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                    		| Published since 1990, Sound Mind Investing is America's best-selling financial newsletter written from a biblical perspective.  Visit the Sound Mind Investing Web site.  Request a free information packet regarding the Sound Mind Investing newsletter.  Investigate the widely-acclaimed Sound Mind Investing book, available at a 35 percent discount!  |  
                    		|  |  |  Smart Investing    Things Are Not As They Seem 
 CBN.com 
		   Sorting  out the real from the illusory is one of the great challenges in investing, as  in life. There's often a disconnect between our perceptions and the underlying  reality. Things are not as they seem. For example:
		
		 • Ownership seems natural. We have houses and cars in our name. We have  money and investment accounts in our name. We feel like they're ours. But  they're not. They're God's. He's merely placed them temporarily in our charge.  Someone else will have "our" wealth after we're gone. Seeing this  clearly can not only have a great effect on our giving, but also our lifestyle  spending and investment risk-taking. • Investing seems complicated. The investment industry often makes it  appear that way, but it doesn't need to be. There are essentially just two  kinds of investments—those where you lend money, and those where you own  things. How you divide your investment money between those two groups is the  most important thing. Everything else is fine tuning. • Professional help seems essential. For the average investor, it's not.  If you master just a few basics, you can do it yourself. We regularly receive  thank-you letters from people who had no financial training saying they feel  liberated now that they've taken charge of their investments. Some of them are  from widows who have been forced to take up the task. • Timing your buying seems important. Actually, the important thing is not  so much when you buy, but that you buy and continue to buy. One  study we did compared an investor who was able to invest all his IRA money at  the market low every year with another investor who simply did his investing at  the end of every month. There was less than a 1% difference in their annual  returns over a 30-year period. Being consistent in your dollar commitment is  much more important than your timing. • Selling under fire seems prudent. When the market is falling, there's a  tendency to want to move aggressively to protect your capital. Whether you  should depends on your age. It makes sense if you need to cash out your stock  fund investments in the next 3-5 years for retirement spending. But otherwise,  you've got it all wrong. During the investing phase of your life, you're going  to be a net buyer of stocks for many years to come. You want your monthly  investing dollars to stretch as far as possible, acquiring as many stock and  stock fund shares as you possibly can. And that happens when prices are down.  Stock prices that are being battered by a weak market work in your favor,  allowing you to stockpile shares to the max. There  are more investment illusions we could talk about—e.g., that markets behave  rationally and there's a sound-bite explanation for each day's price movements,  that advanced reading and studying inevitably lead to better returns, that the  gurus we read about and see on TV have reliable insights into stocks' future  direction, and that picking mutual funds based on their long-term track record  is the most sensible approach. But  beyond these investing misconceptions are bigger life-size issues.  Paradoxically, seeking what seems good (wealth and success) can actually be bad  for us, and accepting what seems bad ("trials of many kinds") can  actually be good for us.  Understanding  this gives us a certain peace. Our confidence is in God, who is always at work behind the scenes for our good. There are times it doesn't seem that  way, so we remind ourselves to take His word for it (see Romans 8:28-39). This truth is beautifully expressed in the Prayer  of an Unknown Confederate Soldier: "I  asked God for strength that I might achieve. I was made weak, that I might  learn humbly to obey.
 I asked for help, that I might do greater things. I was given infirmity, that I  might do better things.
 
 I asked for riches, that I might be happy. I was given poverty, that I might be  wise.
 
 I asked for power, that I might have the praise of men. I was given weakness,  that I might feel the need of God.
 
 I asked for all things, that I might enjoy life. I was given life, that I might  enjoy all things.
 
 I got nothing that I asked for but everything I hoped for.
 
 Almost despite myself, my unspoken prayers were answered. I am, among all men,  most richly blessed."
 
 In our Sound Mind Investing newsletter, we try to regularly emphasize why we are here serving you in this  way: We want to help you to have more so you can give more to share the good  news of Christ's love with the world.
		
		 
 
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