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The Power of Compound Interest: How to Own Manhattan
by Jeffrey Strain
Inspiration
is often found in the most unlikely places. I
received my first lesson in the importance of
compound interest and long term savings from a pair
of training shoes I bought in high school. To
emphasize the point that training a little bit every
day could create vast improvements over time, the
training manual used an example of the Native
American Indians and pilgrims in the US.
In the early 1600s, the American Indians sold an
island, now called Manhattan in New York, for
various beads and trinkets worth about $16. Since
Manhattan real estate is now some of the most
expensive in the world, it would seem at first
glance that the American Indians made a terrible
deal. Had the American Indians, however, sold their
beads and trinkets, invested their $16 and received
8% compounded annual interest, not only would they
have enough money to buy back all of Manhattan, they
would still have several hundred million dollars
left over. That is the power of compound interest
over time.
Taking this concept to small amounts of money in
your daily life can produce significant savings for
you over time. For example, let's take the change in
your pockets at the end of each day. Let's assume
that it adds up to about a dollar a day and you
place that into your piggy bank. That dollar a day
will become $7 in a week and $30 at the end of the
month if you continue to empty your change into your
piggy bank each day.
At the end of the month, you take this $30 and place
it into your Roth IRA (where it grows tax free and
can be withdrawn tax free) which earns 10% a year.
That dollar a day will be worth close to $68,000 in
30 years and that's just pocket change. Make a few
adjustments in your spending habits and look at the
results.
Drive your
car 28 miles less a week and you have yourself
another $68,000 dollars. Brown bag lunch and find
yourself $136,000 richer in 30 years. Make your own
coffee in the morning instead of buying it on the
way to work and you can add another $136,000 to your
account. Do those simple things plus empty your
pockets each day and you will have over $400,000 in
30 years.
It's all in the way you look at the money you are
about to spend. It may be just a dollar right now,
but for every additional dollar you can invest each
month, it can add up to more that $2,200 in 30
years. That's $220 for every extra dime you save and
$22 for every extra penny you can squeeze out in
savings each month. So the next time you're walking
down the street and you see a penny on the ground,
don't think of it as a penny. Pick it up, place it
into your piggy bank to invest and congratulate
yourself for finding $22 for your future.
Copyright (c) Jeffrey Strain.
Reprinted with permission. He is the owner of
SavingAdvice.com -
a personal financial site with tips and articles
dedicated to saving you money.
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