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Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Is Investing Gambling?

By Carter B. Banes

By gambling you are taking a big chance that you might either win a lot of money, or you might lose a lot of money. You are playing a game and you don't know what's going to happen.

Some people play with investing like a game. When you invest your money, you believe that the company you invest in will be successful and the investment will increase in value. Some people who look at investing as a game want to make money, but they also enjoy themselves. Others just do it to make money. Why don't the others look at it as a game?

When you invest your money, you aren't gambling. Some investments are very far from gambling, they're not even close. Take government bonds for example. You might even say they are more likely to pay you back with interest than your employer is, assuming it's not a government employer. There is a tiny chance they won't pay you back, but only in the severest of cases.

How does the stock market work differently in the case of gambling? When you purchase stock, you become part owner in the company. By investing in that corporation, hopefully when they make a profit, you'll be paid in dividends, or if they are growing and increasing in value, the value of the stock will go up.

What about when you bet money at a casino or at a horse race? You don't own part of anything. You can't rely on the success of a stable business to make you money. You are just taking a chance that you could win. A low chance at that.

Investing is another way to earn an income. When you invest, your money is earning money, not simply taking a chance on itself. If you ever fall into a large sum of money and you aren't sure which way to go, remember that investing is much less risky and could earn you a lot more money over the long run.

For example, we'll say you inherit $10,000 for an Aunt. You could either choose to gamble it for double or nothing to $20,000 and then double it again for $40,000, etc. Sure, you could double it 10 times over, but the chances of you even doubling it the first time are very slim. You can pretty much assume you will not be able to double it ten times over. In you invested invested it into stocks and earned an average of 8% a year for 30 years, you would have over $100,000. Lose it all or multiply it by ten? - 23199

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