9 Essential Investor Tips for 2019

Here at FINRA, we do our best throughout the year to offer important tips about a range of investor topics. They are all useful (at least we think so, anyway), but some are truly essential to financial health -- the kind of information you'll want to avoid getting into the kind of financial trouble from which you might never fully recover.

Here are nine super-charged investor tips to start your 2019 on the right track.

gold foil balloons spelling out 2019 against a pink background and gold confetti
gold foil balloons spelling out 2019 against a pink background and gold confetti

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Take control by saving for retirement. If you insist on waiting until you have "enough" money to invest in your own retirement, you might find your definition of "enough" growing and growing, and you might never start at all. When you wait, you miss out on your money growing over time. Have an employer? Talk to your human resources department, supervisor, or business owner about an employer-sponsored savings plans, such as a 401(k). No plan or self-employed? Open an individual retirement account (IRA) by contacting a financial services firm.

2. Establish a rainy day fund. About 34% of respondents to the FINRA Foundation's National Financial Capability Study said they probably or certainly could not come up with $2,000 in an emergency. That inability to pay can make a tough financial situation worse, especially if you have to take on debt to pay the bills or go without vital services such as car repairs or healthcare. If you want more tips on how to get started with establishing your emergency savings, read this.

3. Know what you own. Each type of investment has pluses and minuses, and it's important to know what they are for each product you own. For instance, stocks tend to return more over the long term than bonds (a plus), but stocks as an asset class are also more volatile than bonds (a potential minus, especially if you need the money relatively soon or when the market moves against you). Big problems can occur if you are more concentrated than you realize, fail to understand costs like surrender charges (variable annuities have them), or hold too much of an illiquid investment like a non-traded REIT.

4. Stay (or get) diversified. Diversification helps protect the value of your portfolio if one or more of your investments perform poorly. Learn how to apply this key concept to your portfolio. When you diversify, you aim to manage your risk by spreading out your investments. You can diversify both among and within different asset classes. Diversifying among assets classes typically involves holding a mix of stocks, bonds, and cash. Diversifying within an asset class means dividing the money you've allocated to a particular asset class among various categories of investments that belong to that asset class. For example, if you own stocks, you can diversify within that asset class by owning stocks of companies from different sectors.