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Beginning Investors: How to Turn $500 Into $500,000 for Retirement

growing plant shoots on stacked coins
Image source: Getty Images

Written by Amy Legate-Wolfe at The Motley Fool Canada

If you’re a young investor looking to start a retirement fund, first off, good for you! While there are certainly many young investors that have savings, there aren’t as many worried about retirement just yet.

So, today, let’s see if you can put those savings to work. Start investing just $500 a month, and you could turn that into $500,000.

Start off with a budget

It sucks to think about but if you want to plan for retirement and any other financial goal or emergency fund, you need a budget. Luckily, there are many budgeting apps out there that can help you. This includes through Canadian banks that have access to your accounts.

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You simply put in the information requested by the application or find pre-made spreadsheets online. It will ask you line by line what your income is along with your spending. These will be broken down by essentials like food and rent and non-essentials like take out and miscellaneous purchases.

Then see what you can get away with each and every month. If you need to pay off debt, this can also be a great way to get on top of debt before you start investing. Then put that cash for debt and savings aside each month through automated contributions.

Let’s say it’s $500

If you start putting aside $500 per month, that already is amazing. That comes to $6,000 per year, which is around the contribution room provided by the TFSA on an annual basis. You can therefore continue to keep up with payments, while not worrying about going overboard and getting dinged by the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA).

Now, if you do this starting at 25 years old, and do that for the next 25 years, that alone would create $150,000 in savings! But what if we could make that even more?

That’s why I would recommend an exchange-traded fund (ETF) like iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF (TSX:XIU). XIU follows the top 60 stocks on the TSX today, managed by fund managers to constantly change up your investment. That means it’s like having a top portfolio, without doing the heavy lifting.

How to create $500,000

If you decide to invest in XIU ETF, let’s see how long it would take to reach that $500,000 mark. You’ll need to check on the compound annual growth rate (CAGR) for both the stock and dividend over the last decade as well as reinvest that dividend income. The CAGR for this ETF is 5.84% in share price and 10% for its dividend CAGR. So, let’s put that cash to work.

Year

Share Price

Shares Owned

Annual Dividend Per Share

Annual Dividend

After DRIP Value

Annual Contribution

Year End Stock Price

New Shares Purchased

Year End Shares Owned

New Balance

1

$27

222

$1.03

$228.66

$6,222.66

$6,000

$28.58

217.94

439.94

$12,451.39

2

$28.58

439.94

$1.13

$497.13

6497.095

$6,000

$30.25

214.78

654.72

$19,491.29

3

$30.25

654.72

$1.25

$818.40

$20,309.69

$6,000

$32.01

213

867.73

$27,127.82

4

$32.01

867.73

$1.37

$1,188.79

$28,316.61

$6,000

$33.88

212.18

1079.91

$35,505.27

5

$33.88

1079.91

$1.51

$1,630.66

$37,135.93

$6,000

$35.86

212.79

1292.70

$44,766.58

6

$35.86

1292.70

$1.66

$2,145.88

$46,912.46

$6,000

$37.95

214.64

1507.35

$55,058.05

7

$37.95

1507.35

$1.82

$2,743.38

$57,801.43

$6,000

$40.17

217.66

1725

$66,544.83

8

$40.17

1725

$2.01

$3,467.25

$70,012.08

$6,000

$42.52

222.65

1947.65

$79,479.16

9

$42.52

1947.65

$2.21

$4,304.31

$83,783.47

$6,000

$45.00

228.98

2176.63

$94,087.57

10

$45.00

2176.63

$2.43

$5,289.21

$99,376.78

$6,000

$47.63

237.02

2413.63

$110,666.04

11

$47.63

2413.63

$2.67

$6,444.39

$117,110.43

$6,000

$52.39

237.53

2651.16

$129,554.63

12

$52.39

2651.16

$2.94

$7,794.41

$137,349.04

$6,000

$55.45

248.77

2899.93

$151,143.34

13

$55.45

2899.93

$3.23

$9,366.77

$160,510.11

$6,000

$58.69

261.83

3161.76

$175,876.91

14

$58.69

3161.76

$3.56

$11,255.87

$187,132.78

$6,000

$62.12

277.78

3439.54

$204,388.47

15

$62.12

3439.54

$3.91

$13,448.60

$217,837.07

$6,000

$65.74

295.84

3735.38

$237,285.59

16

$65.74

3735.38

$4.30

$16,062.13

$253,347.72

$6,000

$69.58

317.07

4052.46

$275,409.45

17

$69.58

4052.46

$4.73

$19,168.14

$294,577.59

$6,000

$73.65

341.72

4394.18

$319,745.27

18

$73.65

4394.18

$5.21

$22,893.68

$342,638.95

$6,000

$77.95

370.67

4764.84

$371,532.68

19

$77.95

4764.84

$5.73

$27,302.53

$398,835.21

$6,000

$82.50

403.67

5168.51

$432,137.99

20

$82.50

5168.51

$6.30

$32,561.61

$464,699.60

$6,000

$87.32

441.61

5610.12

$503,260.99

After 20 years, you’ll have $503,260.99 in your portfolio! That will also come with $32,561.61 in annual passive income. Freedom 50, here you come!

The post Beginning Investors: How to Turn $500 Into $500,000 for Retirement appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.

Should You Invest $1,000 In iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF?

Before you consider iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF, you'll want to hear this.

Our market-beating analyst team just revealed what they believe are the 5 best stocks for investors to buy in May 2023... and iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF wasn't on the list.

The online investing service they've run for nearly a decade, Motley Fool Stock Advisor Canada, is beating the TSX by 23 percentage points. And right now, they think there are 5 stocks that are better buys.

See the 5 Stocks * Returns as of 5/24/23

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Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

2023