stocks returned 11.80%, large U.S. stocks returned 9.62%, and world stocks 9.21%.

These are the geometric mean returns that investors enjoyed from 1920 to 2010 in the stock market.

A simple exchange traded fund such as the Diamond — SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average (DIA) would have allowed this unskilled 18-year-old to capture a large stock return of 9.62% over that period.

The financial success of this 18-year-old comes from the power of compounding over a long time.  The Pabrai fund has generated average returns of about 15%.

This higher return would generate a $12,450,561 portfolio for the eighteen-year-old.  A difference of just over 5% produces a fortune nearly ten times greater!

-Doc Brown

P.S. Enroll in this essential community on stock investing now. 


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