The other day when I looked, the Dow Jones was still higher than the lowest during the "pandemic" which was just over 19K. Yes, the Dow is mostly lower, but not time to panic yet.
That buy and hold, paper money and other such scams do nothing but keep the investment company in a constant supply of income. Yes it is true, if your account shows a considerable loss this quarter you will have the same amount as the guy just getting in with that same amount proving that you did indeed lose that much. I was led around too many years with that BS only to watch the portfolio rise and fall way too much. I pulled the plug on the money grabbers and handle my own and make my own gains and mistakes, at least there isn't someone grabbing a percentage off the top. Had I just put everything from day one in an index fund, like a S & P 500, I would be way ahead of where I am now.
[Maybe that's true, but one learns by his mistakes. Take the knowledge and do something with it now. Everyone's tolerance for the market's volatility is different. I retired at 48 and have all the retirement in the market.... my average return in the last 10 years is 10% and the previous 10 years was 7%......I own zero index funds.....buy and hold works in my eyes.
Putler has very few fans here.Just a word of advice from someone who just got got out of "time out." Be careful making any disparaging remarks about certain individuals who may or may not be allegedly responsible for your current situation.
True. A good investment advisor should put this in the plan.It isn't the number of dollars you have, but what that dollar will buy. The buying power of the US dollar keeps going down, and you will need more dollars to buy the same item next year than you needed this year. It is called inflation, and we are all affected by it. No getting around those numbers. If you have 100 in investments today, what will that investment buy you tomorrow? Someone on this thread commented that the value of his far has doubled. If no one has enough money to eat, then the value of the land is irrelevant. Some invest in gold, but you can't eat gold, so even if the value of gold goes up, it is only what that gold will purchase that is important.
My plan is for both of us to be dead 2 days before the fund goes dry.
I could not agree more people do not realize there is always a delay in the economy at least a couple of years sometimes even more. It would be like blaming Bush 2 for the 2000 crash or Obama for 2008 (he was not even in office yet)Like Skeets, and maybe more so, I decided to be very conservative in investing for our retirement.
Twenty years ago I put our then savings into inflation protected I Bonds. Over that time the principal tripled, and there was as close to zero risk as possible. When I retired I put my 401K into a Vanguard inflation protected securities fund. This is where the majority of our retirement money resides.
Certainly lost opportunities for more growth, but in the I bonds, the accrued value never goes down. Either grows or holds steady, even if there would be deflation. AND at the time the fixed rate was very good (Average is 3.5 percent plus inflation). The Vanguard TIPS fund can vary, but has always grown over time.
I always believed, and still do, that the stock market value only holds true when one cashes out. In the interim, ups and downs feel good or bad, but really make no difference until you take your money out. Take it out on a high, great. Have to take it out on a low...not great.
My feeling is the new guy always rides on the performance of the previous guy(s), especially in the first year or two...BUT if anyone could control a complex economy to always provide the best performance consistently that would be a miracle. Just never seems to happen...the previous guy, and the guy previous to him, either got lucky or didn't. Mostly beyond their control...
Granted they can try...and I suppose they do.
Edit: For those that do not know, I Bonds and Inflation Protected Securities are instruments of the US Government. Fully backed by the US Government.
Our plan is to use about 75% of our investments to pay off the mortgage and all debts upon retirement. Between the wife and I we each have a pension and social security. The 4 incomes add up to one decent full time salary, even better with no debt.True. A good investment advisor should put this in the plan.
My wife and I agreed to a 5 % raise in our 401K monthly payout this January. Less than what we earned so fund will still grow just a little slower.
If costs go down we will adjust back.
My plan is for both of us to be dead 2 days before the fund goes dry.
Sorry, but that doesn't make any sense to me. Of course, Presidents aren't responsible for when they aren't President.I could not agree more people do not realize there is always a delay in the economy at least a couple of years sometimes even more. It would be like blaming Bush 2 for the 2000 crash or Obama for 2008 (he was not even in office yet)
My point was you still buy the house, but don't pay off the mortgage early. Put what you would have used to pay off the mortgage early in the stock market. The house will go up in value no matter if it is paid off or not. The investments (assuming average returns) will also go up. Of course, it matters what your loan rate is on the mortgage to determine what the value increase will be compared to stock market or vice versa.hmm..
re: Of course, not only would you gain the value of what you invested, you'd also gain the value of the house
No, as you couldn't have bought the house back then.....the 50K went into the market ? Or am I missing 'something' ?
I ran the numbers for my house and came up about even, except I've owned my house and lived in it rent free for 35 years.
I never had a mortgage so I guess I am in the pay off early camp.Obviously, people should do what they want regarding buying houses, and what level of risk you want to take.
For grins and giggles, compare what your house is worth now to compared to what the same amount of money would have made in the Dow. The average rate of return is actually 8.4 percent since 1989. https://financial-calculators.com/historical-investment-calculator.
A $50,000 investment would yield a profit of over $600,000 from the investment based on the Dow Jones average. Of course, not only would you gain the value of what you invested, you'd also gain the value of the house which allows you to leverage the money in two different ways. YMMV.