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For my 21st birthday, my grandfather gave me 21,000 South African rand (about $1,500 US).
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However, the gift came on the condition that I find a financial advisor and invest it.
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I am grateful both for the gift and for what it taught me.
A month before my 21st birthday, my grandfather told me that he would give me 21,000 South African rand (approximately $1,500 US at the exchange rate at the time). However, there was one catch: I had to go with him to a financial advisor and invest money in shares.
At the time, I appreciated the freedom that money gave me, but thought little about investing. I was working working part-time at a bar Throughout university I promoted gigs whenever possible, and I was just starting to get freelance writing gigs.
Most of the money I earned went towards subsidizing my university lifestyle (usually drunken parties or greasy takeaways from the local pizzeria) or I saved money for a specific occasion, e.g. journey with my roommate across the country. However, I welcomed the 21st birthday gift and knew it was something I would treasure.
In early 2019, six months after my 21st birthday, my grandfather made an appointment for me to meet my new financial consultant with him.
We sat in the boardroom and my financial advisor explained stocks and the market using terms that were completely incomprehensible to me, such as “repo rate,” “capital gains tax,” and “volatility.” I nodded, hoping it looked like I understood more than I did. My grandfather would occasionally ask my advisor to explain important concepts, such as highlighting risks I'm withdrawing money too earlyespecially when the market was in a bad position.
After we arranged the investment, I received quarterly updates via email. I rarely opened them and almost forgot about the investment portfolio. However, during the family Easter holidays, two years after creating the portfolio, the topic of investing came up. My brother asked me how much my portfolio had grown (my grandfather also organized something similar for him). I opened the email to check and the balance was ZAR 28,138. In just two years, this increase was 34%.
By this time, I had already graduated from university and started making decent money in my PR business. I was still unsure of how taxes worked, so I overestimated the amount of money I needed to set aside for them each month. However, in 2022, after hiring a tax advisor and filing annual tax returnsI found that I had a decent amount of money left in savings.



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