Neverwinter27
Member
Looking for some education on real estate investment, if anyone can point me to some beginner books they would recommend, as well as a dedicated website?
Looking for some education on real estate investment, if anyone can point me to some beginner books they would recommend, as well as a dedicated website?
Bigger Pockets
Speaking of 4% rule, Mad Fientist recently did an interview with the father of the 4% rule, Michael Kitces. Awesome podcast episode if you want to nerd out.
http://www.madfientist.com/michael-kitces-interview/
So I went with the advice here a little over a year ago and split up my 401k according to below. Is that still doing well? Should I adjust the percentages as I get older?
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Speaking of 4% rule, Mad Fientist recently did an interview with the father of the 4% rule, Michael Kitces. Awesome podcast episode if you want to nerd out.
http://www.madfientist.com/michael-kitces-interview/
Every few years you should incrementally shift money over to the bond fund, targeting something in the ballpark of 50 / 50 stocks & bonds by the time you are at retirement age.
Aside from that, leave it alone. This strategy of using broadly diversified index funds is designed around the idea that you do not need to care what is happening on a year-to-year basis, because you will just hold this set of funds for the long run. The easiest way to screw up in retirement investing is to try to beat the market every year.
Once I am 10 years or so from retirement I will start investing in Bonds though. The reason for this is that bonds are a lot less volatile than stocks, which means that if a stock market crash comes along, they won't less nearly as much, if at all any, as stocks (hell, they might actually go up).
As for what bond funds and what percentage of my portfolio, I am in favor of 50% Total US Bond market and 50% TIPS fund. Total bond fund should be self-explanitory, but I like the TIPS fund because it is inflation protected. Stocks themselves are inherently a hedge against inflation so moving into bonds you are losing quite a bit of that. Investing in TIPS takes care of that. As for the percentage of bonds compared to stocks, that really depends on how much you have invested. If you already have more than enough money invested for retirement, well, I would go heavily invested into bonds (like 80-100%). If you still need more money, you are obviously going to need to take on more risk, i.e. stock (so 40-60% stock maybe?)
There is another investment strategy, and that is holding your age in bonds, which basically means that you will increase the percentage of your bond holdings as you get older. I think that is way too conservative though since I think the purpose of investment is growth and you only need bonds until time stops being such a fantastic hedge and you need another one (bonds). Really up to you though and how much risk you can handle, because geting freaked up by a crash and selling all of your retirement low is FAR FAR FAR worse than taking a conservative approach to investing for retirement.
Speaking of 4% rule, Mad Fientist recently did an interview with the father of the 4% rule, Michael Kitces. Awesome podcast episode if you want to nerd out.
http://www.madfientist.com/michael-kitces-interview/
Listening to the podcast now, but the entire discussion in the last third has been one hell of an epiphany for me. Because all of my retirement planning has been about saving toward a number, and then drawing it down.
Meanwhile, I've always planned to find some kind of work after I retire, though just part time work for dramatically less income. And my wife just started working again last year, now that the kids are old enough. But we've never factored that into our retirement plans. I'm going to go and crunch numbers tonight, but I'm pretty that modest income would reel in my retirement date by a decade or so. 0_o
Which would be five years from now.
What I want to know is, how we all gonna retire early when Medicare doesn't start until you're 65 and you might need health care before you turn that age?
That's the one question I've been turning around in my head for awhile now.
What I want to know is, how we all gonna retire early when Medicare doesn't start until you're 65 and you might need health care before you turn that age?
That's the one question I've been turning around in my head for awhile now.
What I want to know is, how we all gonna retire early when Medicare doesn't start until you're 65 and you might need health care before you turn that age?
That's the one question I've been turning around in my head for awhile now.
We also need to plan out the funding by age. Regular investments from now until 59.5 when we could use IRA/401k funds, gap to Medicare/Social Security, etc.
What if you don't realize any gains until withdrawal period and you offset those gains with previous realized losses to reduce the long term gains taxes? Is that up to $3000 a year you can offset? Or is the offset limit higher such that a retiree can potentially pay zero income tax during the early taxable account withdrawal years?It's still better to draw down the regular taxable investments first since they don't benefit from deferred tax on dividends or rebalancing, but they don't need to last until 59.5.
*Does not apply to HSAs.
I'm saving with the cynical belief that Social Security won't exist at its current state by the time I retire. I don't plan on relying on it.Also remember it is worth delaying social security till you are 70 because of the annual 8% increase.![]()
What if you don't realize any gains until withdrawal period and you offset those gains with previous realized losses to reduce the long term gains taxes? Is that up to $3000 a year you can offset? Or is the offset limit higher such that a retiree can potentially pay zero income tax during the early taxable account withdrawal years?
If you expect the stock to recover, you don't want to sell it just to realize losses.
Thanks for the tip.Keep in mind that due to the time-value of money, you are generally better off using those capital losses sooner rather than later, so I would apply them as early as possible rather than saving them for retirement.
I started a small speculative investment fund in addition to my normal retirement account. Should TurboTax handle tax loss deductions for me or is this something I need to manually optimize for?
Is it normal though to not be able to choose what your 401k is invested in? My wife's vanguard account says managed and it won't let us change out of some of the higher expense ratio funds (.33%).
I wouldn't say that's normal at all. With 401ks, it's hit or miss whether you'll be stuck with bad options, but to be stuck with no options at all seems quite abnormal to me.
But then, what do I know, I haven't exactly worked for that many companies.
Just went over our budget and savings plan. We are attempting to contribute nearly half of our take-home to various retirement and investment accounts.
We are currently at 2.5x our gross take-home pay across various savings/retirement accounts. That feels good for being 33-34 years old.
Is it normal though to not be able to choose what your 401k is invested in? My wife's vanguard account says managed and it won't let us change out of some of the higher expense ratio funds (.33%).
Warren Buffett has made billions thanks to his ability to bet successfully on investments over the years. Now, it looks like he's about to win $2 million more.
In 2007, Buffett made a bet that the S&P 500 stock index would outperform hedge funds, which he describes in a 2016 letter to Berkshire-Hathaway shareholders. He argues that over a period of time, active investment management by professionals would underperform the returns by amateurs who were passively investing.
Further proving how passive investing is the way to go, Warren Buffet won his decade-long bet against active fund managers and will win about $2 million.
https://www.cnbc.com/2017/09/18/warren-buffett-won-2-million-from-a-bet-that-he-made-ten-years-ago.html
The money will be donated to Girls Inc. which is a nonprofit that advocates for girls and provides them with resources.
Ten years later, Seides' five funds have gained only 2.2 percent a year since 2008 compared with more than 7 percent a year for the S&P 500. That means Seides' $1 million hedge fund investments gained $220,000 in the same time period that Buffett's low-fee investment earned $854,000, according to AEI.
Buffett's index investment bet is so far ahead of Seides' that the hedge fund manager surrendered the wager, which technically doesn't end until Dec. 31.
Though, hedge funds are a nice scam if you can run one. 2% fees, 20% of any gains? Yeah, let me run some of that. Invest, not so much.
Are there taxes for investing in Vanguard?
I have $5,000 and I never invested before.
If you sell the shares you invested in for a profit you will be taxed on those profits.
Or if they pay a dividend.
I've been thinking to start investing (Canadian).
From the linked post in the OP, I'm supposed to start a TFSA and contribute the maximum each year?
Do I just go to my bank to start the TFSA? How do I contribute? Seems like I need to start a Questrade account and get Vanguard ETFs? How does that link to the TFSA account?
Is there a step-by-step guide anywhere I can just brainlessly follow?
need some advice and info. so I worked full time at my last place and contributed to a target retirement 401(k) with Vanguard. only worked there for a couple months so I have just under $5000 in it. now I'm on to a new job and have a new 401(k) set up with fidelity. i don't have any other saving funds outside of these two things.
so in a couple weeks my vanguard savings will automatically rollover to an Ascensus IRA if I don't do anything. otherwise I can move the money myself beforehand. the thing is, I'm not sure what/how I should do i.e. let it rollover or take all the money out and start a new IRA with vanguard or something...
I just opened up a roth IRA with Vanguard and put in $5500. I was planning on doing a blend of VTSMX, VGTSX and VBMFX but it looks like each account requires a $3000 minimum each. So for now I put it everything into a target 2040 fund since the allocation was closest to what I was planning. Is there any downside to keeping everything in the target fund forever since the expense ratios for all these funds are all about the same?
There is no real downside to choosing a target fund from a trusted company. If everyone just did Target Date funds (with reasonable costs, of course), the average retiree would be better off.I just opened up a roth IRA with Vanguard and put in $5500. I was planning on doing a blend of VTSMX, VGTSX and VBMFX but it looks like each account requires a $3000 minimum each. So for now I put it everything into a target 2040 fund since the allocation was closest to what I was planning. Is there any downside to keeping everything in the target fund forever since the expense ratios for these funds are all about the same?
It can handle filling in the deduction form on your return, which is the easy part of the process. The hard part is still manual: you are responsible for determining whether or not any of your transactions qualify as wash sales.
Your broker knows if it's a wash sale or not and should provide you with the correct data you need on your form whatevers. When I'm looking at my Schwab brokerage account, it clearly lists for me which of my transactions are wash sales.
I don't even know what the forms are because most brokers are now electronically connected with Turbotax, you just give your credentials to log into your broker to Turbotax, it logs in, downloads the information you need, and automatically populates your tax forms. It's hard to do your taxes wrong these days because of how automated this process is.
i'd like to bump this and add my own goals as that might influence an answer or two... essentially I'd like to continue bumping employer match with my current employer at Fidelity 401(k). in addition to this I'd like to open a roth IRA and contribute $5500 a year to it.
the leftover money at vanguard is being rolled over to an Ascensus IRA in 10 days. would it be smarter for me to roll that money over to the fidelity 401(k) I have now and open a separate Roth IRA on my own terms later on? Or will this Ascensus IRA be fine? It's not much money because I only worked there for a couple months, a little less than $5 grand. i can either withdraw it and take a huge tax hit on it, let it roll over automatically, or roll it over to the fidelity account.. any advice?
From a purely practical standpoint, I think a good general rule of thumb is to try to minimize the number of accounts and number of brokers you have to deal with. Currently all of my accounts are with Vanguard, and it means I only have to log in to one website to see all of my accounts, and it can sum my balances across them. It also makes it easier to keep track of my tax forms when I file each year. It's a small convenience, but the small conveniences add up if it is something you're going to be doing for most of the rest of your life.
So, since we're not talking about a huge sum of money here, I would suggest that you consolidate accounts by rolling the existing 401k into your current 401k.
Thanks so much. I will look into rolling the money from Vanguard into Fidelity tonight. Then I'm going to open a ROTH IRA with Fidelity and begin pumping $5500 into that every year