The S&P 500 is one of the most reliable wealth-building mechanisms the world has ever seen. It’s beautifully simple: an index of the U.S.’s 500 most prominent companies at any given time. The companies in the S&P 500 have changed over the years, but the index’s long-term results — mind-blowing wealth — remain the same. A $100 investment made in 1950 would be worth over $32,000 today, and that doesn’t even factor in dividends.
It’s a tip of the cap to America’s capitalist economy, which has grown to become a global financial juggernaut despite the U.S. being one of the newer countries on the world stage.
The best part? Anyone can invest in the S&P 500 through exchange-traded funds like the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEMKT: SPY).
Once you know how and why, you’ll realize it’s the most no-brainer investment you can make with less than $1,000.
Building wealth with the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust is simple.
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You buy shares and then wait.
No, really. It’s that easy.
Ok, there’s a little nuance. Depending on your budget, you may buy a whole share of the ETF, which currently costs about $550, or break it up into smaller dollar-based purchases if your brokerage allows fractional shares. Whether you invest your $1,000 as a lump sum or break it up (using dollar-cost averaging) is up to you. Either way, you’re very likely to make money over time.
Many people can’t believe how simple investing can be and let emotions and indecision mess them up. Just look at all the negativity in the media! Watch the news on any given day, and you’ll find a half-dozen reasons not to buy stocks right now. But statistically speaking, now is the best time to invest.
A study by Schwab analyzed market timing by examining the outcomes of two hypothetical people who invested annually for 20 years. Person A invested at the S&P 500’s lowest price each year (super lucky), while Person B invested at the highest (super unlucky). Over 20 years, the super unlucky investor still ended up with over 81% of the money of the person who invested perfectly!
Remember, that’s a worst-case scenario with impossible odds. The same study showed that someone who invested randomly ended with almost the same final result as the super-lucky investor.
What’s the moral of the story here? Simply investing for as long as possible is the biggest factor in how well you do. You could be impossibly lucky in timing your investments, and it would still make little difference in your long-term results.
Read More: 1 No-Brainer Wealth-Building ETF to Buy Right Now for Less Than $1,000