Investing Information

How To Create Wealth In The Stock Market


First and foremost, an opportunistic strategy for creating wealth in the stock market is needed. And the opportunistic strategy for creating wealth in the stock market must have two ingredients, a plan and a goal. The plan must be a definite, concrete plan of investing that would profit you and your family for the rest of your lives.

This opportunistic investment plan you begin should not profit anyone else - not a stockbroker, a mutual fund or a financial advisor. This means you have to have confidence in yourself and in your own judgment as to whether the investment plan you begin has merit. And this means that the investment plan would and should have already been proven to you!

This definite, concrete plan you begin for creating wealth through opportunities in the stock market must also have a goal. The goal should be clear and specific, and once your have made up your mind to achieve that goal, then go forward and make that goal a reality.

What are the opportunistic traits of a strategic investment plan built on concrete that would actually allow the shareholder to profit through all the turmoil of an up and down stock market? The secret for creating wealth in the stock market; no matter what direction the market is heading?

As in what appears to be the most difficult investment question of all to answer, the answer lies in simplicity itself- investing in those companies that have a historical record of raising their dividend every year. Whether or not you can take this statement of fact to heart is your own judgment call. But it is this opportunistic trait that can and will create wealth for you and your family for the rest of your lives.

A company's ability to raise its dividend every year, coupled with stock appreciation is a very powerful wealth creating formula!

I'm going to provide you with two examples, though there are many more, some with even better results. The two examples are from my book, soon to be published by American Book Publishing - The Stockopoly Plan (where an investment plan and a goal are written in stone).

The first example would be a stock purchased in 1990, Comerica (CMA). What led to the purchase of CMA? - In 1990 CMA had a 21 year history of raising their dividend every year. Today's CMA has a 35 year history of raising their dividend every year. This opportunistic trait in CMA stock has garnished a little better than a15 percent return a year, compounded annually (just by having the dividends reinvested back into the stock each quarter through those years - I prove this to you in The Stockopoly Plan), for the past 14 plus years. Today's CMA stock just recently touched a new high at $60 dollars a share, with a dividend yield of around 3˝ percent. In April of 2003 the stock was selling around $37.50 a share, paying a dividend yield of around 5% a year. Am I tempted to sell my position in CMA? Do I care if the stock drops from this lofty price back to $37 a share? Why should I? If the stock drops back to $37 a share, my dividends being reinvested back into the stock each quarter purchases more shares, and my dividend income from CMA simply and dramatically accelerates. I am also already prepared that if a buy-out offer is ever made for the company to reap the profits of owning the stock (as well as the possibility of another stock split).

The second example is (unfortunately) in my book, also. I say unfortunately because my book is in the final copy edit stage, so no one has had a chance to read and benefit from it, and since a buy-out offer was made for the stock last week or so, the stock will no longer exist (this means a rewrite for me, before publication). The company in question is the Rouse Co. (RSE), which was just purchased by General Growth Properties (GGP). Oddly enough, you'll find GGP in my book, also - if you bother to pick it up. Anyway, that's neither here nor there - RSE, on the takeover bid jumped over $16.00 a share in one day! Whew! Why couldn't they have waited a couple of months until my book was released? RSE had the opportunistic trait of raising their dividend every year since 1993 and I was quite content with its performance through the years.

Well, that last paragraph blew my train of thought on this article. All I can think about at the moment is my rewrite.

I would like to take this time to explain something to you. I have never considered myself a writer nor am I a stock market professional. I am simply a man with 39 years of experience and a passion for the stock market, trying to share what wisdom those years have given me. When I sit down to write an article, I seldom have an idea on what I'm going to say. It was the same way when I sat down to write my book. I just meant to put down a few words on paper for my 18-year old son so he would have a sound, concrete plan for investing in those companies that make up the stock market (quite frankly - I didn't want him to blow his inheritance). Whether you find merit in what I say, I have no idea. What I do know is that life is just too short to learn everything you need to learn by yourself, without the help of others.

There, now I'm satisfied with that ending!

For more excerpts from the book 'The Stockopoly Plan'

visit http://www.thestockopolyplan.com

Charles M. O'Melia is an individual investor with almost 40 years of experience and passion for the stock market. Author of the book - The Stockopoly Plan-soon to be published by American Book Publishing

  


MORE RESOURCES:

msnbc.com (blog)

Facebook's bungled IPO ticks off small investors
msnbc.com (blog)
“I was caught up in the excitement of an enormous social media company going public and thought that over the long run, the investment would be profitable,” she said. “It's a service I use several times a day, and that's how I like to invest -- in ...
Facebook's stock debut shows not all investors are equalLos Angeles Times
Facebook flop hurts small investors' trust in stocksReuters
Facebook: A Lesson in IPO InvestingHispanicBusiness.com
Seeking Alpha -Forbes
all 5,281 news articles »


Pala Announces Completion of Investment in Asian Mineral Resources Limited
MarketWatch (press release)
TORONTO, ONTARIO, May 25, 2012 (MARKETWIRE via COMTEX) -- In furtherance to its press releases of March 1, 2012 and April 4, 2012, Pala Investments Holdings Limited ("Pala") announced today that it has completed its investment in Asian Mineral ...

and more »


COLUMN-College investing the low-risk way
Reuters
So I've been employing an investment strategy to try to make up the difference so that tuition doesn't sink my kids into a loathsome amount of debt. The basis of our plan is that we invest our college funds in an age-adjusted 529 college savings plan ...

and more »


U.S. News & World Report (blog)

Investing in Alternatives
U.S. News & World Report (blog)
By Tim MicKey The adviser community has a better understanding of the potential advantages of adding alternative investments to client portfolios as a way of diversifying and, hopefully, further managing risk in client accounts.
11 Ways to Help Yourself Stay Sane in a Crazy MarketPatch.com
Saving needs to become a disciplined habitMontgomery Advertiser

all 3 news articles »


Stanford Investment Group, Inc. Hosted Presentation "Your True Legacy: It's ...
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
Stanford Investment Group, Inc. hosted a presentation discussing the differences between men and women as it relates to money and investing. Mountain View, CA (PRWEB) May 24, 2012 As part of Stanford Investment Group, Inc.'s mission statement to engage ...

and more »


Advisor.ca

REPEAT: BMO InvestorLine Addresses Four Online Investing Myths
MarketWatch (press release)
However, as widespread and convenient as online investing has become, a few myths still persist. "Despite the increasing popularity of online investing, a few misconceptions about the platform remain," said Cesar Rainusso, Vice President, ...
Online investing popular, but myths persistAdvisor.ca

all 14 news articles »


Investors Love Rio: Why Foreign Corps. Are Buying Into Brazil's Real Economy
International Business Times
By Benjamin Reeves: Subscribe to Benjamin's RSS feed Investing into Brazil's booming economy has turned another page as foreign companies, especially Japanese firms, move from putting money into the nation's financial industry to buying into the real ...

and more »


Assembly approves bill targeting Iran investments
San Francisco Chronicle
(AP) -- The California Assembly has passed a bill that targets insurers for investing in companies that aid Iran's nuclear weapons capabilities. The Assembly passed AB2160 on Friday on a 57-4 vote. The bill now goes to the state Senate.

and more »


Facebook's stock debut shows not all investors are equal
McClatchy Washington Bureau
Millions of small investors have trimmed their investments in stocks after seeing their 401(k) accounts pulverized by the market plunge in 2008-09. The May 2010 flash crash - in which $1 trillion briefly vanished from the stock market - served as ...

and more »


ThinkProgress

Goldman Sachs Investing $40 Billion More in Clean Energy
CleanTechnica
Not even a couple weeks ago, Mridul wrote that Goldman Sachs–backed firm ReNew Power Limited was investing Rs 6000 crore (over $1.1 billion) to build 1 GW (1000 MW) of wind power projects across India. Apparently, Goldman Sachs has much bigger plans ...
Goldman Sachs To Invest $40 Billion In Clean Energy: 'The Underlying Thesis ...ThinkProgress

all 54 news articles »

Google News

Article List | Index | Site Map
All logos, trademarks and articles on this site are property and copyright of their respective owner(s).
The comments are property of their posters, all the rest is Copyright © 2006 CanadaSEEK.com - All Rights Reserved.