I often write on Quora.com, where I am the most viewed writer on financial matters, with over 252.1 million views in recent years.
Some of the links and videos referred to might only be available on the original answers.
If you want me to answer any questions on Quora or YouTube, or you are looking to invest, don’t hesitate to contact me, email (advice@adamfayed.com) or use WhatsApp.
Source: Quora
The biggest reasons to have some savings actually hasn’t changed. Savings, long-term, have always paid less than assets like stocks.
They have just been less volatile:
The reason to have some liquid savings is in case of an emergency. If your car or laptop breaks, it is good to have some cash lying around.
It is true that rock bottom interest rates have incentivized more people to invest rather than save, yet the fundamental logic should still remain the same; if you need money in less than five years you should save it. If you can have a long-term investment horizon, invest it.
Therefore, it still makes sense to save in some limited situations, or engage in fixed deposits.
For money you can hold long-term, it should be interested in a mixed portfolio of stocks, bonds and some instruments like real estate investment trusts.
Investing isn’t complicated or scary, unless you make it that way. In fact, you are usually taking more risk with cash than investing.
Here is Ray Dalio explaining why cash is the riskiest investment of all:
As per the graph below, nobody has lost long-term if they hold the entire market (like the S&P500) for decades:
The only reason people have lost money investing is:
Look at 2008–2009 or the COVID-19 crash of 2020. Nobody who bought and held lost money.
The S&P500 recovered in 2–3 years in the first crisis and six months or so last year. Many people lost by panicking.
So for me, I have a simple rule. I keep 3–4 months worth of costs in savings/cash accounts.
The rest gets invested, and I don’t care if the market is down, up, sideways or crashing.
If markets crash today or soar in value it won’t make any difference as I won’t sell for decades.
Source: Quora
Firstly, there is a correlation between IQ test scores and average salaries and wealth, even though it isn’t politically correct to say it.
Yet I get your point. It is very true that, despite the aforementioned averages, many smart people aren’t successful in many ways.
Let’s start with what success is
For most people success is at least some of the following things:
Some of those things are linked. If you want to become a world-class, and famous, scientist, you will probably be working on a cause and be financially successful at least in terms of income. You will also be wealthy if you manage that income properly.
No matter what form of success you want to achieve, you are partly reliant on other people.
No matter how hard or smart you work in business or even as a charity, you are reliant on the market to buy your goods.
You might feel like your goods or services solve a problem, but the market might not agree.
You could also have two charities, or businesses, who are trying to solve the same problem and are equally good, but one is marketed better.
That isn’t to mention that life, and the market, isn’t always fair.
Let me give you a simple example.
The three best people in terms of Chinese language skills (non-natives I mean) in my network are:
The third person is clearly more impressive. He doesn’t have any Chinese roots.
He didn’t live in China until his 30s. He doesn’t just speak everyday Chinese fluently, he can read the traditional characters to a higher-level than the average Chinese person outside of Hong Kong, who no longer study them as much as before.
He can read books in philosophy and science in both, interconnected, written languages.
Despite all of this, he wouldn’t be offered one dollar more for most translation work than the first two people.
There is a simple reason for this. Apart from in some very narrow circle, the market isn’t looking for somebody who can translate science in traditional Chinese.
Even if the market cared, they could get a cheap freelancer, maybe a well-educated student from Hong Kong, who could do the same thing cheaply.
The first two people are “good enough” as far as most jobs are concerned. Their practical Chinese is just as good, they are just weaker in some areas the market doesn’t care about.
Likewise, in sport, two horses could be one hair or nose apart, and that winning horse could win millions more in prize money.
The market and people in general, don’t care that much about:
The market and people in general, care about whether you can help them solve their perceived problems.
Those who know how to solve other people’s and businesses’ problems, and can communicate and market that problem-solving ability, will do better than somebody who is merely smart and can’t do those things.
Yet sometimes people who have been considered smart all their lives feel like they deserve more due to their hard work or intelligence.
Real life isn’t school or university though. There are no participation medals or rewards to compensate for unfairness.
Source: Quora
There is something that is a universal truth. That is, betting against the end of the world isn’t very profitable.
It is unlikely to happen and if it does, you won’t make much profit from it in any case.
The dollar depreciating wouldn’t be the end of the world. Even a dollar collapse might not be, but it could feel like close to the end of the world financial speaking.
It would cause so much contagion that it would make these events like look a picnic or a party:
There is another point to make. Spreading doom is profitable. If you have been doing what I have for any length of time, and/or read history, you will see the same stories come up again and again:
The same people predicting a dollar crisis in 2021, predicted one in 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020!
I don’t like making predictions, but I will make one now. On the day we die there will be stories on the news or internet saying:
I am not saying black swan events can’t happen. Merely, it isn’t likely the dollar will collapse, and many of the people predicting this event have form.
Source: Quora
That could be true, but this quote is relevant here:
At any given time 40%-40% of the population doesn’t invest for numerous reasons:
In most countries it is much more than 50%.
Also remember
Being nervous is ultimately pointless, because there is a lot of academic evidence that shows that nobody can time the stock markets.
Therefore, unless somebody believes they are smarter than the entire market, it makes sense to just invest when you have money.
Very seldom have a met a person who is wealthy and extremely nervous and always pessimistic about the future.
So I wouldn’t worry about it. There have always been people who have been willing to put money under their mattresses or to lose to inflation by keeping the money in the bank.
Pained by financial indecision? Want to invest with Adam?
Adam is an internationally recognised author on financial matters, with over 252.1 million answers views on Quora.com and a widely sold book on Amazon
Further Reading
In the answer below , taken from my online Quora.com answers, I spoke about the following issues and topics:
To read more click on the link below.