Well, I met with my sister and we went over her finances.
She's an interesting case. She has $60,000 sitting in an online savings account. That's what I call her "slush" fund. She doesn't really hold down a steady job, she kind of drifts, does some contract work, and lives ultra-frugal. No kids. No husband. No debt.
So, she wants that amount as a cushion to live for a year should she decide not to work.
Okay. . .that's fine. Here's where it gets interesting.
Then, in her 401(k) from Apple, she has about $23,000 split among 6 funds, most of it in Fidelty ContraFund (about $12,000) and about $5,000 in Fidelty Growth and Income. The rest is small amounts in other MM's and otehr funds I have to get familiar with.
Then, she goes self-employed - her SEP-IRA is split among 5 Putnam funds, all back-end loaded but they diminish over time. A financial advisor put her in these. This is about $13,000.
So, she has about 11 funds with $36,000 that I have told her to compress into 5. I am trying to work it out whether to rollover her Apple account into her SEP-IRA (per the other thread).
Emotionally she is attached to the ContraFund, which has done the best for her (it does have a Morningstar 5 rating).
Her SEP-IRA, which was professionally advised, hasn't really earned anything past her contributions (since the year 2000) of 13K. But. . .she seemed to only add to her SEP-IRA before market corrections instead of dollar cost averaging so I am not sure I can blame the advisor here. In other words, she just threw money at it every once in awhile.
Still. . .since 2000, I would think some of that money would have grew.
The Putnam funds tend to run with an expense ratio of 2.5% too.
Well, no point to this post. . .I'm going off for 3 days for a vacation.
I'm going to email her a plan for her.
She's an interesting case. She has $60,000 sitting in an online savings account. That's what I call her "slush" fund. She doesn't really hold down a steady job, she kind of drifts, does some contract work, and lives ultra-frugal. No kids. No husband. No debt.
So, she wants that amount as a cushion to live for a year should she decide not to work.
Okay. . .that's fine. Here's where it gets interesting.
Then, in her 401(k) from Apple, she has about $23,000 split among 6 funds, most of it in Fidelty ContraFund (about $12,000) and about $5,000 in Fidelty Growth and Income. The rest is small amounts in other MM's and otehr funds I have to get familiar with.
Then, she goes self-employed - her SEP-IRA is split among 5 Putnam funds, all back-end loaded but they diminish over time. A financial advisor put her in these. This is about $13,000.
So, she has about 11 funds with $36,000 that I have told her to compress into 5. I am trying to work it out whether to rollover her Apple account into her SEP-IRA (per the other thread).
Emotionally she is attached to the ContraFund, which has done the best for her (it does have a Morningstar 5 rating).
Her SEP-IRA, which was professionally advised, hasn't really earned anything past her contributions (since the year 2000) of 13K. But. . .she seemed to only add to her SEP-IRA before market corrections instead of dollar cost averaging so I am not sure I can blame the advisor here. In other words, she just threw money at it every once in awhile.
Still. . .since 2000, I would think some of that money would have grew.
The Putnam funds tend to run with an expense ratio of 2.5% too.
Well, no point to this post. . .I'm going off for 3 days for a vacation.
I'm going to email her a plan for her.

If the tax advantage will work for her and she doesn't mind the possiblity of a small loss, why not I guess?
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