The second-best way to get rich in America

Stephen McBride | Editorial
April 12, 2021

This article appears courtesy of RiskHedge, LLC.

Earlier this year, Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk made history when his net worth skyrocketed $25 billion—in one day.

Bloomberg now estimates Musk is worth $191 billion. He’s inching closer and closer to surpassing Amazon founder Jeff Bezos as the richest man in the world—he’s “just” $2 billion behind Bezos.

And get this, Musk is now personally worth more than General Electric and American Express!

Take Bezos. The billionaire CEO has made the same $81,840 salary for two decades.

The bulk of his vast fortune is tied to the 53 million shares of Amazon stock he owns.

In fact, controlling vast sums of stock market wealth is a common thread among the world’s rich.

Scroll through Bloomberg’s Billionaire Index, and you’ll see they all vaulted to the top by owning their share of a successful business.

For example, look at the Waltons, heirs to the Walmart (WMT) throne. Bloomberg estimates they’re the richest family in the world, with a $200 billion treasure trove.

Almost all of their vast fortune is tied to their 50% ownership stake in Walmart.

And this isn’t just a case of super-rich guys getting even richer.

Every day, tens of thousands of regular Americans are reaching an entirely new level of wealth. According to Credit Suisse, one in every 17 Americans is now a millionaire!

So… what’s going on here?

These folks didn’t get rich solely by grinding their way through a 9 to 5 job. Even high-earners like doctors and lawyers don’t typically earn millions of dollars a year.

Instead, the path to amassing vast fortunes is paved by starting a successful business.

But here’s the thing…

It’s extremely difficult to start a successful business, let alone billion-dollar empires like Walmart, Tesla, and Amazon.

The good news is you don’t need to build the next Amazon or Walmart get rich.

You can focus on the second greatest wealth-building secret known to man…

This is the playbook many wealthy folks follow.

Recent data from investment bank Goldman Sachs shows the richest 1% of US households now own more than half the stocks in America! At the end of 2019, they controlled $21 trillion in stock market wealth.

Longtime RiskHedge readers know stocks have been on a tear over the past decade. The “tech-heavy” Nasdaq has shot up more than 700% since 2009.

Roughly nine out of 10 US households that earn over $100,000, own stocks. So it’s no wonder this decade-long stock market boom has minted a whole new class of millionaires.

As I said, even well-paid folks like doctors and lawyers rarely get rich through work alone.

Instead, they save a big part of their paychecks and invest it in businesses.

In other words, it’s very hard to get truly wealthy by renting out your time.

Think about it: you can only work so many hours. So even if you’re earning thousands of dollars a day, your “upside” is capped.

It also means you’re not earning money when you’re sleeping, when you’re on vacation, or when you’re retired.

But when you save and invest your savings in a successful business, you accumulate assets that earn money while you sleep.

For example, think about buying Amazon shares. Every time the disruptor bulldozes through another industry and its stock soars, you get a slice of the profits.

When it crushes earnings and Jeff Bezos’s net worth surges, it means you win, too.

Think of it as a second income that often brings in more than your main job.

You hear a lot about the “top 1%” versus the have-nots in America these days.

The gap between the rich and the poor has always existed. But never, ever on this level.

In many cases, the stock market has been the great separator.

Remember, nine out of every 10 households with incomes over $100,000 own stocks. I personally know many folks who’ve become millionaires on the back of the stock market’s surge over the past decade.

But the sad reality is most American’s don’t have a cent invested in stocks.

Only 20% of households earning less than $40,000 own stocks. And research from the National Bureau of Economic Research shows almost two-thirds of investors have less than $10,000 in the stock market.

In other words, the stock market’s meteoric rise over the past decade has barely helped most families.

In fact, a recent survey by robo-advisor Betterment highlights this great misfortune.

When asked how the stock market performed over the past decade, roughly half of folks said the market had gone nowhere. Worse yet, a further 20% said they thought it fell!

But after a relentless 20-year decline, this trend is reversing.

Thanks to commission-free trading, all the major brokerages saw millions of new investors flood into the market in 2020.

Charles Schwab said it opened more accounts last summer than during any three-month period in the firm’s history.

TD Ameritrade added 661,000 new accounts, with assets of $78 billion in the first half of 2020.

New accounts opened on E*Trade in the first half of 2020 were more than double that of any prior full-year period.

In short, millions of new investors are getting into stocks for the first time.

And it’s a wonderful thing.

Working hard and saving money is necessary, but it’s often not sufficient. Owning a piece of a successful business—owning stocks—is the main path to wealth that’s open to anybody.

From chatting with RiskHedge readers, I know many of you are walking this path.

But if you’re unsure about investing in the stock market, now is the time to get off the sidelines.

It’s okay if you only have a little money to get started. These days, it’s totally free to buy stocks through most big brokerages. And you can usually open an account with as little as $100.

The important thing is to break the inertia and start investing. No excuses.

Do you own stocks? What percentage of your money is in stocks?

If you don’t own any stocks—why not?

Tell me at stephen@riskhedge.com.

Stephen McBride
Editor — Disruption Investor

PS: If you’re just getting started investing, first look to buy an index fund that owns a lot of stocks. That way, you’ll own a tiny fraction of hundreds of businesses.

After that, I suggest looking at the “Amazon Killer” stock. It’s hands-down my top “buy it and forget it for years” stock. In fact, it’s the only stock my daughter owns (she’s two). I bought it in her name to help her pay for college when the time comes. Go here to discover it.

Stephen McBride is editor of the popular investment advisory Disruption Investor. Stephen and his team hunt for disruptive stocks that are changing the world and making investors wealthy in the process. Go here to discover Stephen’s top “disruptor” stock pick and to try a risk-free subscription.

     
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This article appears courtesy of RiskHedge, LLC. RiskHedge publishes investment research and is independent of Mauldin Economics. Mauldin Economics may earn an affiliate commission from purchases you make at RiskHedge.com

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