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Too Hot Investment Thread

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by channingcrowderhungry, Feb 11, 2021.

  1. jeffbrig

    jeffbrig GC Hall of Fame

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    Crystal ball is hazy. Ask again later. :D

    I am extremely confident that the general trend is upward. There is a reason why the market is regularly setting new highs. However, you can't predict when the next dip/recession/depression will happen with any certainty. Sure, there may be signs, but remember even the 'experts' predicted 63 of the last 3 recessions.

    I am almost 100% equities at this point in my life (I'm 43), but there's a strong argument for keeping a percentage in less volatile investments if you're near or at retirement, to lessen sequence of return risks.
     
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  2. gotime51

    gotime51 GC Hall of Fame

    I have been in my 401k for about 16 years now. Unfortunately I don't max it out currently as I have 4 kids that suck up alot of money but I do pretty good. Just recently got into personal investing in the last two years. My wife and I had a rule that we wouldn't invest personal money until we had 1 year of savings stored up first. Been the best decision we have made
     
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  3. ursidman

    ursidman VIP Member

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    Me too. I learned a lot from Motley Fool and on 2 occasions when I had some money to invest, I paid a subscription for a year.
     
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  4. RIP

    RIP I like touchdowns Premium Member

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    I currently subscribe but don't have the funds to invest in individual stocks at the moment. If anyone is curious as to what their 10 picks for 2021 are then send me a PM.
     
  5. demosthenes

    demosthenes Premium Member

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    Well, thank you. That made me feel better (and sad for others at the same time).

    Last year I saved more than double the entire amount of median retirement account for someone my age. Hell, I made more dabbling on the side in crypto in the last two weeks than the median person my age has saved their entire lives. And here I thought I was WAY behind the curve.
     
  6. demosthenes

    demosthenes Premium Member

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    I’m in the same boat didn’t start saving till my 30s. I’m hitting it pretty hard now so that I only take home about 56% of my gross pay. I figure it has the two fold benefit of playing catch-up to the extent I can but also makes me not as far behind because I won’t need 80% of my inflation adjusted income to live on in retirement. If I hit that I’ll feel like a king coming from 56% while paying student loans and daycare for two kids...
     
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  7. jeffbrig

    jeffbrig GC Hall of Fame

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    On the 401k, I'll share what was really helpful for me. The day I was eligible I started contributing 6%, because that was the smallest % that received the maximum company match (3 or 4% in free money). Then, for the next few years, every time I got a raise, I increased my contribution, keeping my paycheck about the same. That was a fantastic way to increase savings without feeling a big pinch.

    I hear you on the kids thing. I joke with my siblings (who have kids) that since my wife and I are DINKs, we decided to have Porsches instead.
     
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  8. RIP

    RIP I like touchdowns Premium Member

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    For those that are contributing more than 15% I'm curious if you have paid off your mortgages already (Ramsey school of thought).
     
  9. vaxcardinal

    vaxcardinal GC Hall of Fame

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    your wife has effectively saved for retirement since woman usually outlive men ;)
     
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  10. vaxcardinal

    vaxcardinal GC Hall of Fame

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    yes...one way I did that was that whenever I refinanced at a lower rate I kept my payments the same. That enabled me to pay off my mortgage much faster.
     
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  11. RIP

    RIP I like touchdowns Premium Member

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    At least I have to contribute very minimally to house work!
     
  12. docspor

    docspor GC Hall of Fame

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    While I think for the financially savvy, paying off mortgages is probably not that important, we paid off our house & vaca condo years ago. My logic was simply that paying off the mortgages was the bond portion of my portfolio.

    I think Ramsey gives good advice. I also recall liking Suze Ormond b/c she focuses on what people can control as opposed to the things that they cannot a la Cramer.
     
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  13. jeffbrig

    jeffbrig GC Hall of Fame

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    So here's where I get really philosophical, and I'm hoping I don't come off as super-elitist. I'm not a Dave Ramsey fan. His advice works for the complete noob, financially ignorant, unsophisticated investor. To be fair, there are A LOT of people that fall into that category. And his advice probably helps people get out of the paycheck-to-paycheck rut. But where Dave loses me is this irrational aversion to debt. Debt is a tool - think of it as a sharp knife. Yeah, you can do dumb things with debt, just like you can cut yourself with a sharp knife. But it's damn useful when used correctly.

    Yes, I have a big, fat mortgage. Ballpark of $350k last I checked, on a house that's worth twice that - at the insanely low interest rate of 2.5%! We're also still paying off my wife's student loans from law school - 3% fixed. Meanwhile, our investments have returned nearly 14% on average over the last decade plus. I could write a check tomorrow and pay off the student loans, and even the mortgage is just a fraction of our net worth. It's just not the best use of cash.
     
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  14. RIP

    RIP I like touchdowns Premium Member

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    I didn't take your comment as elitist at all. I fall into the category of the typical Ramsey follower. I'm a bit further ahead than most as I don't have a huge student loan or credit card hole to climb out of. I buy pre-owned cars and drive them until the wheels fall off. We refinanced our mortgage recently for 15 years @ 2.5%. In your opinion rather than focusing on paying mine off earlier what would you advise doing with this extra money? I have an emergency fund of $15k that will never be touched outside of its purpose. I contribute 10% to 401k and 5% to Roth IRA in the funds he recommends. My 401k is 33% Growth, 33% Growth and Income, and 33% Aggressive growth (my 401k doesn't have a very good performing International option) and returns around 13% annually on average. I also own 0.48632 bitcoin.
     
  15. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

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    My retirement fund is a tad different than those that have mentioned their's here. The garbage business that I started in 2006 is almost guaranteed to eventually be bought out by one of the large garbage haulers. Its just how the industry works. So rather than put much towards a retirement fund or 401k I have dumped most of my money back into the company for better equipment or upgrades. Hopefully in 5 years or so I'll be given a nice check with 2 commas in it and I won't have to worry about my lack of retirement funding so far.
     
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  16. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

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    I agree with you on Ramsey. I think he's great for most people but it's all super basic stuff. When I got married my wife's uncle got us a copy of one of his books and made us promise to read it. I did. All 200+ pages can be summed up by "live within your means." Which is great advice. But basic.
     
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  17. docspor

    docspor GC Hall of Fame

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    The garbage company that we use just got bought by Republic Services after being a family biz for 61 years.
     
  18. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

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    Yep. Once you get to a certain size they just buy your contracts (and equipment if it's worth a damn). At that point you can sell or hang on for as long as you feel like doing it and keep trying to pump up the numbers for a bigger acquisition amount. My partner and I have our floor amount and we're hoping to hit it within 3 more years. Then we'll decide what we do.
     
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  19. jeffbrig

    jeffbrig GC Hall of Fame

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    Get the prospectuses for your 401k funds and see what indexes they're really benchmarking/tracking and what the expense ratios are. If they're actively managed funds, they probably have high fees. My general advice would be to consolidate on one index fund with a low expense ratio. My plan calls it the 'large company equity fund' and it tracks the S&P 500 - expense ratio is .03% annually, which is $30 per $100k - peanuts.

    I would consider either the 401k or Roth IRA before paying off the mortgage. If those are maxed, then consider a taxable account. The Roth may be more attractive (more flexible) if the funds in your 401k are expensive. But really, the question comes down to making a tax deductible (technically tax-deferred) contribution to the 401k vs putting after-tax money in the Roth. Which is really a decision based on your marginal tax rate. A tax deduction at 10% wouldn't be high value, so the Roth makes far more sense to someone in that bucket. At 32% or higher, you'd take every tax deduction you can today.

    I do fund a Roth, but only after I've filled every tax deferred bucket. There are a lot of one-size-fits-all financial blogs that suggest everyone should prioritize the Roth IRA, Roth 401k, etc. It's good general advice, but not for high tax brackets - you trade marginal tax today against what your effective tax rate will be in the future. I know what my marginal rate is today. I expect to have less taxable income in retirement, and I expect my effective tax rate will be less than my current marginal rate. So I use a Roth, but I don't think it's necessarily better than the tax-deferred 401k.
     
    Last edited: Feb 12, 2021
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  20. channingcrowderhungry

    channingcrowderhungry Premium Member

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    I've seen a few people mention that if/when crypto becomes widespread and common that bitcoin will be more like gold. A place where people will store as a safe investment, but it won't be the widespread currency. Something has to be there with low value and a higher supply (ability to constantly mine more, which bitcoin essentially doesn't). So something like doge, as silly as it is, actually makes sense in that spot.

    I don't know if that would ever actually transpire, but I'll take the shot that it can hit $1.
     
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