u/Mccould-Ync

What's the best investing course for someone who wants to build a solid foundation?

Long post ahead but I just really want to be heard. I recently graduated with a degree in finance, and I honestly thought I'd feel more confident about investing by now. But when it's your own money on the line, everything suddenly feels a lot more intimidating than it did in the classroom.

If I'm being honest, I've already tried getting into investing a few times over the past couple of years. I'd get excited, read up on different strategies, save a bunch of resources, and tell myself this was finally the time I'd get started. Then I'd run into completely different opinions about what beginners should do, get overwhelmed, and quietly put it off again.

One person says to keep it simple and buy index funds. Another says you should understand individual stocks first. Then someone else argues ETFs are the best place to begin. Before long, I have more questions than answers and end up back where I started.

This time, I want to approach it differently. Instead of piecing together random advice from different places, I'd rather follow something structured that builds a solid foundation from the ground up.

I've been looking into the best investing course, but it's hard to tell which ones are genuinely educational and which ones are mostly trying to sell a strategy. I'm not looking for shortcuts or unrealistic promises. I just want to understand the basics well enough to make smart, long term decisions and finally feel confident enough to make that first investment.

I'd especially love to hear from anyone who struggled to get started more than once before things finally started to make sense. Looking back, what do you wish someone had told you when you were just beginning?

I honestly have a lot of respect for people who pushed through all the confusion and eventually came out the other side feeling confident with investing. I'm hoping that, with the right foundation this time, I can finally do the same.

reddit.com
u/Mccould-Ync — 3 days ago

There are so many options (ETFs, index funds, individual stocks, etc.), and I’m not really sure what most beginners actually start with.

I understand the basic idea of diversification, but when it comes to actually making a first investment, I still feel a bit unsure about what a “good starting point” is supposed to look like in practice.

It’s not that I’m trying to overcomplicate it—I just don’t want to start off in a direction that doesn’t make sense long term.

For those who remember being in the beginning stage, how did you decide what to invest in first, and what helped you feel more confident about it?

reddit.com
u/Mccould-Ync — 2 months ago