Originally posted by disneysteve
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Fiverr Is My Newest Pick
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Originally posted by corn18 View Post
I don't think I could handle even that..
Vanguard's US Growth fund (not an index fund) has 1, 5, and 10-year returns of 63.94, 25.37, and 17.93% respectively. I'll just plop it in there for you.
Seriously though, you need to do what let's you sleep at night. I'm actually thinking about meeting with a CFP in the not too distant future (on an hourly basis) just to have him/her review our holdings and answer a bunch of questions about what happens moving forward, managing withdrawals, minimizing taxes, staying under caps for various benefits, etc. I know I can get all of that info here and at ER and other sites, but the idea of having a single source for all of that info is very appealing. And if I'm not happy with the outcome and level of knowledge, we just won't go back.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by Singuy View Post
It's a resistance trend line, and because the nasdaq is bearish the trend line is trending down. So everyday it's a different number that's getting lower and lower. It was 319 last week but this week it was around 315 and now it's like 313.
So far qqq is not collapsing even though rates are going higher which is very bullish!
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Originally posted by corn18 View PostI met with a financial advisor a couple of years ago. We decided not to go with him because I did not see the benefit of paying a 1% AUM fee for something I could do myself. He has since left his megacorp firm and went off on his own. We met again last year and he pitched his new approach. I liked it, but wasn't ready to make a move because I was in the middle of separating from my company. That becomes official today. I have followed his portfolio, and I am intrigued with his approach. Had I invested my 60% stock allocation with him back in early 2019 when we met, I would have over twice as much for retirement now. I'm not a FOMO kind of guy, but I am thinking about moving some money over to him. I have $300k in my Roth accounts that is 100% total stock index funds. I should not ever need the money. I am considering turning that over to him and let it ride for the kids.
This is his stock / growth fund portfolio:This is what the performance looks like:PLUG POWER INC. (XNAS:PLUG) Fidelity Advisor Growth Opportunities Fund;I American Funds SMALLCAP World Fund;F2 TESLA, INC. (XNAS:TSLA) WORKHORSE GROUP INC. (XNAS:WKHS) ZOOM VIDEO COMMUNICATIONS, INC. (XNAS:ZM) WCM Focused Emerging Markets;Institutional iShares:Core Div Growth (ARCX GRO)
ARK Innovation (ARCX:ARKK) SOLAREDGE TECHNOLOGIES, INC. (XNAS:SEDG) SQUARE, INC. (XNYS:SQ) Federated Hermes Kaufmann Small Cap Fund;Inst NANO DIMENSION LTD (XNAS:NNDM) ARCIMOTO, INC. (XNAS:FUV) Virgin Galactic Holdings, Inc. (XNYS:SPCE) Pacer Bchmrk D&I RE SCTR (ARCX:SRVR) NIO INC. (XNYS:NIO) LORDSTOWN MOTORS CORP (XNAS:RIDE) DANIMER SCIENTIFIC, INC. (XNYS NMR)
Li Auto Inc. (XNAS:LI) XPENG INC. (XNYS:XPEV)
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I liked it, but wasn't ready to make a move because I was in the middle of separating from my company. That becomes official today.
Um Congratulations! Hello retirement! I just want to highlight what you wrote like Kork! Woot! What a turn around 8 years make....since you started in 2013 in debt and retired now 2021. Who'd have thunk?
Anyway sure if you don't care about the roth why not?
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I'm hearing some noise that the bond market is going down again next week and the market may follow so seems we may get another big drop, news is mentioning bonds are kinda dropping out. But honestly I don't understand the connection between the bond market and the stock market, as they are two very different kinds of investments, so why does one going down effect the other?
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Originally posted by corn18 View PostI liked it, but wasn't ready to make a move because I was in the middle of separating from my company. That becomes official today.
“Compound interest is the eighth wonder of the world. He who understands it, earns it … he who doesn’t … pays it.”
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Originally posted by jeffmem View PostI'm hearing some noise that the bond market is going down again next week and the market may follow so seems we may get another big drop, news is mentioning bonds are kinda dropping out. But honestly I don't understand the connection between the bond market and the stock market, as they are two very different kinds of investments, so why does one going down effect the other?
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
usually when bond rates go up they are more attractive for investors who are looking for a safe investment. it's been years since we had 3% CD or MM or anything which would normally be a pillar of returns for retirees. People (myself included) are just investing in stocks because bonds literally have no returns right now. I have ibonds but I wonder if I shouldn't cash it in and invest in the stock market. I sank part of our EF in there, but maybe it's not worth being conservative.
I have bonds also, savings bonds, not selling, remember EE bonds earn 3%, if you hold for 20 years, it equates to 3% as the government gives you a nice fat gift if your bond doesn't double. I bonds are varied, no such government gift. I also have Treasury bonds, but I need to check what they are earning, when I bought it, it was over 3%, so I think that is for the life of the bond.
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Originally posted by jeffmem View Post
Yes, but why would low bond rates equate to investors selling stocks also? This is part of the cause of the first correction two weeks ago. And now they are talking about the entire bond market is about ready to go down the tubes... Why would this negatively impact the market?
I have bonds also, savings bonds, not selling, remember EE bonds earn 3%, if you hold for 20 years, it equates to 3% as the government gives you a nice fat gift if your bond doesn't double. I bonds are varied, no such government gift. I also have Treasury bonds, but I need to check what they are earning, when I bought it, it was over 3%, so I think that is for the life of the bond.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
Low yields = higher bond prices. but it looks like prices are going lower as yields are going up. More money going into bonds because prices are coming down and yields go up. this is all speculation on GDP and feds and where economy is going.
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Originally posted by jeffmem View Post
So is this the reason for today's sell-off again? I am back down to March 3rd levels when the market first corrected. Things seem unstable, and global situation doesn't seem too fantastic right now either.
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Originally posted by Singuy View Post
Yes, everything is just following the indexes. Today bond yield drops, so everything will be green. There seems to be some manipulation in the bond market by short sellers so expect volatility for awhile.
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