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FIRST TIME INVESTOR

Where to start?

Hi i just turned 18 and want to start investing but not sure where to start. I have heard Pearler is a good site for Australian to invest but not really sure how to. Is there an amount i have to invest everyweek and if do what is the budget. right now i dont have a job but have allowance can i still invest? Will i have to include this in my tax return? Most importantly which investment do i invest in? Sorry it is a lot of questions but i hope i can get answers to it

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Han Le.

4 March 2023

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Dave Gow - Strong Money Australia

INVESTOR

over 1 year ago

Hi Han :)

Lots of questions, but that’s perfectly normal at the beginning stage!

Is there a set amount to invest? No. You can invest as much or as little as you want. If you’re investing amounts less than $500, then you could look at managed funds – details on this page scroll down: https://pearler.com/pricing

The main thing is to invest with a long time horizon (longer than 5 years), and yes, any income earned from investing will need to be added to a tax return.

As for which investment, nobody here can tell you what to invest in. But you can see what others invest in by checking out either the different accounts available on the invest page (which are ranked in order of popularity I think) to get some ideas. You can get go off and google those funds to learn more about any that you’re interested in.

I also wrote an article for new investors with some things to think about which you might find useful: https://pearler.com/explore/learn/blog/invest...

I know it probably feels overwhelming right now, but don’t worry. As you read and learn a bit more, things will start becoming more clear. Given you’re 18, that’s a great age to be starting. The most powerful action in the early stages is saving money to invest with, rather than picking the perfect investment. So if you focus on that, things will typically work out better than if you go hunting for the ‘best’ strategy.

Hope that helps.

Dave

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Owen Rask

INVESTMENT ADVISER

over 1 year ago

G’day Han!

Mateeee, this is an amazing thing you’re doing. Investing so early is basically one of the very few superpowers anyone can attain. That, and creating a time machine, are two of my favourites. The others are secrets I can’t reveal…

Dave and Crisis have crafted some top responses for you, so I’ll keep mine brief and focus on my passion — investing education.

But, Han, please keep in mind that I can only offer generalised financial information, so please speak with a financial adviser if you’re confused about anything I say, and refer to an ETF’s Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) before you invest… (I know what you’re thinking…. the PDS sounds boring but it actually answers a lot of newer investor questions like the tax statements you’ll receive, when dividends/distributions are paid by an ETF, what you should do with your share registry… whoever that is, etc.!).

A top piece of investing advice I got in my 20s

I was a little older than you when I started investing. So, you’ve got me there (you could be retired by my age — I look 52 but I’m actually 32).

My first investment was NAB shares. Not a bad idea — it’s a big bank! — but I’m pretty sure I freaked out and sold the shares later that afternoon.

Nowadays I’d consider that a mistake but trust me, that «mistake» has never featured on my list of ‘things I got wrong’. In fact, I needed to make that mistake. And, it turns out, while I’ve lost more than 80% on some shares, by far my worst mistakes by 💲💲 value have been selling great investments too soon. Murphy’s law says they would run higher after I sold them 🤦‍♂️

One of the best pieces of advice I got in my 20s was this: time is on your side, meaning more compounding than almost any investor. So don’t waste your time trying to find ‘cheap stocks’ or ‘big dividends’… just find the strongest companies & ETFs you can find, companies that will be around for 10 or 20 years, and let them go. Be slow to s

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