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Topic Guide

Investir sur le Long Terme

Build lasting wealth with index funds, ETFs, and proven long-term strategies — without the jargon, fees, or stress.

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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

ETF Investing for Beginners in Europe: A Practical Starter Guide

Learn how ETF investing works for beginners in Europe, including UCITS ETFs, costs, taxes, brokers, and how to build a simple diversified portfolio.

6 Feb 2025Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

How Compound Interest Builds Wealth Over Time: A Simple Guide

Learn how compound interest builds wealth over time, why starting early matters, and how small, consistent investments can grow into substantial long-term savings.

7 Jan 2025Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

Dollar Cost Averaging Explained

Learn what dollar cost averaging is, how it works, its advantages and drawbacks, and when investors use it to reduce timing risk and build long-term wealth.

12 Feb 2025Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

How to Choose the Right ETF Portfolio

Learn how to choose the right ETF portfolio based on your goals, risk tolerance, time horizon, costs, and diversification needs. A practical guide for long-term investors.

26 Nov 2024Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

A Simple Portfolio Strategy for Long-Term Wealth

Learn a simple portfolio strategy for building long-term wealth with diversified index funds, asset allocation, rebalancing, and disciplined investing.

8 Mar 2025Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

Long-Term Investing Strategies That Work

Discover long-term investing strategies that work, including diversification, dollar-cost averaging, index funds, dividend reinvestment, and risk management to build lasting wealth.

3 Oct 2024Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

How to Invest €500 Per Month: Smart Strategies to Build Wealth

Learn how to invest €500 per month with practical strategies for ETFs, diversification, risk management, and long-term wealth building.

20 Nov 2024Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

Dividend Investing vs Index Investing

Compare dividend investing vs index investing by returns, income, taxes, diversification, and risk. Learn which strategy may fit your long-term investing goals.

18 Feb 2025Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

How to Rebalance an Investment Portfolio: A Practical Guide

Learn how to rebalance an investment portfolio, when to do it, and which strategies help manage risk, maintain asset allocation, and keep long-term goals on track.

2 Nov 2024Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

The Biggest Investing Mistakes Beginners Make

Discover the biggest investing mistakes beginners make, why they happen, and how to avoid costly errors like chasing hype, poor diversification, market timing, and emotional decisions.

11 Jul 2024Lire l'article →
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Investing🇬🇧 EN25 min de lecture

Stocks vs Bonds: Long-Term Returns Explained

Learn how stocks and bonds have performed over the long run, why their returns differ, and what history suggests about risk, income, and portfolio growth.

10 Aug 2024Lire l'article →

Questions Fréquentes

What are the best ETFs for European investors?+
UCITS-compliant world ETFs tracking the MSCI World or FTSE All-World index are the most popular starting points. Low-cost options include the Amundi MSCI World (IE000BI8OT95), Vanguard FTSE All-World (IE00B3RBWM25), and iShares Core MSCI World (IE00B4L5Y983). Total expense ratios are typically 0.12–0.22% per year.
How does compound interest work?+
Compound interest means earning returns on your returns, not just on your original investment. €10,000 invested at 7% annually becomes €14,026 after 5 years, €19,672 after 10 years, and €76,123 after 30 years — without adding a single euro. The longer the time horizon, the more dramatic the effect.
What is dollar-cost averaging?+
Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) means investing a fixed amount at regular intervals regardless of market price. When prices fall, your fixed amount buys more shares. When prices rise, it buys fewer. Over time, this results in an average purchase price lower than the market average high, reducing timing risk.

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