April 20, 2026

Your investing options

You’ve decided to invest. Nice one. The next question is a big one: what do you actually invest in? Shares? ETFs? Property? Something else? Before choosing, it helps to understand risk properly. Risk isn’t just “losing money”. It’s the ups and downs you accept in exchange for the chance of long-term growth. Once that clicks,…

By Jess Lei

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You’ve decided to invest. Nice one.

The next question is a big one: what do you actually invest in? Shares? ETFs? Property? Something else?

Before choosing, it helps to understand risk properly. Risk isn’t just “losing money”. It’s the ups and downs you accept in exchange for the chance of long-term growth.

Once that clicks, your options feel a lot less overwhelming.

The main ways people invest

Most investments fall into a few broad categories. Each one suits different goals and timeframes.

Shares – When you buy shares, you’re buying a small piece of a company like BHP, Woolworths or Apple. If the company grows or pays dividends, you benefit. Share prices move daily based on results, news and markets, so values can rise and fall.

Property – Property investing can mean buying real estate directly, or investing through listed property trusts (often called REITs). Returns usually come from rent and changes in property values. Property can be harder to access and sell quickly compared to shares.

Bonds – Bonds are effectively loans to governments or companies. In return, you receive interest. They’re generally more stable than shares, but usually offer lower long-term growth.

Cash – Savings accounts and term deposits are the lowest-risk option. They’re useful for short term goals and emergency funds, but over long periods inflation can reduce their buying power.

Alternatives – Things like gold, crypto or private investments sit here. They can behave very differently to shares and cash and often come with higher risk or complexity.

Most new investors don’t use all of these. Many start by combining shares and bonds through funds, which keeps things simple.

ETFs: diversification made easy

ETFs (exchange traded funds) are popular with beginner investors for a reason.

An ETF holds a collection of investments  like shares or bonds, bundled into one product that trades on an exchange like the ASX, just like a share. One investment can give you exposure to dozens or even hundreds of companies.

For example, an Australian shares ETF might track the ASX 200, giving you exposure to many of the country’s largest businesses in a single trade. Global ETFs do the same for overseas markets.

Why people like ETFs:

  • Instant diversification
  • Lower effort than picking individual shares
  • Clear fees
  • Easy to buy and sell

You’re not betting on one company. You’re investing in a slice of the market.

ETFs vs individual shares:

 

ETFs Individual shares
Diversification Built in Depends on how many you buy
Research needed Lower Higher
Volatility Spread across many companies Tied to one company
Beginner friendly Very Less so

Both have a place. Many people start with ETFs and add individual shares later as they learn.

What risk really means in practice

Risk is about uncertainty, not recklessness.

Markets move. Some years are strong. Others aren’t. Shares can fall sharply in the short term but over long periods they’ve historically grown more than cash.

That’s volatility, the normal up-and-down movement of markets.

Here’s the key idea:

Short term risk feels scary, long-term risk is often missing out on growth.

Holding cash for long periods feels safe but inflation can slowly reduce its real value. Investing introduces ups and downs but gives your money the chance to grow over time.

That’s why timeframe matters:

  • Short-term goals (under ~3 years): more cash and defensive assets
  • Long-term goals (10+ years): growth assets like shares and ETFs tend to play a bigger role

No investment goes up in a straight line. Markets recover, fall, then recover again. Patience is part of the deal.

Why this matters for your first investment

Without understanding risk, investing choices feel confusing.

With it, patterns emerge:

  • Cash and bonds = stability, lower growth
  • Shares and ETFs = more movement, higher long-term potential
  • Diversification = smoother ride than going all-in on one thing

That’s why many beginners start broad. A diversified ETF can deliver market level exposure without needing to pick winners or time the market.

You can always refine your approach later.

Pick one thing to explore

Look back at your goal from the last post. Which option fits your timeframe?

If you’re unsure, start simple. Pick one broad ETF and read its summary. What markets does it invest in? What’s the fee? How long would you plan to hold it?

You don’t need to do everything at once. One clear step beats endless comparison.

 

Superhero Trading makes it easy to get started. Invest in ASX shares and ETFs from $10, with brokerage from $2 and no account fees. Capital at risk.

 

Superhero Markets Pty Ltd (ABN 36 633 254 261) is a Corporate Authorised Representative (CAR 1276309) of Superhero Securities Limited (ABN 96 160 456 315) (AFSL 430150). 

 

Please read and understand our Financial Services Guides, Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy and Website Terms of Use at superhero.com.au/support/documents, before deciding to use or invest on Superhero. We do not provide financial advice that takes into consideration your personal objectives, financial situation or particular needs. All investments carry risk, so please consider carefully before making any investment decisions and seek independent financial advice. Past performance is not indicative of future performance. Pictures, charts and graphs are provided for illustrative purposes only.

 

Copyright © 2026 Superhero

 

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