How to Invest for Beginners (2026)

AAli Abdaal
Beginning InvestingSmall Business/StartupsAdult EducationStocks

Transcript

00:00:00Okay, so let's say you wanna get started
00:00:01with this investing thing.
00:00:02You might have a bit of money saved.
00:00:04It's probably not enough for a house,
00:00:05but you decide you should probably invest in something.
00:00:07You could invest in stocks and shares, government bonds,
00:00:09corporate bonds, real estate, foreign exchange, crypto,
00:00:12NFTs, futures, fine art, watches.
00:00:14Or maybe you've got that one friend who bought Bitcoin
00:00:16in 2013 or Nvidia in like 2015.
00:00:18And then that person got super rich and you're like,
00:00:20whoa, like man, if only I'd done that,
00:00:22I'd have been like mega rich without having to do any work.
00:00:24So there's all these dreams, there's all this confusion.
00:00:26And then on top of all of this,
00:00:27there is the very real fear that you might actually lose
00:00:29all of this money that you've worked so hard to save.
00:00:31So in light of all of this,
00:00:32this is my updated ultimate guide to investing for beginners.
00:00:35And so we're gonna split this video up into four parts,
00:00:38which are timestamped so you can skip around
00:00:39if you feel like it.
00:00:40In part one, we're gonna talk about the basics
00:00:42and the philosophy behind investing.
00:00:44Then we're gonna talk about why and how to invest your money
00:00:46and some nuances around that.
00:00:47Thirdly, we're gonna talk about common fears
00:00:49and questions and concerns like what if I lose all my money?
00:00:52And then in part four,
00:00:53we're gonna talk about fast lane investing,
00:00:54which is an alternative approach to building wealth.
00:00:57So with that said, let's dive in.
00:01:00Part one, the philosophy and the basics of investing.
00:01:03Okay, so let's start with the basics
00:01:04and let's start by asking the question,
00:01:05what's actually the point of investing in the first place?
00:01:08Now, a lot of people I speak to have the experience
00:01:09where they've managed to save up some amount of money,
00:01:12maybe it's a few thousand pounds, a few thousand dollars,
00:01:14and they're feeling pretty good about it
00:01:15because now they have a safety net
00:01:16and they're being financially responsible.
00:01:18But if you're interested in investing,
00:01:19then you probably know that if that money
00:01:21is just sitting there in your bank account,
00:01:22it's actually losing value every single day.
00:01:24And that is thanks to a wonderful thing called inflation,
00:01:27where essentially over time,
00:01:28your money loses its purchasing power.
00:01:30And so obviously $1,000 today buys you less stuff
00:01:33than $1,000 did 10 years ago or $1,000 did 20 years ago.
00:01:36The $1,000 is theoretically the same.
00:01:38It's just that everything else has gone more expensive
00:01:40and therefore you can buy less stuff
00:01:41with the same amount of money.
00:01:42Now, the whole point of investing
00:01:43is to be able to put our money somewhere
00:01:45where it makes more money.
00:01:46Firstly, to counteract the effects of inflation.
00:01:48And secondly, if we can beat inflation,
00:01:50then it means like the more you invest,
00:01:52the more money you make, the more it compounds over time.
00:01:54And then that is one of the strategies for building wealth.
00:01:56So if the point of investing is to magically grow your money,
00:01:59you might be thinking,
00:02:00okay, but like how does investing actually make you money?
00:02:02And here we're gonna introduce the term asset.
00:02:05An asset is a thing that puts money in your pocket.
00:02:07So for example, if you think about buying a house
00:02:10and then putting it on rent,
00:02:11you kind of make money in two separate ways
00:02:13from that particular equation.
00:02:14Firstly, you buy the house and then you put it on rent.
00:02:16Therefore you get rental income
00:02:17coming in from your tenants every month
00:02:19and that puts money in your pocket.
00:02:20And secondly, hopefully the value of the house
00:02:22also goes up over time.
00:02:23This is called capital appreciation.
00:02:25So let's say you win a million dollars in the lottery
00:02:27and you put all of it into buy a house in cash
00:02:29and you're able to rent out that house
00:02:30for, I don't know, $2,000 a month.
00:02:33Every year, you're making $24,000
00:02:35in rental income from the house.
00:02:36And maybe if you sell the house 10 years later,
00:02:38maybe it'll be worth 1.5 million.
00:02:40And so you've theoretically made an extra 500,000
00:02:43from the capital appreciation of the property.
00:02:45In reality, of course, you probably use a mortgage.
00:02:46In reality, there's property taxes,
00:02:47there's like inflation itself
00:02:49and all sorts of more complicated factors.
00:02:50But essentially in this context,
00:02:51you are earning money through rental income
00:02:53and through appreciation of the asset itself.
00:02:55Now houses are an interesting example
00:02:57because they're quite easy to visualize.
00:02:59Like you can imagine theoretically owning a house
00:03:01and then theoretically becoming a landlord
00:03:02and having someone pay you rent
00:03:03because you probably pay rent to someone else.
00:03:05And so most people, when they think of investing,
00:03:07they think I should get on the property ladder in some degree,
00:03:09especially if your parents were into that sort of stuff
00:03:11many decades ago.
00:03:12But for the most part, for most people,
00:03:13owning a house is actually a relatively inaccessible thing
00:03:16if you are just getting started with investing.
00:03:18And so we wanna be looking to alternative asset classes.
00:03:21Now there is a long list of assets that you could potentially
00:03:24choose to invest in.
00:03:24There's stocks, shares and equities,
00:03:26which is sort of the same thing.
00:03:27There are hedge funds, there are index funds,
00:03:29there are government bonds, there are corporate bonds,
00:03:31there are fancy watches, there's fine art,
00:03:33there is crypto of course.
00:03:35And a lot of this stuff can get very complicated very quickly.
00:03:37So we are gonna simplify things
00:03:38and we are gonna be focusing on stocks and shares.
00:03:40The reason we're gonna be talking about stocks and shares,
00:03:42and this is most sensible people's recommendation
00:03:44when it comes to investing your money.
00:03:46Firstly, because it is very accessible
00:03:48to normal people like you and me.
00:03:49Secondly, you don't need a huge amount of money
00:03:51to get started, unlike buying a property.
00:03:52Thirdly, you don't need to take on huge amounts of risk,
00:03:54unlike something like crypto.
00:03:55And fourthly, you don't need to be an accredited investor
00:03:58of any kind, like for the most part,
00:03:59normal people can just buy stocks and shares.
00:04:01Part two, why and how to invest in stocks and shares.
00:04:05So what does it actually mean to buy a stock or a share?
00:04:09Well, when you're investing in stocks and shares,
00:04:10you are basically buying a small percentage ownership
00:04:13in the company that you're investing in.
00:04:14So let's say I wanted to buy shares in Apple,
00:04:16but first let's answer the question of what even is the point
00:04:19of owning, for example, Apple stock.
00:04:20And the point is that there are two ways
00:04:22to make money from stock.
00:04:23The first way you make money from investing in stocks
00:04:25is that the value of the company increases over time
00:04:28and therefore the value of your stocks or shares
00:04:30increases over time.
00:04:31Secondly, certain companies pay what they call dividends.
00:04:34For example, in the UK, there is a company called BT,
00:04:36British Telecom that pays dividends.
00:04:37And so if you own a piece of BT,
00:04:39even if it's just like a tiny percentage,
00:04:41you're not just hoping that the price increases over time.
00:04:43They are also literally paying out some of their profits
00:04:45to their shareholders.
00:04:46So we've established that there are two ways to make money
00:04:48from stocks and shares.
00:04:49The next question we have to get to is how do you choose
00:04:52which companies you want to invest in?
00:04:54Maybe you have an iPhone and you're like,
00:04:55Apple seems pretty good.
00:04:56Maybe you're like, AI stuff seems interesting.
00:04:58I should invest in Nvidia.
00:05:00Maybe you're an Elon fan boy and you're like,
00:05:01man, I should invest in Tesla.
00:05:03Maybe you watch loads of Netflix and you're like,
00:05:04man, I should invest in Netflix.
00:05:05Now here are the advice from most sensible people
00:05:07who give advice about this stuff.
00:05:08Not me, I'm not a financial advisor,
00:05:09but sensible people who are basically say,
00:05:11you should not try and pick stocks.
00:05:13This is a wonderful book by a chap called JL Collins.
00:05:15This was, is like how I got started with investing
00:05:17like 10 plus years ago.
00:05:18He says, you should not try and stock pick.
00:05:20Warren Buffett himself says,
00:05:21you should not try and actively pick stocks.
00:05:23In general, there is a better and safer approach
00:05:25to investing and that is to buy an index fund.
00:05:28So what is an index fund?
00:05:29Well, index fund can be divided into two words,
00:05:31index and fund.
00:05:32So a fund is basically just like a group of stocks and shares.
00:05:35And then the index component means that the fund tracks
00:05:38a particular stock market index.
00:05:39So for example, in the US,
00:05:41there is a very famous stock market index
00:05:42called the S&P 500,
00:05:44which is basically the top 500 biggest companies in the US.
00:05:46For example, at the time that I'm recording this video,
00:05:48Nvidia makes up 7.18% of the S&P 500.
00:05:52Apple makes up six and a bit percent.
00:05:53Microsoft makes up four and a bit percent.
00:05:55Other companies that you have heard of are Amazon,
00:05:57Alphabet, which is the parent company of Google.
00:05:59Meta, which is the parent company of Facebook and Instagram.
00:06:01And interestingly, company number 498 out of 500
00:06:04is Match Group,
00:06:04which is the company that owns the dating apps,
00:06:06Tinder and Hinge,
00:06:07which also makes up around 0.01% of the index.
00:06:10Now the point of the S&P 500 index
00:06:12is that it gives you a single number
00:06:13that you can track over time
00:06:15to see how valuable as a whole the US stock market is.
00:06:18And the vast majority of the value in the US stock market
00:06:21is in these 500 companies.
00:06:22Now, if you look at a graph of the S&P 500 over time,
00:06:24you will see that for the most part,
00:06:26it goes up and to the right,
00:06:27which is what we'd like to see,
00:06:28but you'll see these moments of decline.
00:06:29And this is where you are in a recession
00:06:31or you've got like the 2008 financial crisis,
00:06:33or you've got COVID that's just hitting,
00:06:34or you've got like tariffs.
00:06:35So the market as a whole,
00:06:37i.e. the sum of the value of all the different companies
00:06:40goes up over time,
00:06:41but sometimes goes down
00:06:42and then generally kind of continues going back up slowly.
00:06:44So that is what the S&P 500 index is.
00:06:46Now, if you invest in an index fund,
00:06:48what basically happens
00:06:49is that the money you put into the fund
00:06:50gets distributed amongst the companies in the index.
00:06:53And crucially, this is split
00:06:55based on their weighting in the index.
00:06:56So for example,
00:06:57if I invested a thousand dollars into the S&P 500 today,
00:07:01in reality, what's happening behind the scenes
00:07:02is I've got $71 and 80 cents of Nvidia.
00:07:05I've invested $65 in Apple.
00:07:07I've invested about $47 in Microsoft
00:07:09and so on across these 500 companies.
00:07:11And this is exactly what people like Warren Buffett recommend
00:07:14in terms of how to get started with investing.
00:07:15- I think it's the same thing that makes most sense
00:07:18practically all of the time.
00:07:20And that is to consistently buy an S&P 500
00:07:25low cost index fund,
00:07:27keep buying it through thick and thin
00:07:29and especially through thin.
00:07:30- Now, the great thing here is that over time,
00:07:31your money is gonna track the market.
00:07:33So the money you invest grows at the same rate
00:07:35as the stock market as a whole,
00:07:37if you invest in the S&P 500,
00:07:38which is the US stock market as a whole.
00:07:40You're not trying to come up with like some crucial,
00:07:42like game-changing insight that like,
00:07:45you aren't trying to predict 10 years ago
00:07:46that Nvidia was suddenly gonna do well or anything like that.
00:07:48You're not trying to do all of this research
00:07:50into all these companies to figure out
00:07:51which companies are like mispriced
00:07:53and like what their price to earnings ratio is
00:07:55and any of this sort of stuff.
00:07:55You're just saying, you know what?
00:07:56I'm gonna make a bet that as a whole,
00:07:58the US stock market in this case is gonna go up over time.
00:08:01And so I'm just gonna distribute my money
00:08:04across the top 500 companies.
00:08:05I'm not gonna think about it too hard.
00:08:07I'm just gonna set it and forget it.
00:08:08And I'm gonna do better things with my time
00:08:09rather than comb through spreadsheets
00:08:11and try and research companies.
00:08:12And if we take a historical average over the last,
00:08:14like, I don't know, a hundred years or something,
00:08:16the S&P 500 grows roughly by somewhere
00:08:18between seven and 9% on average every year.
00:08:21Now at this point, whenever someone hears the advice
00:08:23of index funds for the first time
00:08:24and what I was thinking when I first read this,
00:08:26I was like, okay, but like why would I invest
00:08:29in like fricking Campbell's soup company?
00:08:31Why would I invest in like Ralph Lauren?
00:08:33Like these companies clearly aren't gonna be big.
00:08:35Obviously I should just invest in tech companies
00:08:37or obviously I should invest in Nvidia
00:08:39or I should invest in Apple or I should invest in Tesla
00:08:41or obviously I should invest in products that I actually use.
00:08:43Like surely I have enough insight
00:08:45that I can pick winning stocks
00:08:47that like outperform the market.
00:08:48Now this makes a lot of sense
00:08:49'cause you might be thinking that seven to 9%,
00:08:51like that's nothing, like that's not that interesting.
00:08:53I wanna double my money.
00:08:55I wanna, you know, triple my money.
00:08:56And in general, when it comes to the world of investing,
00:08:58you should not expect to double or triple your money
00:09:01because that tends not to happen
00:09:03unless in, except in very few circumstances,
00:09:04which we're gonna talk about at the end of this video.
00:09:06Having a seven to 9% return rate
00:09:07is actually considered really solid.
00:09:09The best private equity firms in the world,
00:09:11I think aim for like 20% returns,
00:09:13but normal people like you and me
00:09:14generally can't access private equity anyway.
00:09:16And so most of us normal people
00:09:18are content with seven to 9% annual compounding returns.
00:09:21Now I wanna talk a little bit more
00:09:22about why you should generally not try
00:09:24and pick individual stocks.
00:09:25And the whole idea here is that unless you get really lucky,
00:09:27chances are you are not actually gonna beat the market.
00:09:30There have been a bunch of studies and surveys
00:09:31where people have tried this over time.
00:09:33Warren Buffett even did a challenge
00:09:34where he challenged like fund pickers
00:09:35who were like literally specialists at picking stocks
00:09:38and basically compared the performance
00:09:39of these like professionals whose entire job it is
00:09:41to pick stocks against the S&P 500
00:09:43and basically found that the S&P 500
00:09:45actually outperforms most funds most years,
00:09:48if you take a long enough time horizon.
00:09:49There is also a hidden cost of stock picking
00:09:51because even if you could theoretically beat the market,
00:09:53the way you do that is by investing loads and loads
00:09:55and loads and loads of time in actually doing the research
00:09:57to be able to know what you're talking about.
00:09:58So like spending hours every week, reading financial reports
00:10:01and tracking the news and analyzing charts
00:10:03and worrying about whether you should be buying or selling
00:10:05at each individual moment.
00:10:06Now that is time that you probably have better things
00:10:08to do with, you could probably spend it with your family
00:10:09or your hobbies or building a business.
00:10:11If you invest in an index fund,
00:10:12it basically takes like 30 minutes or less to get started
00:10:14and then you don't have to put any time into it
00:10:16thinking about it or worrying about it
00:10:17whereas stock picking is quite different.
00:10:19For me personally, I have a bunch of friends
00:10:20who have invested in individual stocks over time
00:10:22rather than an index fund.
00:10:24Basically all of them have made less money
00:10:26than they would have done
00:10:27if they just invested in the index fund in the first place.
00:10:29And some of them have even lost money overall
00:10:31because they were so convinced
00:10:32that company X was gonna do really well
00:10:33and then company X didn't do well
00:10:35and they put too much money in company X.
00:10:37So that's like a scenario in which
00:10:38you can actually lose money
00:10:39but you're very unlikely to lose money
00:10:41if you just spread it out
00:10:42amongst the top 500 companies in the US
00:10:44or amongst the top 1,000 companies in the world.
00:10:46Now I do wanna hammer home this point
00:10:47because at this point, if you're still with us in the video,
00:10:50you might be thinking, but like surely stock picking is easy.
00:10:52I mean, man, five years ago, I knew that Apple would do well
00:10:56and if I just invested in Apple five years ago,
00:10:58I'd be rich right now.
00:10:59Or like, man, you know, 10 years ago,
00:11:01I had a good inkling that Nvidia was gonna get big.
00:11:04You know, I just didn't get round to putting money in it
00:11:05but had, man, had I put money into Nvidia,
00:11:08it would have gone to the moon.
00:11:09And so what people do is that they get this sort of
00:11:11false sense of like thinking of themselves
00:11:13as being very good investors because at one point,
00:11:14maybe in 2013, you considered buying Bitcoin
00:11:17just like I did and never actually did it.
00:11:18Or like, I don't know, when Disney+ was announced in,
00:11:20I don't know, five years ago, I was like, huh,
00:11:22maybe I should invest in Disney stock and I never did.
00:11:24And I'm like, oh man, Disney stock is so up.
00:11:25Man, if only I'd invested in Disney stock,
00:11:27I'd have been, I'd have made so much money,
00:11:29et cetera, et cetera.
00:11:30The thing to keep in mind is that
00:11:31unless you actually invested in Bitcoin in 2013,
00:11:33you can't say that like, man, I'm such a good investor.
00:11:36I knew Bitcoin was gonna do well because like,
00:11:38everyone's like, I knew it was gonna do well.
00:11:39And unless you put your money where your mouth is,
00:11:41it really doesn't count.
00:11:42Secondly, if you did invest in Bitcoin in 2013
00:11:44or Nvidia in 2013, when would you have sold?
00:11:47Would you have sold when the price 5Xs or 10Xs or 100Xs?
00:11:50Like, how would you have known
00:11:51to hold on for the next like 15 years
00:11:53because like stuff was gonna go up and down
00:11:55and ultimately up.
00:11:56Let's say you own Nvidia stock right now.
00:11:57Nvidia is at an all time high in its stock price.
00:11:59Do you keep on holding or do you sell?
00:12:01Do you think, man, this AI boom is a bubble.
00:12:03So do you sell Nvidia because you're like,
00:12:05there's open AI and all these Microsoft
00:12:07and all these companies.
00:12:08It's all just like a bubble and it's gonna pop.
00:12:09Why didn't you sell six months ago
00:12:10when everyone was like, oh my God, Nvidia is dying.
00:12:12Stock price is going down.
00:12:13Like loads of people sold at that point.
00:12:15Like what is it about you
00:12:16that would have kept you holding onto the stock?
00:12:17It is so easy to delude ourselves
00:12:19into thinking that we are good investors
00:12:21just because we had a thought a few years ago
00:12:23that like I should probably buy Nvidia
00:12:24and then didn't actually do it.
00:12:25Or even if you did buy Nvidia a few years ago,
00:12:28you maybe just got lucky.
00:12:29And it has nothing to do with like your quality
00:12:31as investor 'cause there are literally
00:12:32full-time professionals whose job it is to pick stocks.
00:12:35They do it for 60 to 80 hours a week.
00:12:37And in general, over time, index funds outperform
00:12:40even those people who are putting their entire life's work
00:12:42into trying to pick stocks.
00:12:43Generally, the younger you are, the more prone you are
00:12:46to wanting to do individual stock picking
00:12:48because your memory is just not long enough.
00:12:50For example, if you happen to be one of the, I don't know,
00:12:5120% of people who watch this channel
00:12:53who are over the age of 40,
00:12:54you probably remember Kodak in the 1990s.
00:12:57They were absolutely huge.
00:12:58No one could have imagined a world without Kodak
00:13:01because they were absolutely massive.
00:13:01Like they actually invented digital cameras back in 1975,
00:13:04but they didn't wanna market the digital camera
00:13:06because it would cannibalize
00:13:06their like film camera business.
00:13:08And now no one uses a Kodak anymore.
00:13:09It's kind of like retro nostalgic tech
00:13:12because they filed for bankruptcy in like 2012.
00:13:13Or if you have the memory of like 20 years ago,
00:13:15Blockbuster was like absolutely massive.
00:13:17People would go to a Blockbuster store on a Friday night
00:13:19and like rent a movie.
00:13:20Netflix literally went to Blockbuster and said,
00:13:22"Hey, do you wanna buy us for $50 million?"
00:13:24And Blockbuster's CEO laughed in their face.
00:13:25And now there is one Blockbuster left on the planet
00:13:27and Netflix is worth hundreds of billions of dollars.
00:13:29If you speak to your parents or your grandparents,
00:13:31there is no way they would have ever imagined
00:13:33that Lehman Brothers, the 158 year old investment bank
00:13:37would never not be around
00:13:38'cause it was just too big to fail.
00:13:40It survived the civil war.
00:13:41It survived two world wars.
00:13:42It survived the great depression in the US.
00:13:43But then in September, 2008,
00:13:45it just collapses in a single weekend.
00:13:46And people who've worked there for decades,
00:13:48who have their entire retirement savings in the bank,
00:13:50who have their entire like stock portfolio
00:13:52in like the Lehman stock,
00:13:53those people lost everything overnight.
00:13:54Now the point is the more life experience you have,
00:13:56the more you know that these are things, right?
00:13:58Like every single generation has examples of companies
00:14:01that were too big to fail.
00:14:03Right now, I cannot imagine a world without Apple
00:14:05or without Tesla or without Netflix,
00:14:07but neither could the chaps in 2008.
00:14:08They could not imagine a world without Lehman Brothers.
00:14:10The point isn't that you don't wanna invest
00:14:12in Netflix and Apple and Nvidia.
00:14:13The point is you don't wanna only invest
00:14:15in Netflix and Apple and Nvidia.
00:14:16You wanna try and diversify your holdings
00:14:18across multiple different companies,
00:14:19rather than betting your entire financial future
00:14:22on a single company.
00:14:22Okay, so at this point, if you are sold on index funds,
00:14:25then you might be asking the practical question of like,
00:14:26how do I actually buy them?
00:14:28Unfortunately, you cannot just go
00:14:29to smp500indexfund.com/buy.
00:14:32You have to go through a middleman
00:14:33and that middleman is generally referred to
00:14:34as a stock broker.
00:14:35Back in the day, it was a real life person
00:14:37that you would phone up to buy and sell stocks
00:14:39on your behalf on the New York Stock Exchange
00:14:41or the London Stock Exchange or whatever.
00:14:42Nowadays, it's not a real person.
00:14:44It's just online platforms.
00:14:45There are loads of them depending on which country you're in.
00:14:47So you just Google like stock platform
00:14:48and then insert your country name.
00:14:49Like Vanguard is one of the big global ones
00:14:51that's available in lots of different countries.
00:14:53They're also available in the UK.
00:14:54So I have a lot of my holdings in Vanguard.
00:14:55Trading 212 is another app
00:14:57that me and my wife have been using for years.
00:14:58So I mostly have my holdings split across Vanguard
00:15:01and Trading 212.
00:15:02Speaking of, we should reach out to Trading 212
00:15:03to sponsor this video.
00:15:04So if that deal goes through,
00:15:06you will hear a sponsored message now.
00:15:07All right, so I'm gonna tell you about Trading 212
00:15:09who are very kindly sponsoring this video.
00:15:10Trading 212 is a fantastic online investment platform.
00:15:13Me and my wife Izzy were both using it independently
00:15:16and have been for years,
00:15:17even way before they started sponsoring the channel.
00:15:18The platform makes investing super easy,
00:15:20super straightforward.
00:15:21There are no commissions.
00:15:22You can sign up with as little as like 10 pounds.
00:15:24You can sign up to fractional shares
00:15:26and there's none of that unnecessary friction
00:15:28that stops people from ever getting started.
00:15:29If you're really scared of investing,
00:15:31they even let you get started trading with practice money.
00:15:34So it's not real money,
00:15:35but you're using practice money on the real market.
00:15:37So you can see if you had invested 100 pounds or 1,000 pounds
00:15:40or whatever the thing is,
00:15:41what would you have made or what would you have lost
00:15:43if you're super, super scared about it?
00:15:44And so it's a really nice like entrance point
00:15:46for people who are new to investing.
00:15:47The fractional shares bit is really useful.
00:15:49It means you can invest in expensive stock
00:15:50like Apple and Google and stuff
00:15:52without needing to buy a whole share.
00:15:53You can buy a fraction of a share
00:15:55and their pies and auto invest features are also really good.
00:15:57So the pies feature is essentially,
00:15:58you can basically just like browse other people's
00:16:00like asset allocation portfolios
00:16:02and you can copy and paste their asset allocation
00:16:04into your own portfolio if you want.
00:16:06And the auto invest feature is also really good
00:16:07because then you can put your investing on autopilot
00:16:10like every month it can deposit a certain amount
00:16:12into whatever stocks or funds or whatever you want.
00:16:14And they handle everything else,
00:16:15including dividend reinvesting and asset rebalancing.
00:16:18And these are the sorts of services that used to in the past
00:16:20be only available to high net worth individuals.
00:16:22As a bonus, if you sign up to Trading 212 using my link,
00:16:25you will get a totally free fractional share
00:16:27worth up to a hundred pounds.
00:16:28So it's free money, you might as well.
00:16:29There'll be a link down below,
00:16:30or you can go to trading212.com/join/ali
00:16:33to get your free fractional share.
00:16:34So thank you Trading 212 for sponsoring this video
00:16:36and let's get back to it.
00:16:37Oh, that worked well.
00:16:38It's pretty good.
00:16:39Seamless integration, fingers crossed.
00:16:41But anyway, even with all this information,
00:16:42there are probably some fears and concerns
00:16:44in the back of your mind.
00:16:45So let's talk about those.
00:16:46Part three, common fears and concerns and questions.
00:16:50Fear number one, what if I lose all my money by investing?
00:16:53This is the big one.
00:16:54This is the thing that stops most people
00:16:55from ever getting started with investing because like,
00:16:58oh my God, what if I lose all my money?
00:16:59What if something like 2008 happens
00:17:01and like you had all your money in Lehman Brothers
00:17:02and then it collapses and then suddenly you're bankrupt?
00:17:04Oh my God, that would be terrible.
00:17:05Now this actually is a totally legitimate concern.
00:17:07I was worried about this until 2015
00:17:10when I read "The Simple Path to Wealth" by J.L. Collins
00:17:12for the first time and realized
00:17:13that I didn't need to worry about it too much.
00:17:14So let's put some numbers on this.
00:17:15The biggest crash in recent memory
00:17:16was the crash of March, 2020 when COVID was happening.
00:17:20You're probably old enough to remember that.
00:17:21Now let's say you'd invested a thousand dollars
00:17:23into the S&P 500 at exactly the wrong time
00:17:26just before the crash, so like early 2020.
00:17:28And then COVID hits.
00:17:29And then in a single month in March, 2020,
00:17:31the market, the S&P 500 drops by 34%.
00:17:34So your thousand dollars is now worth $660.
00:17:37You have lost $340.
00:17:39Oh my goodness.
00:17:40At this point you're thinking, oh my God,
00:17:42I knew I shouldn't have done this investing thing.
00:17:43I'm losing so much money.
00:17:45My money, oh my God, I've lost this $300.
00:17:47The world is literally shutting down.
00:17:48Oh my God.
00:17:49But if at that point you decide, screw it,
00:17:52I'm just gonna sell.
00:17:53I don't wanna lose any more money.
00:17:54Then you have realized the loss
00:17:56because you bought the index at a thousand dollars.
00:17:57You sold it at 660.
00:17:59So you have literally bought high and sold low,
00:18:01which is the opposite of what you should do.
00:18:03And so you've lost $340.
00:18:04But if you had just held on,
00:18:06if you'd been like, you know what, I'm just gonna hold on.
00:18:08You know, I knew that investing in stocks and shares
00:18:10was like a little bit risky,
00:18:11but it gets a lot less risky if you just like hang on
00:18:13and just leave your money in there for a long time.
00:18:15The market literally recovered
00:18:16to its pre-crash levels by August.
00:18:18So it took five months to recover
00:18:20back to where it was before.
00:18:22So within five months, you'd have been back up to a thousand
00:18:24dollars and then it just kept going up and up.
00:18:26And by the end of 2021,
00:18:27your thousand dollars would have been worth $1,400.
00:18:29And by the end of 2025, that same $1,000,
00:18:32if you just held on through the crash
00:18:34would have been worth over $2,100.
00:18:36So in that five-year period
00:18:38where we all lived through a pandemic,
00:18:39you would have more than doubled your money
00:18:40if you had just held on,
00:18:42assuming you had invested at the worst possible time.
00:18:44Now, yes, back in 2008,
00:18:45it took like a few years for the market to recover,
00:18:47but recover it did.
00:18:48And even if you'd invested in the stock market
00:18:50at the absolute worst possible time,
00:18:52just before the 2008 financial crisis,
00:18:53you would have still made way more money in the long run
00:18:56if you just held on.
00:18:57And the key insight here that I learned from this book
00:18:58and a bunch of research since is that for the most part,
00:19:01the stock market goes up over time,
00:19:03as long as you have a long enough time horizon.
00:19:05It's sort of the same with house prices.
00:19:07Like for the most part, in most countries,
00:19:09in most cities where people actually want to live,
00:19:10if you buy a house today and try and sell it next week,
00:19:13maybe the price has gone down.
00:19:14If you try and sell it next month,
00:19:15maybe the price has gone down.
00:19:16But if you try and sell it 20 years from now,
00:19:18chances are the price will have gone up quite significantly.
00:19:20So basically the longer you can leave your money
00:19:22in the index funds without touching it,
00:19:24the more it compounds over time.
00:19:25And apparently Albert Einstein had that quote of like,
00:19:27"Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world."
00:19:29Okay, but like seriously,
00:19:30this is my hard-earned cash I'm investing here.
00:19:33Like what would have to be true for me to lose all my money?
00:19:35So if you're investing in the S&P 500,
00:19:37in order for you to lose all of your money,
00:19:39the value of top 500 companies in the US
00:19:42suddenly has to drop to zero overnight.
00:19:44What are the chances of that?
00:19:44Like if all of the top 500 companies in the US
00:19:47suddenly had their entire value disappear overnight,
00:19:50we would probably be living through an apocalypse.
00:19:52We'd probably have way worse problems
00:19:54than the value of your stock market portfolio.
00:19:56And the money that you invested in those stocks
00:19:58probably wouldn't even be worth the paper it's printed on
00:20:00because like civilization has collapsed
00:20:02or something like that.
00:20:03Now, I think it's a very reasonable bet personally
00:20:05that the stock market is gonna go up over time
00:20:07over a long enough time horizon.
00:20:09And there's a few different reasons for that.
00:20:10So firstly, human productivity is a thing
00:20:12and human productivity compounds.
00:20:14So if we imagine a company like Nvidia, Apple, Amazon, Meta,
00:20:17like these companies that make up
00:20:19the top few companies of the S&P 500,
00:20:21every day there are thousands and thousands of people
00:20:23that go to work where their job is to literally add value
00:20:26to the company, right?
00:20:27Like they make stuff, they invent things,
00:20:28they create a new iPhone, they make a new chip.
00:20:30All of that stuff creates real value.
00:20:32Like one thing that I didn't quite appreciate
00:20:34before I started getting into investing
00:20:36is that the value of a company is not just people gambling
00:20:40on like, I reckon Elon's gonna be great,
00:20:42therefore Tesla price should go up.
00:20:44I mean, in that context, it kind of is,
00:20:47but like the value of a company is a real thing.
00:20:49And in general, the more revenue the company has,
00:20:51the more profit the company has,
00:20:52the more products the company has,
00:20:53the greater that value is.
00:20:54And so because people are continually doing work,
00:20:57you would expect the value of companies
00:20:59where people are continually doing work to go up over time
00:21:01because value is literally being created every day.
00:21:03The second reason is that the world keeps on getting bigger.
00:21:05So like 20 years ago,
00:21:06we had like 6 billion people in the world.
00:21:07Now we have like 8 billion people in the world.
00:21:09More people means more customers and more transactions
00:21:11and more economic activity.
00:21:12There's hundreds of millions of people in Asia and Africa
00:21:14and South America who are like buying stuff
00:21:16like entering the consumer economy for the first time.
00:21:18More and more people are getting access
00:21:20to the internet every single day.
00:21:21These people are buying iPhones,
00:21:22they're opening bank accounts,
00:21:23they're like subscribing to online software.
00:21:25So the fact that like in general,
00:21:27the world's population is increasing is another reason
00:21:29as to why you would expect the value of companies to go up
00:21:31'cause there are more consumers who want the stuff
00:21:33that the companies make.
00:21:34Thirdly, I think it is a reasonably strong bet
00:21:36that the value of something like the S&P 500 Index Fund
00:21:39will go up over time is because it is a self-healing index.
00:21:42So it's not like a list of 500 companies that never changes.
00:21:44It's a curated list of 500 companies.
00:21:47So if a company starts failing,
00:21:48it gets kicked out of the index
00:21:50and it gets replaced with a new company.
00:21:51Something like Blockbuster disappears
00:21:53and something like Netflix takes its spot.
00:21:54So you can kind of think of the index
00:21:55as a sort of like best of Spotify playlist
00:21:58that's like constantly being updated
00:21:59with whatever is most valuable at that given moment.
00:22:02And so you're not betting
00:22:03that any single company will survive forever.
00:22:05You're not even betting
00:22:06that like these top 500 companies will survive forever.
00:22:08You're just betting that the top 500 companies in the US,
00:22:11in this example, at any given time will collectively grow
00:22:14because people are going to work
00:22:16and creating value within these companies.
00:22:17At this point, you might be thinking,
00:22:18but like the S&P 500 is just American companies.
00:22:21And you know, America is gonna collapse
00:22:23because of Trump or because of Elon
00:22:25or because of the woke people or because of the immigrants
00:22:28or because of insert whatever flavor you would want in that.
00:22:32It's like, you know, and to that, I would say,
00:22:34yeah, that's actually a fair point.
00:22:35That is why you don't have to invest
00:22:37in the S&P 500 Index Fund.
00:22:38There are things called Global Index Funds.
00:22:40So there's the Vanguard FTSE All World Index Fund,
00:22:43which is sort of like the S&P 500
00:22:44in that it is an index fund.
00:22:45But instead of investing
00:22:46in just the top 500 companies in the US,
00:22:48instead, this fund splits your money
00:22:50across the top 3,700 companies across 49 different countries.
00:22:55So if you put $1,000 in that,
00:22:56you're getting a little bit of Apple,
00:22:57you're getting a little bit of Microsoft,
00:22:59but you are also getting some Samsung from South Korea.
00:23:01You're getting some TSMC in Taiwan.
00:23:03You're getting a little bit of Toyota in Japan.
00:23:04You're getting a little bit of LVMH in France.
00:23:06So even if, for whatever reason,
00:23:08you believe that the US economy is heading for decline,
00:23:10the global economy probably isn't.
00:23:12And so you can just spread your money
00:23:14when you're investing across like global companies
00:23:16rather than just US companies.
00:23:18And the nice thing about the Vanguard All World Index
00:23:20is that it automatically adjusts its weightings
00:23:22based on where the value is.
00:23:23So if the US suddenly shrinks
00:23:25and let's say India's economy suddenly booms,
00:23:27then your distribution of investments will naturally shift
00:23:29to wherever the growth is happening.
00:23:30So again, you're not gambling that like a particular company
00:23:33or a particular country is gonna win.
00:23:35What you're basically saying is,
00:23:36I reckon humans across the world
00:23:38who are working in companies
00:23:39will be creating more value over time
00:23:41and there will be continued demand for that value.
00:23:43Therefore, the price of everything
00:23:44is gonna go up over time.
00:23:45So with all that said, you might be asking the question
00:23:47of like, okay, cool, I'm sold.
00:23:48How do I get started?
00:23:49How much money do I need to get started?
00:23:51The answer to this question depends on the platform.
00:23:53Most sensible platforms in most countries,
00:23:55you can get started with like a dollar
00:23:57or like $10 or like a hundred dollars,
00:23:58like generally a small amount of money.
00:23:59Again, I would do some Googling or ask Chad GPT or Claude
00:24:02to figure out like what the best free platform is
00:24:05depending on what country you're in.
00:24:06You should be able to find a platform
00:24:07that is completely free.
00:24:08You shouldn't have to pay for it
00:24:09unless you're in a country
00:24:10that has weird regulations and stuff.
00:24:11But for the most part, you can do this for free
00:24:13with very little money to get started.
00:24:14Oh, by the way, if you're enjoying this video so far,
00:24:16I would love to hear from you in the comments.
00:24:17What has been your biggest concern
00:24:19about getting started with investing?
00:24:20And if you haven't yet, like what's the thing
00:24:22that's holding you back?
00:24:23Okay, so at this point,
00:24:23we've covered the traditional approach to investing.
00:24:25But there is a final thing we need to talk about
00:24:27because yes, of course we all wanna be rich in 30 to 40 years
00:24:30but it would be nice if we could get rich
00:24:32in five to 10 years, 15 years,
00:24:34rather than having to wait 30 to 40 years
00:24:36to build true wealth.
00:24:37And that is where we come to part four of the video,
00:24:39which is fast lane investing,
00:24:41the alternative approach to building wealth.
00:24:42Now, what we've talked about so far
00:24:43is what MJ DeMarco, author of "The Millionaire Fastlane"
00:24:46calls the slow lane approach to building wealth.
00:24:49He's a bit disparaging about it,
00:24:50but basically it's like, I've got some money,
00:24:52I've got a day job, I'm gonna save 10% of my income
00:24:55from my day job, I'm gonna put it into investments
00:24:57like stock market index funds
00:24:58or like real estate or whatever.
00:25:00And then 50 years from now, that money is gonna compound
00:25:02and then I'll be a millionaire and stuff.
00:25:03Now, this is a very slow form of investing.
00:25:06It's totally fine and I think it's very important to do
00:25:08as part of a diversified balanced portfolio
00:25:11and balanced life and stuff, but there is another approach.
00:25:14And that approach involves reframing
00:25:16what investing actually means.
00:25:17Now, when we hear investing, a lot of us default to thinking
00:25:20that investing means taking our money
00:25:22and buying an asset with it, like stocks and shares
00:25:25or like buying a rental property.
00:25:26But if we really think about it from first principles,
00:25:28what is the point of investing money?
00:25:29The point of investing money is for your existing money
00:25:31to make more money further down the line.
00:25:33The point isn't explicitly to invest in stocks and shares
00:25:36or like watches or like, I don't know, fine art.
00:25:38The point is to grow your money and the stocks and shares
00:25:40or the rental property or the watch.
00:25:41That's just a vehicle by which you turn your money
00:25:44into more money.
00:25:45So if we imagine something like, you know, 7% returns
00:25:47in the S&P 500, let's say you've got a spare $10,000.
00:25:50If you put the $10,000 in the S&P 500 today,
00:25:52on average, it'll be worth $10,700 next year.
00:25:56So then the question becomes, can I find a way
00:25:58to invest that $10,000 or whatever the thing might be
00:26:00so that it can make more than $700 in the next 12 months?
00:26:03And generally to that, the answer is usually a hell yes.
00:26:06So there's a couple of different options here.
00:26:08Option number one is if you invest in your own ability
00:26:11to make money.
00:26:12So let's say I have a job,
00:26:13like I'm a healthcare assistant in a hospital
00:26:15and I could spend a thousand pounds to take a new course
00:26:19that gives me a new certification.
00:26:20And that certification, like being a phlebotomist,
00:26:23allows me to increase my hourly rate.
00:26:24So if I'm making, let's say, $15 an hour
00:26:26as a healthcare assistant and this new thing
00:26:29lets me suddenly make $30 an hour as a phlebotomist.
00:26:32I've invested in my own skills and my own credentials.
00:26:34And as a result, I've literally doubled my earning capacity.
00:26:37And so with an additional four hours of work, what's that?
00:26:39An extra $60 with 40 hours of work.
00:26:42So 40 hour work week, it's $600.
00:26:43So within week two of making this trade,
00:26:45I've already like made back my investment.
00:26:47And now it's just like pure profit from there
00:26:50based on like that investment.
00:26:51And so my return on this thousand dollars
00:26:52that I've invested in this course or whatever
00:26:54is way higher than 7% because I've invested
00:26:57in my own ability to make money.
00:26:59And this is generally why investing in your own skills
00:27:01or your own education is very reasonable
00:27:03provided you can see a path from like, okay,
00:27:06getting that credential or getting that qualification
00:27:08or learning those skills, provided you can see a path
00:27:10to like a sensible return on that investment.
00:27:12I'm not saying you have to buy courses and stuff,
00:27:13but you can find stuff for free on YouTube.
00:27:15I'm just saying that there is often more value
00:27:17in investing in your own ability to make money
00:27:19than there is in investing in like 500 random companies
00:27:22in the US if you had to choose.
00:27:23And then we have option number two,
00:27:24which is to actually invest in your own business.
00:27:27And that is another form of fast lane investing.
00:27:30Now, obviously this only applies if you have a business
00:27:31or if you want to start your own business.
00:27:33If I use my own business as an example, when I was 18,
00:27:35I started a business helping kids get into med school.
00:27:37In year one, it made about 8,000 pounds, like $10,000.
00:27:41In year two, it made about 80,000.
00:27:43In year three, it made about 150,000.
00:27:45So we eight X revenue in year one
00:27:47and we two X revenue in year two.
00:27:49And I sort of stayed at 150,000 for a few years.
00:27:51And then a few years later in like 2020,
00:27:53boom, went up from 150K to like 1.2 million.
00:27:55So we did 10 X in revenue again.
00:27:57And then the next year we four X in revenue
00:27:59from 1.2 million to $4.6 million pounds.
00:28:02I can't remember the exact currency.
00:28:03If we consider the 12 year period of this,
00:28:05that's way more than 7% per year.
00:28:07Now, if you were to put money in Apple,
00:28:08it is very unlikely that Apple will 10 X its value
00:28:11in the next 12 months
00:28:12because they're already absolutely huge.
00:28:13And the bigger you are, the harder it is to grow,
00:28:16at least in terms of percentages,
00:28:17because you're already so huge, right?
00:28:18But if, for example, you took $1,000
00:28:20and you used it to start your own business,
00:28:21it is totally reasonable for you to have made 10 grand
00:28:24by next year, or even 100 grand.
00:28:25I've got this thing called Lifestyle Business Academy,
00:28:27which is like an online business mentorship thing
00:28:29for beginners starting businesses.
00:28:30We have some people who've started a business
00:28:31for the first time and within like three months,
00:28:33they made 10 grand and they're on track to make 100 grand
00:28:36within the first 12 months.
00:28:37And so if you think of the investment
00:28:39in starting their business, for example,
00:28:40and maybe investing in an educational program
00:28:42or a mentorship program or whatever,
00:28:43like they're getting a way better return
00:28:45on that particular investment
00:28:47compared to just investing in the S&P 500.
00:28:49And if you're interested in this sort of approach
00:28:51to building your own business,
00:28:52where you could take some amount of money,
00:28:54it doesn't have to be a huge amount,
00:28:55you could invest it, a small amount of it,
00:28:56like maybe even a few hundred dollars, maybe even less,
00:28:58in starting your own business.
00:29:00That business could be something like a lifestyle business
00:29:02that could quite conceivably get you to 100K in revenue
00:29:05within about 12 months.
00:29:06If you're interested in more details about that,
00:29:07I have a video over here somewhere
00:29:09that breaks down that concept in more detail.
00:29:11In general, I think it is good to invest a good chunk
00:29:13of your time, energy, and money into starting your own thing
00:29:16and improving your own ability to make money,
00:29:18and then investing the rest into something like the S&P 500,
00:29:21which is what I've been doing
00:29:21for the last like 10 plus years.
00:29:22So yeah, you should totally check out this video over here
00:29:24if you are interested
00:29:25in potentially starting your own business
00:29:27to drastically increase your rate of return.
00:29:28Thank you for watching, and I will hopefully see you there.
00:29:30Bye-bye.

Key Takeaway

Build wealth by consistently investing in low-cost index funds for long-term compounding, while simultaneously increasing earning capacity through personal skill development or business creation.

Highlights

Money held in a standard bank account loses purchasing power daily due to inflation.

The S&P 500 index tracks the top 500 US companies and historically provides average annual returns between 7% and 9%.

Holding index funds through market downturns prevents realized losses and allows for long-term compound growth.

Investing in personal skills or a lifestyle business offers higher potential returns than the 7-9% annual average of the stock market.

Diversifying globally via funds like the Vanguard FTSE All World Index provides exposure to over 3,700 companies across 49 countries.

Most individual stock pickers and professional fund managers underperform the market average over long time horizons.

Timeline

Investment Philosophy and Fundamentals

  • Money loses value over time when kept in a bank account due to inflation.
  • Assets generate money through either rental income or capital appreciation.
  • Stocks and shares are recommended for beginners because they are accessible and require less capital than real estate.

Investing acts as a counter-measure to inflation, ensuring money maintains or increases its purchasing power. Assets are defined as vehicles that put money into one's pocket. While real estate is a common visual for investment, it is often inaccessible to beginners, making stocks and shares a more practical, low-risk starting point.

Strategy for Stock Market Investing

  • Index funds track a market index by distributing capital across all companies within that index.
  • Individual stock picking is discouraged due to the extreme difficulty of consistently beating the market.
  • The S&P 500 is a self-healing index where failing companies are replaced by new, growing enterprises.

Index funds provide a diversified, hands-off approach to investing by mimicking the market's overall performance. Buying an index fund like the S&P 500 eliminates the need for deep financial research and mitigates the risk of a single company's collapse. History shows that even professional fund managers struggle to beat the market consistently over long periods.

Addressing Common Fears and Concerns

  • Market crashes, such as the 34% drop in March 2020, are temporary fluctuations that recover over time.
  • Losses are only realized if investors sell during a downturn; holding through the crash secures long-term recovery.
  • Global index funds mitigate the risk of relying solely on the economy of a single country.

Fear of losing capital often prevents individuals from starting, but the S&P 500 has historically recovered from major events like the 2008 financial crisis and the 2020 pandemic. A long-term time horizon is essential for compound interest to function effectively. Global index funds further diversify risk by spreading investments across 49 countries rather than focusing exclusively on the US market.

Fast Lane Wealth Building

  • The 'slow lane' relies on index funds and day jobs, while the 'fast lane' focuses on aggressive income growth.
  • Investing in personal skills can yield returns significantly higher than 7-9% annually.
  • Starting a business provides the highest potential for exponential revenue growth compared to passive investing.

While index funds are essential for a balanced portfolio, they are a slow wealth-building vehicle. Fast lane strategies involve reallocating capital into personal development or entrepreneurship. By investing in credentials or business mentorship, individuals can increase their hourly rates or generate 10x revenue growth, which drastically outperforms traditional stock market averages.

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