mathjak107
Well-known Member
- Location
- bayside ,queens , ny
i suggest people learn the difference between gambling , speculating and investing before even commenting .
i suggest people learn the difference between gambling , speculating and investing before even commenting QUOTE]
For Sure! Investing requires some good Self Education and Close monitoring. A good portfolio of fairly conservative and diverse stocks will usually outperform nearly any other form of "savings". The markets do go up and down, but if a person monitors their investments closely, they can move in and out of "risk" such that the results are positive, over time. I just wish that 401K/IRA plans had been available when I first started working, and had been wise enough to participate for my entire working career. The banks get rich by investing individual savings/checking accounts.
the problem is people think they are going to side step the down turns and that is where they shoot themselves in the food . study after study shows those who get out successfully fail to get back in , in time or they bail out after the drop happened ..nothing works better then settling on an allocation that works and leave it alone ...
I agreeNever 'gamble' on the stock market unless you can afford to lose the money.....don't forget the hidden costs, like commission, and know what you are doing!
to me; it is remarkably like going to a casino....
gamble for sure don't do it .... invest in broad based equity funds absolutely it should be done .I agree
gamble for sure don't do it .... invest in broad based equity funds absolutely it should be done .
The irony is it is usually those that are under funded the most that are gun shy of investing and are likely underfunded because they spent their accumulation years gun shy of investing ..simple index funds or diversified funds have never lost a penny over typical accumulation and retirement time frames that span decades ..even at 65 their is money that has 25-30 years before it is used to eat and that money should be growing
A penny saved is a penny earned but alas it will always stay a penny without the most powerful force there is in finance , good compounding over decades of time ...
As long as you have growth vehicles that is fineTo each his own I say but I’d rather invest in real estate, gold and silver.
I had a Dexus plan for many years that made me some good money. it had a safety net under it for seniors. markets good I played. started to go down I was automatically pulled out.
I was also heavily invested in Northrop Grumman as well. but in 2008 got a letter from them warning me a democrat my be president. proceed at your own risk. sure enough I had to drop it.
all my investments were rolled into one account. and the day after the election I sent it all overseas where it still waits. no way in hell was i gonna let some sticky fingered peckerhead in the WH touch a penny of my life's savings
401K. what a ripoff. If you've withdrawn any you know. get the shaft at both ends. in addition to paying tax's on the withdrawal, the amount you take out is added to your annual income. get knocked into a higher tax bracket?? tuff. drop your pants bend over and grab your ankles.
well since 2014 a simple s&p 500 fund had an 11% return a year ... 100k is now more than 170k doing nothing but waiting .That's what I have now as well KC, no problems, except that it's in their hands ultimately. I think the mattress would be ok, but then a flood or fire ya know. I wonder what the odds are as far as which would actually be safer, the bank or my mattress?layful:
My wife and I have both been in broad base, low fee mutual funds for over 30 years and over time we have done very well. The only individual stock that we own is some AT&T that she got by participating in the company stock option plan even when she was a lowly paid phone operator. She worked there for 18 years and gets a rather pitiful retirement. The dividend from her stock is greater than her regular retirement.
The payout from our 401k's and our IRA's is much more than either one of our SSA's and makes a major difference in our lives. It has been at least 15 years since we changed mutual funds.
Now there have been some gut wrenching days, including some recent ones, but we don't sell in a panic. Generally we take our MRD's in monthly bank transfers to help avoid wild fluctuations.
I remain astonished by the people who fail to participate in a company 401k, especially when they can get a good match. I am also troubled by those who believe that they can pick great stocks or time the market. My adult son does this and gets burned, he also has a high priced advisor who takes a generous cut every month. He was paying his guy $263 a month to basically hold his hand. I finally convinced him to move directly to a big Vanguard fund and stop thinking he was going to beat the market. The amount that he actually has is sad compared to what he has been "investing".
I need to get off my soapbox!