Successful ETF Investing: Is It Luck or Strategy? | ETF Trends

The experts preach the message of building a nest egg as early as possible. By putting money into different vehicles, such as exchange traded funds (ETFs), as soon as you receive your first paycheck, they say you can reap the benefits of compounding interest. But what gets buried in the larger message is that you can’t simply put money into a retirement fund and expect to earn the long-term average.

According to Sam Mamudi of MarketWatch, luck plays a big part in how much your investment can grow. Take recent history for example: If you began stashing a percentage of your paycheck into the market in 2008, you would have lost close to 40% of your investment, assuming that your portfolio was based off a broad market index. [5 Tips for Portfolio Diversification.]

What if you started saving during non-recessionary times? A $100,000 portfolio of 60% stocks and 40% bonds invested in 1946 would have grown to about $1.15 million by 1976. From 1976 to 2006, that same amount would have grown to $2.27 million.

Looking at overlapping periods, that same portfolio invested in 1925 would have yielded about $1 million 30 years later, while the same portfolio invested two years later would have yielded only $760,000 by 1957, underscoring the fact that you can’t take the long-term growth average for granted.

Of course, there are no clear-cut answers to investing success. The best way to securing a retirement still starts with saving as early as possible to ensure that you save as much as possible.