Millennials: 3 Moves to Ensure You Are a Retired Millionaire

Growth stocks such as Lightspeed (TSX:LSPD) can help build long-term wealth and accelerate your retirement plan.

| More on:
Mature financial advisor showing report to young couple for their investment

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

Most of you are working right now to secure your future and lead a comfortable retirement life. You need to save and invest your monthly income, which will help you build long-term wealth. Saving for retirement is more like a marathon rather than a 100-metre sprint, that requires focus and discipline. We’ll look at three moves that will help you retire with a million dollars.

Start saving as soon as possible

You need to start saving as soon as you can and benefit from the power of compounding. This also means the sooner you start saving, the less you need to save each month and reach your financial goals.

If you aim to retire by the age of 65 with a retirement fund of $2 million and generate an annual rate of return of 8% on investments, you need to start saving $550 a month at the age of 23. However, if you start saving at the age of 40, you will have to set aside $2,000 per month to reach your financial goal of $2 million in retirement savings.

Equities remain the best bet

Although stocks are a volatile asset class in the near term, they have managed to derive substantially higher average rates of return over time. In case you want to reach a million dollars by retirement, investing in equities makes perfect sense, and taking an aggressive approach can jumpstart your savings.

You also need to consider that as you reach closer to retirement, you need to invest in safer havens such as bonds, which barely manage to beat inflation rates.

Avoid making withdrawals from your retirement fund

You need to avoid making withdrawals before retirement, as even small amounts can add up over time, which will hurt your growth potential. For example, if you have $100,000 in savings at the age of 40 and withdraw $5,000 to cover emergency expenses, it could ultimately lower your savings by $50,000 over the course of 30 years.

Invest in growth stocks such as Lightspeed

Investors just starting out can look to invest in growth stocks such as Lightspeed (TSX:LSPD)(NYSE:LSPD), a company in the digital payments space. LSPD provides software, solutions, and support systems to small and medium enterprises primarily in the retail and restaurant verticals.

The company aims to help SMEs engage with customers by managing operations and accepting payments. It provides an omnichannel commerce-enabling SaaS (software-as-a-service) platform.

Lightspeed operates in over 100 countries and helps customers engage across online, mobile, and physical channels. Between fiscal 2017 and fiscal 2020, the gross transaction volume on the LSPD platform increased at an annual rate of 46% to US$22.3 billion. Comparatively, revenue growth was 41% in this period. In fiscal 2019, LSPD also launched Lightspeed Payments, which is its proprietary payment-processing solution.

The company’s expanding portfolio of solutions, widening customer base and stellar growth in sales make it one of the top growth stocks on the TSX.

Lightspeed generates a significant amount of revenue via subscription, which will allow the company to drive a steady stream of sales across business cycles. LSPD stock has more than tripled since it went public in early 2019 and should continue to outperform the broader market in the upcoming decade as well.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

The Motley Fool owns shares of Lightspeed POS Inc. Fool contributor Aditya Raghunath has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Tech Stocks

A worker uses a double monitor computer screen in an office.
Tech Stocks

Why Shopify Stock Sold Off Last Week

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) sold off heavily last week. A bad earnings release may have been the culprit.

Read more »

Hand arranging wood block stacking as step stair with arrow up.
Tech Stocks

2 Phenomenal Growth Stocks Down 30-60% That Could Rally in the Next Bull Market

Is it time to buy growth stocks? The worst of the interest rate hike and inflation is over, and now…

Read more »

stock market
Tech Stocks

2 Best Tech Stocks to Buy Before the Next Bull Market

Tech stocks such as Roku and Nuvei can help long-term investors generate outsized gains in 2023 and beyond.

Read more »

Wireless technology
Tech Stocks

Tucows Stock Trades Near its 6-Year Low: Is it a Buy?  

Tucows stock fell 63% in the tech stock sell-off and has failed to show any recovery. Is this domain and…

Read more »

Male IT Specialist Holds Laptop and Discusses Work with Female Server Technician. They're Standing in Data Center, Rack Server Cabinet with Cloud Server Icon and Visualization
Tech Stocks

Is Converge Stock a Buy?

A relatively new tech stock could soar higher with the pause in rate hikes, although a resumption of the cycle…

Read more »

online shopping
Tech Stocks

Up by 25%: Is Shopify Stock Finally a Buy in 2023?

The strong rebound in the TSX’s top tech stock remains uncertain. Investors will have to wait before it delivers stellar…

Read more »

Businessman holding AI cloud
Tech Stocks

2 TSX Tech Stocks Innovating Hard in AI

Shopify (TSX:SHOP) stock and another intriguing Canadian gem make good use of AI technologies.

Read more »

worry concern
Tech Stocks

Shopify Stock: Incredible Bargain or Deceptive Trap?

Shopify has quickly shifted from a market darling to something else. Is it a safe buy or risqué bet?

Read more »