Welcome to reThinkable: a weekly newsletter where I share actionable ideas to uplevel your finances, personal growth, and productivity.

Today, weโ€™ll cover:

  • The biggest misconception about investing and building wealth

  • When is the best time to start investing?

  • Free investing resources to help you get started

Estimated read time: 2 minutes

The biggest misconception about investing is that you need a lot of money to start.

Many people delay investing until they've saved up a significant amount of money.ย 

This is a mistake. By waiting, you miss out on the most valuable aspect of investing: time.

Starting early, even with small amounts, can be more beneficial than waiting to invest a larger sum later.

A Tale of Two Investors

Letโ€™s say we have two people who are both the same age, but wait until different moments in their life to start investing.

Alex: The Early Starter

Alex starts investing at 25 years old. She can afford to invest $5,000 a year.ย 

After 10 years, she has contributed $50,000 and decides to let the investment just chill and grow at an annualized rate of 7%.

Brooke: The Late Bloomer

Brooke wasn't ready to jump into investing right away.ย 

She waited until age 35 to get started. Like Alex, she invests $5,000 each year, but continues contributing for 30 years until age 65.ย 

She contributes a total of $150,000, and her investments also grow at an annualized rate of 7%.

The Results

By 65, Alex will have about $602,070 in her portfolio, while Brookeโ€”despite investing far more and for longerโ€”ends up with $540,741.

Even though Brooke contributed 3x more than Alex, Alexโ€™s early start gave her the advantage. The extra 10 years Alexโ€™s money spent compounding is what made all the difference.

Just like how a snowball rolling downhill grows larger as it picks up more snow, compounding interest works the same wayโ€”the earlier you start, the more momentum your investment gains over time.

The Time is Now

If you're still on the fence about investing, you lose money in 2 ways:

  1. Your money loses value overtime because of inflation

  2. You miss out on the potential investment gains from being on the sideline

Even small amounts matter โ€” that extra $27 you spend every week on needless things could grow into tens of thousands in just a few years.

If youโ€™re ready to put these principles into action, here are two ways I can help:

1. Take Action

Start investing with my favorite brokerage, moomoo. Iโ€™ve been using moomoo for ~4 years now and I love how easy it is to use. If you feel like investing sounds intimidating, I highly recommend trying it out for yourself.

  • Up to 15 free stocks when you make a qualified depositย 

  • 8.1% interest (APY) on any cash you donโ€™t invest

2. Learn The Basics

Then, get my free Investing Cheat Sheet to walk you through the basics of investing. It has a bunch of helpful tools like:

  • Investing checklist to get you started

  • Investment growth calculator to see how your money can grow overtime

  • Breakdown of investing basics and terminology

The best time to start investing was yesterday. The next best time is today.

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See you next Thursday,

โ€” Vincent Chan

Find me on YouTube, Instagram, or Tiktok

Whenever you're ready, here are 2 ways I can help you:

  1. Earn more money with a High Yield Savings Account: Open a HYSA in just 5 minutes with my free video tutorial.

  2. Savings Operating System (Free): Supercharge your savings with my free 5-step savings system.

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