The following is a guest post written by Paul Damazo, author of 80 Proven Ways to Become a Millionaire, All you need is two or three! For those of you interested, here's a series I wrote a long time ago on The Richest Man in Babylon.
If you struggle to survive financially, you are not alone. Isn't it amazing that in the two most important areas of our lives-finances and relationships-most of us have not had even one hour of training. This is crazy!
I'm sure you've heard about the Law of Attraction and you know the Law of Gravity. Did you know there are also Laws of Wealth Creation. Perhaps you were never taught them or you do not use them.
Let me share what I learned from one of my favorite books.
The Secrets of The Richest Man In Babylon
You can succeed financially! It is quite simple, boiling down to three simple secrets that go back to old Babylon. The book, The Richest Man in Babylon, by George S. Clason, shares Arkad's secrets to becoming wealthy and makes the financial concept of compound interest fun to read and easy to understand.
What makes his story so interesting is that Arkad did not begin life wealthy. Poor when a young man, he wanted to experience more of life than what his childhood circumstances had to offer.
Arkad's friends were confused as to why he had so much more money than they did. As children, they had been equal. They had played, studied, and worked together. Nothing had set Arkad apart. So, what was his secret? How come Arkad had all the "luck"? Didn't they "deserve" to be wealthy?
To Arkad's childhood friends, it seemed very unfair that ordinary little Arkad somehow became the richest man in Babylon, while they struggled daily to survive.
Arkad shared with his friends that when he was younger he had observed that many things were possible when one had wealth. Being happy and content was a great way to live and having wealth made it even easier. He consciously made the choice to be happy and wealthy! He set out to learn wealth creation and then focused on doing it well.
Arkad doesn't try to defend his good fortune or to apologize for it. Instead, he sets out to share his secrets. And what he makes very clear is that these "secrets" aren't really secret at all. They are simple formulas anyone can learn. Yes, you can become wealthy.
Secret 1: Arkad decided "A part of all I earn is mine to keep."
He found the road to wealth when he kept and invested for himself one-tenth of all he earned. Start with 1% and work up to 10% or more as quickly as you can. Just start!
Secret 2: He invested wisely.
Arkad learned to save and invest and reinvest his money. He told his friends they should put their money and that money's children (i.e., the interest or return on their money) to work for them.
Make your money work hard for you rather than you working hard for your money. Have the patience and persistence to let your money grow, compounding each year.
Have a large money tree. The more money you save, the more money you can put to work for yourself.
Secret 3: He enjoyed his wealth.
Arkad was famous for his wealth, kindness, and generosity. He gave graciously to charities, was generous with his family, and liberal with his own expenses.
If you are serious about your wealth creation and becoming a millionaire, you will quickly differentiate between your needs versus your wants, and you will not be involved with instant gratification.
The Amazing Secret of Compounding
Compounding can work for you or against you. When you borrow money, compounding works against you and takes more of your money, sometimes far more than the amount you initially borrowed. When you save and invest money, compounding works for you, paying you more money every day.
You can become very wealthy. Compound interest grows gigantically faster than simple interest. The younger you are, the more you can use this "secret" to your advantage. Start now compounding interest and watch how fast your investments will grow.
When comparing simple and compounding interest, imagine a duck and a jet, both ready to fly. The duck takes off slowly, staying close to the ground while gradually picking up height. The jet speeds down the runway, starts climbing rapidly, eventually climbing so high and so fast it appears to be going straight up. The jet is like compounding interest.
Time is Magic
"Compound interest is the greatest mathematical discovery of all time," said Dr. Albert Einstein. The results are determined by time, not just how much you invest! Time really is magic.
The Rule of 72 developed by Dr. Albert Einstein is an easy way to estimate how long it will take for your money to double with annual compounding. (Divide 72 by the percentage growth rate.) For example, with a 15% return your money doubles every 4.8 years. Round it to five years (for simplicity's sake). This means a $5,000 one-time investment made at birth by parents and grandparents would grow to $2,560,000 when the child is 45 years old. This awesome result is based on two major factors-compounding earned interest and time.
Remember that Wealth is a Matter of Choice-Yours Alone. Choose today to become a millionaire, to focus on your wealth creation, to create a life you love for you and your loved ones.
NOTE: This article is designed to inspire you into action and to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter covered. Factual material has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable, and is not guaranteed. All examples are for illustrative purposes only and are not to be construed as recommendations, advice, or tax counsel. The author is not engaged in rendering legal, accounting, or other professional service. If legal or other expert assistance is required, the author strongly recommends that the reader should contact his own professional advisors.
Past performance should not be taken as being representative of future results. Anything tax-related should be discussed with your accountant before it is used for tax purposes. All information provided in this article is for informational purposes only.




Comments: The Richest Man in Babylon, The Power of Compounding, Part 2
Awhile back, I post on The Richest Man in Babylon, The Power of Compounding where I quoted from the book The Richest Man in Babylon and highlighted the power of compounding.
Next, I received a comment from a reader and posted it in Comments: The Richest Man in Babylon, The Power of Compounding. The reader wondered how much was enough for the power of compounding to really make a difference. I asked readers to make suggestions on this questions and here's what the first had to say:
To me the "magic" point is when you're consistently making more in interest or other earnings each year than you're making in contributions. That's when you really go "whoa, money for nothing!" At 8% APY that happens around the end of your ninth year, assuming you keep the contribution constant. That's why a guy who saves $500 a month starting at age 20 and STOPS at age 30 will end up with more than a guy who starts saving the same amount at 30 and continues for the rest of his life. By the time the 20-year-old hits 30, his savings is making his $500 monthly investment for him.
Good thought. Here's another one:
There are lots of important milestones for me in saving for retirement. However, unlike a lot of people I base them on exactly this sort of question rather than when I have saved round numbers. For example, I recently hit an important milestone: my retirement savings will compound on its own to an amount that will be sufficient to sustain my income at an the inflation-adjusted equivalent of what it is today, without any further contributions from me. That means that everything I save from now on toward retirement serves one of two purposes. The first is that it will increase my income after retirement. Since I still expect my pre-retirement income to increase, some of that will be necessary to maintain my lifestyle at the level I'll be enjoying just before I retire. Second, I can bring my retirement date closer.
That second point is the whole reason for paying attention to this particular milestone. I've based my retirement date on when I can start drawing from retirement accounts at 59 1/2 years old. If I want to have money to live off of if I retire at 57, I'd better have it in other accounts that I can tap earlier. Yes, I've reached the point where I need to carefully consider how much I'm putting into retirement accounts vs. non-retirement accounts.
Wow! This person has done a great job of saving. To be in a position where the investment income will take care of the rest of the money needed for retirement is fantastic. Can't wait until I get there! ;-)
Finally, here's a more quantitative take on the question:
The magic number is pretty simple. Take your savings and multiply by .04 (4%), if you can live on that amount of money, go ahead and retire. Theoretically you should never run out of money. Of course expenses can rise dramatically (think taxes, health care and energy) which may make this theory obsolete.
I don't think this guarantees you of not running out of money, but gives you something like a 95% chance of having the money you need through age 90 or so -- which should be plenty.
For more thoughts on saving for retirement, see these links:
Posted on April 28, 2006 at 10:34 AM in Comments, Richest Man in Babylon | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)