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nrealistic t1_j2df6tp wrote

Putting the same amount in every week or month is DCA. The alternative would be waiting until the market seems low, buying a bunch of stock, and then not buying any more for a long time until the market seems low again

I think DCA generally performs better / is safer. Personally, i do it - I have it set up so a portion of every paycheck is deposited into my brokerage account and invested.

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lost_girl_2019 OP t1_j2dfhcv wrote

Yeah, I wouldn't have any idea how to tell if it's low. When I look at those charts, my brain feels like it's frying. I literally have ZERO experience in this stuff. I am so appreciative of everyone's help and kindness towards my lack of knowledge and experience!!

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tsnara t1_j2dof55 wrote

Don’t try to time the market. Just buy when you have your $50 available.

Some times you get a “good” price per share with that $50, others not so good. Good price means your $50 will buy more shares compared to a bad price.

But either a good or bad price on each $50 purchase you make will result in more or less the same outcome - you’ll own a lot of shares that accumulate over time. Especially if you’re diligently buying shares each time you have extra cash, with little regard to the price you pay.

That’s the secret - amass shares and don’t sell them for decades.

(Ps - Don’t buy individual stocks- stick to broadly diversified mutual funds or ETFs)

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JJROKCZ t1_j2e1q3k wrote

Time in the market beats timing in the market. Put whatever you can in when you can and don’t sweat too much over it. Anything you do now is a benefit to your older self

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absurdamerica t1_j2eaz2u wrote

The habit of saving is far more important than any timing. I’ve been consistently putting in for 23 years and it’s a big pile of money now.

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Strong_Woodpecker634 t1_j2fnpvn wrote

Get the book, or audiobook, the simple path to wealth by JL collins. You need to build some base financial literacy in that book is really all you need.

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lhamil64 t1_j2frh6v wrote

>Putting the same amount in every week or month is DCA.

Check out the wiki on investing:

https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/investing/

Dollar cost averaging is when you have a sum of money that you want to invest and, rather than investing it all at once, you spread it out over time. If you are investing as you earn, it's not technically DCA. And as the wiki says, it's generally better to just invest the lump sum at once. But by the same logic, it's better to invest as you earn rather than saving it up to invest later (which I need to be more disciplined about tbh)

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