Dad, Mom, should we buy SpaceX?"
SpaceX has now blasted off. And there's a good chance some version of that question will be asked around kitchen tables across America.
And honestly, it's a great question.
Kids see rockets landing themselves. They watch astronauts return from space. They hear about Elon Musk on YouTube, social media, and in conversations at school. To many children, SpaceX feels like the future.
Maybe it is.
But whether SpaceX becomes the next great investment isn't the most important lesson for families.
The bigger lesson is how wealth is actually built.
And that's something every child should learn.
Every Generation Has Its "SpaceX"
If you go back through history, every generation has had a company that captured the public's imagination.
For some, it was IBM.
For others, it was Apple, Microsoft, Amazon, or Tesla.
These weren't just businesses. They became symbols of the future.
SpaceX may be the latest example. And biggest. But...
When a company becomes exciting, people naturally want to own a piece of it. That's not a bad thing. In fact, it's one of the reasons investing can be so powerful. It allows ordinary families to participate in the growth of extraordinary businesses.
But excitement can also create a trap.
Many investors begin to believe that because a company is talked about as great, buying the stock must automatically be a great decision.
The two aren't always the same.
A great company can still be a poor investment if you pay too much for it. A company can dominate headlines and still struggle to deliver the returns investors expect.
That's why the first lesson we should teach our kids is simple:
A great company and a great investment are not always the same thing.
The Biggest Investing Mistake Most People Make
When people talk about investing, they often focus on finding the next winner.
The next Apple.
The next Amazon.
The next SpaceX.
But most family wealth isn't built that way.
It's built through consistency.
Imagine two families.
Family A invests $200 every month into a diversified index fund. They do it whether the market is up, down, exciting, boring, or somewhere in between.
Family B spends years searching for the next hot stock. Sometimes they buy. Sometimes they wait. Sometimes they jump in after prices have already skyrocketed.
Which family wins?
History suggests it's usually Family A.
Not because they're smarter.
Not because they're luckier.
Because they developed a habit.
One of the most powerful lessons children can learn is that wealth is the result of small decisions repeated over a very long time.
The magic isn't finding the perfect investment.
The magic is staying invested.
Turn the SpaceX IPO Into a Family Experiment
This is where things get fun.
Instead of telling your kids what to think, use the SpaceX IPO as a real-world learning opportunity.
Sit down together and ask a simple question:
"If you had $100 to invest, what would you do?"
You might offer three choices:
- Put all $100 into SpaceX.
- Put all $100 into an S&P 500 index fund.
- Split the money between both.
Have each family member make a choice and explain their reasoning.
Don't worry about being right.
The goal isn't predicting the future.
The goal is learning how to think.
Write everyone's answers down. Then revisit them every few months.
Your children will naturally begin asking questions:
Why did one investment go up?
Why did another go down?
Why does diversification matter?
What happens when people get overly excited?
Those conversations are worth far more than the performance of any single stock.
Wealthy Families Usually Do Something Boring
When we picture wealthy investors, we often imagine people making brilliant stock picks or discovering hidden opportunities before everyone else.
In reality, many financially successful families do something far less exciting.
They build systems.
They automatically invest every month.
They contribute to retirement accounts.
They save for education.
They maintain emergency funds.
They diversify.
None of these things generate headlines.
Nobody brags about making their monthly contribution to an index fund.
But these habits quietly create financial security year after year.
It's the system that is powerful. Not the amount invested. Invest what you can but use the system. Stay consistent.
The older we get, the more we realize that boring is often underrated.
Excitement makes great stories.
Consistency builds great futures.
The Rule of 10 Years
If there's one investing rule worth teaching kids, it might be this:
Before buying any investment, ask yourself if you'd be comfortable owning it for ten years.
Not ten days.
Not ten weeks.
Ten years.
That simple question changes the conversation.
It encourages patience.
It shifts attention away from daily headlines.
It forces us to think about long-term value instead of short-term excitement.
Interestingly, children often understand this idea better than adults.
Kids naturally think about things they love for years. Their favorite books, hobbies, sports, and interests become part of who they are. Help them invest in their hobbies. They'll stay interested.
Investing works best when we bring some of that same long-term thinking to our financial decisions.
The Real Lesson Isn't SpaceX
Maybe SpaceX becomes one of the most successful companies in history.
Maybe it exceeds every expectation.
Maybe it doesn't.
Nobody knows.
What we do know is that families who consistently save, invest thoughtfully, avoid emotional decisions, and stay focused on the long term have been building wealth for generations.
That's the lesson worth passing on.
The SpaceX IPO may create headlines.
It may dominate social media.
It may even inspire a few future engineers, scientists, and entrepreneurs.
But for families, its greatest value may be something much simpler.
It gives us a chance to sit down with our children and teach them that building wealth isn't about chasing every rocket launch.
It's about building habits that can carry a family forward for decades.
And unlike any single stock, that's an investment that almost always pays off.
Family Activity: The Rocket Portfolio Challenge
Give each child a fictional $1,000 portfolio.
Have them allocate:
- 50% to a broad market index fund
- 25% to a company they believe in
- 25% held as cash
Track the results once a month.
At the end of the year, compare performance and discuss what everyone learned.
Bonus points if Mom and Dad participate too.
You might be surprised by who asks the best questions.
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