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Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns
#1

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Any suggestions? Stocks are too volatile for me to put large sums of money into, so I've been looking at high return mutual fund accounts to act as sort of a checking account, perhaps spreading my money across 4 of them to reduce the risk. I realize at first I won't be getting any kind of returns I can live off of, but I figure after pumping $4,000 a month into them I should be able to see something happening in a year or two. Hard to tell what the next year will bring, but a couple funds I've been looking at have returned >20% this year, have a high P/E ratio, have low risk (according to Morning Star) and low overhead fees for taking out your money. Hell some of them have returned >10% in just one month. I don't mind jumping out of a fund early, and in fact I don't imagine I'll be in each fund more than a year.

So while mutual funds seem to be the best bet for me, my knowledge is limited. Is there anything else out there that's just as safe as mutual funds but return more? Something that is beneficial for someone with a stable high income job?

Thanks
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#2

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

more return = more risk

period, end of story, anyone telling you otherwise is straight up lying or ignorant. Example: Madoff, Stanford, etc.

thank the central banks of the world for distorting interest rates and screwing people over so the banks can stay afloat. Meaning you can't get a decent ROI in bonds therfore everyone is chasing stocks and high yields to get returns. This always ends badly, always...when is the hard part.

if you spread it across 4 different funds but they are all similar in style, then it won't matter, they will rise and fall together.

saving money is the most important part. You're doing that. The investing part is the second part. Save money and don't lose it. Play it conservative.

The best way to get rich fast...is to get rich slow. Boring and effective.

Greed and fear separate people from their money . You're being greedy.

My .02
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#3

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Like learning how to communicate with women, it is very rare that you will just wake up and be rich. Wealth is generally a slow burn, that grows exponentially on itself.

I save 25% of my check into a fund that pays a guaranteed 8% annually. It doesn't sound like much, but in 30 years it will leave me a millionaire. With that, I have a savings account that I contribute $400/month to in order to remain liquid.

Have enough to have fun now, but always save.
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#4

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 02:02 PM)MaleDefined Wrote:  

Like learning how to communicate with women, it is very rare that you will just wake up and be rich. Wealth is generally a slow burn, that grows exponentially on itself.

I save 25% of my check into a fund that pays a guaranteed 8% annually. It doesn't sound like much, but in 30 years it will leave me a millionaire. With that, I have a savings account that I contribute $400/month to in order to remain liquid.

Have enough to have fun now, but always save.

In 30 years a million dollars wont be shit. Go back 30 years and take a look at what value the dollar had then compare it to today... just a heads up. Also I wouldn't bank on any "guaranteed" return over the course of 3 decades.
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#5

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 02:35 PM)Jaydublin Wrote:  

Quote: (12-09-2012 02:02 PM)MaleDefined Wrote:  

Like learning how to communicate with women, it is very rare that you will just wake up and be rich. Wealth is generally a slow burn, that grows exponentially on itself.

I save 25% of my check into a fund that pays a guaranteed 8% annually. It doesn't sound like much, but in 30 years it will leave me a millionaire. With that, I have a savings account that I contribute $400/month to in order to remain liquid.

Have enough to have fun now, but always save.

In 30 years a million dollars wont be shit. Go back 30 years and take a look at what value the dollar had then compare it to today... just a heads up. Also I wouldn't bank on any "guaranteed" return over the course of 3 decades.

We've got bigger problems if the rate of inflation exceeds 8% annually.
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#6

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

guaranteed 8% fund is a scam/ponzi scheme or a lie in my opinion.

There are no guarantees

10 yr us treasuries yield 1.6%
US Junk bonds yield about 6.5% -below investment grade aka might default
10 yr Greece 15% they will default

which means 8% is VERY risky, it is below investment grade. (7.4% spread from US treasury rate).

can't guarantee a return with stocks...Madoff did. It was a ponzi scheme.

Stanford guaranteed around 10% with bonds when US rates were around 2%. It was a scam. (8+% spread from 08 or 09 T rate)

Can you get an 8% return...yes.

Is there risk in it...absolutely, bc the only way you get it is taking on higher risk to get higher return or using tons of leverage.

Example of the leverage would be a some type of a structured investment vehicle based on LIBOR rates with 3x leverage would yield you around 8% I think, it did a few years ago.

The same LIBOR rate that Barclays is being sued over for manipulation by the US and UK government.

No thanks.
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#7

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 03:16 PM)MaleDefined Wrote:  

We've got bigger problems if the rate of inflation exceeds 8% annually.


I wasn't exactly saying there will be 8% inflation. I do believe it but I try to leave my personal beliefs out of it. I think even the fed assumes an average of 3% inflation a year over the long term. Could be wrong though. Anyway, that cuts your "guarantee" nearly in half.

If you want to believe a million $ will be in impressive in 30 years then go for it. But if we follow the same trend of the last 30 years it wont be anything close to what it is today.
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#8

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 10:45 AM)americanInEurope Wrote:  

Any suggestions? Stocks are too volatile for me to put large sums of money into, so I've been looking at high return mutual fund accounts to act as sort of a checking account, perhaps spreading my money across 4 of them to reduce the risk. I realize at first I won't be getting any kind of returns I can live off of, but I figure after pumping $4,000 a month into them I should be able to see something happening in a year or two. Hard to tell what the next year will bring, but a couple funds I've been looking at have returned >20% this year, have a high P/E ratio, have low risk (according to Morning Star) and low overhead fees for taking out your money. Hell some of them have returned >10% in just one month. I don't mind jumping out of a fund early, and in fact I don't imagine I'll be in each fund more than a year.

So while mutual funds seem to be the best bet for me, my knowledge is limited. Is there anything else out there that's just as safe as mutual funds but return more? Something that is beneficial for someone with a stable high income job?

Thanks

"Past performance is not indicative of future results."

Without being active with your investments, the best thing do is to build a portfolio of different funds according to your risk tolerance
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#9

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

from 73 to 82 inflation probably averaged very close to 8% a year

CPI based on the way it was calculated in 1990 is about 6% for 2012

CPI based on 1980 methodology is around 10% for 2012

since politicians manipulate it to pay less for social security etc. the official rate is 2% or around there.

wouldn't matter if interests rates weren't manipulated too, but they are. I think I'm off my soap box.

My opinion for OP find a pro to manage it who believes in capital preservation and when the market has a PE of around 10 (trailing earnings not future earnings) and dividends in the S&P 500 are 6% or so, then take on more risk.

Until then defense is the way to go, 3-5% returns w/o losing 40% like in 08 (to get back to even you would need a 60+% return, that takes years). Heavy losses destroy your ability to get a compound rate of return.
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#10

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 04:06 PM)redneckpunk Wrote:  

guaranteed 8% fund is a scam/ponzi scheme or a lie in my opinion

It's through a fixed government fund. It's contractually bound based off of my employment start date as a public employee.

Now we could go on about the structure of these funds, as to whether they are inherently ponzi schemes and how they're bankrupting cities and states, but that's an argument for a different day.
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#11

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

I hear this a lot from people, that I'll lose everything if I risk. I'm not a pro, but if I'm checking my fund performance everyday, ready to pull out if I'm losing too much, is it really possible to "lose everything" in one day? I mean I know it has happened in the past, but I think at that point no stock/fund is safe so there's nothing you could have really done about it. Everybody was affected when '08 hit. Also, MF's are already by nature diversified, so you guys are telling me even with a diversified portfolio of funds (in different sectors) I'm still going to lose it all? Sorry but I don't buy that. For example, 4 different funds, each in different sectors, each with $50,000, will not go down in flames at the same time all in one day. I may lose some of my money, but certainly not all. What you guys seem to be describing is a scenario where, no matter how much research you do, you'll pretty much lose all your money because the funds are doing jack shit. But what I'm seeing is not so bleak. Forget a savings account. I like the idea of my money in the bank earning some serious interest based on my decisions, and not some asinine .03% per year.

Plus the main ingredient of my plan is that I can keep putting $4000 into my investments every month. At the very least it'll be a checking account where the money I waste will be on something meaningful and not a hoe, and at best my money can actually start making me some money. Again I'm no expert, but I have done research. And the funds that I've been watching have returned pretty good numbers since I first starting watching the beginning of last month. If I had put money into them I'd have made some nice returns. From what I've seen from the last few years, mutual funds usually have a 6 month to 1 year maturity period. If you get in, and it hasn't improved significantly in 6 months, then you need to move out.
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#12

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 06:49 PM)americanInEurope Wrote:  

Forget a savings account. I like the idea of my money in the bank earning some serious interest based on my decisions, and not some asinine .03% per year.

I don't know your financial situation, but IMO the usefulness of a savings account is that it is easily liquid in case of emergency anywhere in the world. I don't want to have all of my assets tied into a fund I can't withdraw from, or even an investment that will take a few days to hit my account.
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#13

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

I'm not saying you will lose everything.

check to see how your funds did in 08. Is the guy managing that fund in 08 still managing it today? Did the funds behave similarly that year?

If you want 8% returns per year when the market goes down and it always does can you handle losing 20-40% of your money. Everyone says yes, I'm in it for the long run. Reality is they panic and sell (fear). Something like 75% of retail investors waaaay underperform the market bc they don't know what they are doing, they buy at the top and sell at the bottom. These are not dumb people either, doctors, lawyers included, they underperfom by alot bc they don't really know about the investment game.

Fear and greed ruin them or moving around from what is the hottest trend ruins them bc fees eat them alive or they always are late to the party.

You settle for 3% returns maybe when the market goes down you lose 10%. You can recover that in a few years. Losing 40% takes many years to recover from. Wasted time.

Investing using the rear view mirror (what did well last month/last year) is a long term losing strategy.

Those are the theories, but newbies never listen.

Everybody didn't lose big in 08, most did, the guys who knew what they were doing didn't. Politicians and crooked Wall Street analyst claimed "nobody saw it coming"...horseshit it was telegraphed and not hard to see that it was coming. I pray the next downturn will be as obvious.

Best of luck, and I loved your Japan posts
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#14

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 06:49 PM)americanInEurope Wrote:  

I hear this a lot from people, that I'll lose everything if I risk. I'm not a pro, but if I'm checking my fund performance everyday, ready to pull out if I'm losing too much, is it really possible to "lose everything" in one day? I mean I know it has happened in the past, but I think at that point no stock/fund is safe so there's nothing you could have really done about it. Everybody was affected when '08 hit. Also, MF's are already by nature diversified, so you guys are telling me even with a diversified portfolio of funds (in different sectors) I'm still going to lose it all? Sorry but I don't buy that. For example, 4 different funds, each in different sectors, each with $50,000, will not go down in flames at the same time all in one day. I may lose some of my money, but certainly not all. What you guys seem to be describing is a scenario where, no matter how much research you do, you'll pretty much lose all your money because the funds are doing jack shit. But what I'm seeing is not so bleak. Forget a savings account. I like the idea of my money in the bank earning some serious interest based on my decisions, and not some asinine .03% per year.


Nobody claimed this......Anyway, just be careful. Some of the returns you mentioned in the OP are not realistic long term, and they certainly aren't as low risk as they claim.

Trust me we all like the idea of our money making money. That is why we have been investing for years. My bank account is usually as close to zero as possible. I have a few very liquid investments if case I ever need cash.
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#15

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

The market returns 4% on average when factoring in the bad times too my understanding which could be wrong. If OP can save 4k a month even if he gets hammered its not the end of the world. Hes saving / investing more per year than the average person is grossing.
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#16

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (12-09-2012 08:10 PM)redneckpunk Wrote:  

I'm not saying you will lose everything.

check to see how your funds did in 08. Is the guy managing that fund in 08 still managing it today? Did the funds behave similarly that year?

If you want 8% returns per year when the market goes down and it always does can you handle losing 20-40% of your money. Everyone says yes, I'm in it for the long run. Reality is they panic and sell (fear). Something like 75% of retail investors waaaay underperform the market bc they don't know what they are doing, they buy at the top and sell at the bottom. These are not dumb people either, doctors, lawyers included, they underperfom by alot bc they don't really know about the investment game.

Fear and greed ruin them or moving around from what is the hottest trend ruins them bc fees eat them alive or they always are late to the party.

You settle for 3% returns maybe when the market goes down you lose 10%. You can recover that in a few years. Losing 40% takes many years to recover from. Wasted time.

Investing using the rear view mirror (what did well last month/last year) is a long term losing strategy.

Those are the theories, but newbies never listen.

Everybody didn't lose big in 08, most did, the guys who knew what they were doing didn't. Politicians and crooked Wall Street analyst claimed "nobody saw it coming"...horseshit it was telegraphed and not hard to see that it was coming. I pray the next downturn will be as obvious.

Best of luck, and I loved your Japan posts

I hear you bro, and I hope there's not another recession like in '08. Since $4000 is not even half of what I get a month in income, I'll still have some liquid for playtime, car payments, rent, bills, wine/dine, etc. I just want to get to a point where I'm sitting on six-figures in my account so I can take advantage of "January Fever" coming up, which will no doubt send most funds up >10%. Part of my problem is the inability to save. It's just too much fun here in Europe. Had the same problem in Tokyo. But if I send the money straight to my investment account and not even see it that's better for me cause I won't spend it.

In all honesty, I'm seriously contemplating Afghanistan for a year or two. Come back with $500,000 cash in the bank. With that amount tied up in various investment streams, it's hypothetical that I'll never have to work again, at least not unless I want to, and doing something I want with people I actually like.
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#17

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Start with reading The Intelligent Investor and go from there.

You're an example of the problems of today's generation. "I want a huge return, guaranteed, in an incredibly short time frame, and without having to learn anything about investing'. I want a job where I work 1 morning a month testing condoms on super models getting paid 250k. Simply not in the cards.

Unfortunately a lot of people who lose money and are scammed didn't do their due diligence, and got greedy. That's why it's imperative to know about this stuff before you go in.

Stay away from mutual funds. The management fees will kill you, and over the long term (20 years+) something like 90% of funds under perform the market. If you want stability and don't know much about the markets, your best bet is index funds. Boring, but the work:reward ratio is about the best you will find given that you said yourself you don't know much about this stuff.

Bank preferred can yield 5-6%, REITs 10-16%, neither a scam per se, simply examples of returns commensurate with risk, but generally long run (decade +) the risky stuff will outperform.

FYI you want low P/E, and historically ignoring all else "chasing the losers" has been a far more profitable strategy than "chasing the winners" If in '08 you did the exact opposite of what what everyone who panicked did, you would have made a killing. I bought a little, sold nothing, it didn't sit well with me at the time but in my head I knew it was right. 4 years later wish I had of bought a ton more.

What is January Fever, and why will it cause your funds to go up 10%? And why will it do this with "no doubt"? What can you do in Afghanistan where you will clear 500k in a year or two? This sounds like the beginning of a story of someone who's in jail. "It was a sure thing, I was going to make 300k, if only......."
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#18

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

..

"Me llaman el desaparecido
Que cuando llega ya se ha ido
Volando vengo, volando voy
Deprisa deprisa a rumbo perdido"
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#19

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Real estate.

"Money over bitches, nigga stick to the script." - Jay-Z
They gonna love me for my ambition.
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#20

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

You saw what happened in 08, right?
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#21

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Maledefined sounds like you are a NYS teacher. They use to get 8.25% now it is 7%.

As for beating inflation. Actually until the low interest rates,CD's were the way to go. Evn now my pops has like 1 million in 10 yr 6% cds. What ones does is but into long term when rates are high and most likely you will come out ahead.

Example..in 1981 there was 13% inflation but you could get a 5 yr cd at 21%. Anyone who did that came out ahead.

As for the sp500....they historically beat inflation by 5% so index mutual funds is a great long term.
Quote:Quote:

guaranteed 8% fund is a scam/ponzi scheme or a lie in my opinion.

Not true there are gov't jobs(nyc teachers for example) where they get quaranteed %..tax payers pick up the lost.

My extra money in the pension system earned 8%..so when i retired i left it in.
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#22

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (11-30-2014 10:58 PM)Peregrine Wrote:  

You saw what happened in 08, right?

We all did. If you buy on the basis of appreciation, you're doing it wrong.

You make money in real estate when you BUY, not when you sell. Thats what so many people do not realize.

"Money over bitches, nigga stick to the script." - Jay-Z
They gonna love me for my ambition.
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#23

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (11-30-2014 11:33 PM)jimukr104 Wrote:  

Maledefined sounds like you are a NYS teacher. They use to get 8.25% now it is 7%.

As for beating inflation. Actually until the low interest rates,CD's were the way to go. Evn now my pops has like 1 million in 10 yr 6% cds. What ones does is but into long term when rates are high and most likely you will come out ahead.

Example..in 1981 there was 13% inflation but you could get a 5 yr cd at 21%. Anyone who did that came out ahead.

As for the sp500....they historically beat inflation by 5% so index mutual funds is a great long term.
Quote:Quote:

guaranteed 8% fund is a scam/ponzi scheme or a lie in my opinion.

Not true there are gov't jobs(nyc teachers for example) where they get quaranteed %..tax payers pick up the lost.

My extra money in the pension system earned 8%..so when i retired i left it in.

This is as crucial as getting out before the 20-40% corrections when they are as evident as 2008.

If a CD rate gets above 6% and especially 10% locking in a ton of money for a long period is a great bet. Something that is not mentioned often enough.

When things swing too far one way or the other is when big money is made by people that don't panic to all cash then sit and do nothing. There are big opportunities when things aren't going well.

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#24

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

You make money in real estate when you buy? I'm not sure I follow.

Quote:Quote:

This is as crucial as getting out before the 20-40% corrections when they are as evident as 2008.

In that case, I'd get out now.
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#25

Suggestions for someone getting high income, wanting high returns

Quote: (11-30-2014 11:59 PM)Peregrine Wrote:  

You make money in real estate when you buy? I'm not sure I follow.

Quote:Quote:

This is as crucial as getting out before the 20-40% corrections when they are as evident as 2008.

In that case, I'd get out now.

You need to buy below market value, in order to get instant equity in a property. But essentially, the money is in the good few deals, and you should never bank on a property appreciating.

Corrections are cyclical, even if you don't get out, the market rallies; it just takes time. Just don't sell when a stock starts falling. You have to treat all of these investments with cold calculation, not with emotions of happiness when you make a dollar, and depression when you lose.

"Money over bitches, nigga stick to the script." - Jay-Z
They gonna love me for my ambition.
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