by sjperez on 5/9/20, 2:41 PM with 19 comments
by shoo on 5/9/20, 7:37 PM
https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Getting_started
If you sign up for the Bogleheads forum & follow the template to describe your financial situation you will likely get some reasonably good feedback & ideas.
by rocketpastsix on 5/10/20, 5:48 PM
by RALaBarge on 5/9/20, 2:57 PM
If you still had questions and more money than the average bear, find a financial professional.
by sloaken on 5/9/20, 5:46 PM
1) Need in the next 1-2 years - Money market account
2) 3-7 years - value funds (either ETF or Mutual funds)
3) 7+ - growth funds (either ETF or Mutual funds)
Individual stocks take effort to watch. Make sure you do not buy just before a dividend (you will pay tax on the money they give back to you). Watch for bad news, so you can pull your money before they go bankrupt.
ETF are lightly managed, your money grows as that segment grows. Which is not a bad idea.
Mutual funds - someone is actively watching it. Which can hopefully mean it avoids a bad turn, but it can burn money being churned.
Safest bet is an EFT that tracks the S&P 500
I expect Real Estate funds to take a gut punch when things open up and the businesses fold and they have no rent coming in. So I plan to put money there, after it falls.
by giantg2 on 5/10/20, 10:24 AM
by austincheney on 5/9/20, 8:56 PM
In order to accomplish that rule you have to generally do the opposite of what is popular, but in a meaningful way.
When the market began crashing I sold shares from my healthy mutual funds and bought a lot of stocks in airlines and cruises. People aren't going to stop flying. Eventually those markets will recover and I recently bought shares at about 25-33% of their recent value. Now I just have to wait out the pandemic and for business to return to normal.