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Thoughts on my retirement planning
#1

Thoughts on my retirement planning

I've been a state employee for for about two years now and what I hate is if I move elsewhere I can't hold my current retirement plan. I'd like to have something more flexible. So I've been thinking of terminating this 40whatever-it-is and invest in an indexed fund or something like that.

A whore ain't nothing but a trick to a pimp. (Iceberg Slim)
Beauty is in the erection of the beholder. (duedue)
Grab your life by the pussy.
A better question to ask is "What EXACTLY do I want out of life and what EXACTLY am I doing to get EXACTLY that? If you can answer that question truthfully you will be the most Alpha motherfucker you will ever need to be. (PapayaTapper)
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#2

Thoughts on my retirement planning

Many threads on the subject, Look here for example: thread-52801-page-15.html

TL;DR: Go buy SPY.
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#3

Thoughts on my retirement planning

I agree with Aaron Clarey and believe in the Smith & Wesson retirement plan. Screw being a vegetable hooked up to a bunch of machines.
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#4

Thoughts on my retirement planning

OK I should look Smith & Wesson up.

I have more questions: For long term investment in stocks (not necessarily for retirement) do you use an investment bank like Merryl-Lynch or do you do it yourself?

I have a little money in Denmark from the time I worked there and I'm thinking of investing it there, instead of transferring it here. Denmark has a pretty stable economy.

A whore ain't nothing but a trick to a pimp. (Iceberg Slim)
Beauty is in the erection of the beholder. (duedue)
Grab your life by the pussy.
A better question to ask is "What EXACTLY do I want out of life and what EXACTLY am I doing to get EXACTLY that? If you can answer that question truthfully you will be the most Alpha motherfucker you will ever need to be. (PapayaTapper)
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#5

Thoughts on my retirement planning

Quote: (02-03-2017 07:57 AM)duedue Wrote:  

I have more questions: For long term investment in stocks (not necessarily for retirement) do you use an investment bank like Merryl-Lynch or do you do it yourself?

Depends on how much work you are willing to put into picking stocks yourself.

You can do-it-yourself, but you will make a mistake somewhere, and you will lose money somewhere somehow. But by being conservative, carefully listening to your head and not your heart, you can build up your own stock portfolio. Just be prepared to learn a lesson or two the hard way, and keep your portfolio varied enough that if one sector of the economy goes down, it doesn't crash your entire portfolio. I was recently burned badly by the South Africa drought, and a company I had invested in basically went bust, so it was a hard lesson but it was only a small portion of my portfolio, so I shrugged off the loss and carried on with my life. Do-it-yourself investing is definitely not a good option if you get very emotional about money, though.

If you don't want to do it yourself, rather invest in an index fund. They are low cost portfolios generally managed by a computer or a formula, without deliberate attempts at stock picking. They tend to do as well as the bank managed portfolios for a fraction of the fees.

Banks like Merryl-Lynch will absolutely destroy you in management fees. You will lose out on a lot of potential profits because you have to pay your stock pickers and the bank first, then you get to take any profit home. It's almost never cost-effective to let a bank manage your money for you.

Bear in mind that investing in stocks does mean you have to think hard about risk and decide how much you are willing to tolerate, especially in our bubble-debt economy. All stock markets crash from time to time, and under certain conditions stock exchanges can also collapse permanently, wiping out all your investments. This is true of any investment, though, and it's the risk that brings reward.
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