ON
← Back to feed
I’m a Financial Adviser—How to Make Your Baby a Millionaire by 30
United States🏛️ Politics6 hr. ago

I’m a Financial Adviser—How to Make Your Baby a Millionaire by 30

This article discusses strategies for building wealth for a child by the age of 30, focusing on investing early and managing finances responsibly. The author, Scott Stratton, a financial adviser, emphasizes the importance of starting investments from birth and highlights the potential growth of $1,000 monthly contributions at a 7% annual return. He advises against simply giving money and instead promotes teaching financial independence through education, avoiding debt, and adopting sound investment habits. Key recommendations include limiting student debt to one year’s salary, starting investments early with tools like Roth IRAs, and modeling positive financial behaviors.

How each side covered it

The same event, grouped by the political lean of the outlets covering it.

How each side covered it

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Covered around the world

The same event as reported in other countries.

Covered around the world

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

Claims check

Key factual claims, and how many sources assert vs dispute each.

Claims check

Support independent, bias-aware news and unlock the social pulse, community voting, and your personalized For You feed.

Become a Supporter

1 reports

Newsweek logoNewsweekIndependentCenter6 hr. ago
I’m a Financial Adviser—How to Make Your Baby a Millionaire by 30

This article discusses strategies for building wealth for a child by the age of 30, focusing on investing early and managing finances responsibly. The author, Scott Stratton, a financial adviser, emphasizes the importance of starting investments from birth and highlights the potential growth of $1,000 monthly contributions at a 7% annual return. He advises against simply giving money and instead promotes teaching financial independence through education, avoiding debt, and adopting sound investment habits. Key recommendations include limiting student debt to one year’s salary, starting investments early with tools like Roth IRAs, and modeling positive financial behaviors.

Bias read (Center): While the topic relates to personal finance and wealth-building, which can have broader societal implications, the article does not present a clear ideological slant. It offers balanced advice based on financial principles without overtly promoting any political agenda. The framing remains neutral,雖

Keep the news honest.

ObjectiveNews is reader-funded and ad-free — we show you the bias instead of hiding it. Support independent journalism for €5/month.

Become a Supporter

Related stories