kdailey4315
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Pacifica, CA
So... Anyone else getting hammered by the stock market lately?
Well...if you are smart enough to leave your money alone, it really won't matter. It will come back up.kdailey4315 said:So... Anyone else getting hammered by the stock market lately?
DrMoab said:Well...if you are smart enough to leave your money alone, it really won't matter. It will come back up.
Good time to buy though.
DrMoab said:My personal opinion and take it for what its worth... I think owning any kind of single stock is stupid.
I have all my money tied up with Mutual funds that have long term track records. I figure those guys are way better and this stuff then I could ever be.
beakie said:didn't mean to imply I had all my eggs in one basket, just one of many eggs being tested in a new basket.
I have my savings, funds, RRSP's and such. I just wanted to do some research/reading and see if I could have some fun on the stock market. so far I am ok, and if all pans out well (sounds silly I know) I would be happy just getting my money back in 2 months.
My buddy has made quite a bit of money in stocks (well for us quite a bit) he let me know the risks, this is just for fun I guess. Even if it is $1500, the house doesn't depend on it, but anything it makes will be added bonus (more it makes, more mods on the way)
What are you talking about? That statement can be true, if you fund it with the right amount in the right places, becoming a millionaire is mathmatically not that hard but it requires TRUE dedication and commitment...something that most people can't do. You can't fund it with $20 a month and expect to retire a millionaire.Stumpalump said:Back when 401k first came out they said if you fund it you will hjave over a million dollars when you retire. Great I'm going to be a millionaire! Do you really think our goverment is going to let a common working man retire a millionair? Somthing my almost retired uncle said at Christmas. Hmmm.
Maybe you get my uncles point about being a millionair. A million won't cut it. For years I put 16% into 401K plus I buy 10% company stock at a discount.I fully fund my Roth IRA. Now after years I get my statements and can see that on some months I gain more in intrest than I make on my job. It's a compounded thing. I'm still getting intrest on the intrest of the money I put back 20 years ago. It's starting to snowball. So if you start late you will miss out on the power of decades of growth. If you have 200k In an old 401k just think what it will be in 10 more years. Eventually you get to a million and if the market goes up 5% you just made 50000. Plus you get 1500 a month social security. Hopfully you fully funded your tax free Roth so you can pull out extra like when you want a Cady or vacation. Then as you get even older you start pulling 50k a year from the million and you reverse mortgage the house. Now you are and old fart that never made more than enough to make ends meet but you have a 175K retirment income and you live like a king. What if you only save 50K and a gun freak leaves his cannon in his jeep for the sterio crook to find and shoots you because he parked his junk next to you. He ruins your ability to work but at least with the 50K you can still get a used wheelchair van and a nice chair. In other words you will never regret edjucation or saving money.Slonopotam said:Can't really give any advice, but according to BW "CPI (not including energy and food) rose 2.5% the fourth quarter 2007". That is 10.3% inflation. Whatever you save today will have only 2% of todays buying power 40 years later. That is about saving in cash. Stocks, sure they rise with time, do they rise as fast as inflation ? Some do, but not always. Those retired in 2002 have a nice example to show. CDs, bonds - all insured stuff gives about 5% now, it sure helps a lot to fight inflation, it will leave about 14% of your first year of savings 40 years later.
Saving for retirement when you are 20-30, does it really make any sense ? Am I missing something ? Teach me, I am 32, I will need it soon.
Thank you,
Andrey
Stumpalump said:... you will never regret edjucation....
Boatwrench said:Classic...or was this meant tongue in cheek:shhh:
Stumpalump said:Maybe you get my uncles point about being a millionair. A million won't cut it. For years I put 16% into 401K plus I buy 10% company stock at a discount.I fully fund my Roth IRA. Now after years I get my statements and can see that on some months I gain more in intrest than I make on my job. It's a compounded thing. I'm still getting intrest on the intrest of the money I put back 20 years ago. It's starting to snowball. So if you start late you will miss out on the power of decades of growth. If you have 200k In an old 401k just think what it will be in 10 more years. Eventually you get to a million and if the market goes up 5% you just made 50000. Plus you get 1500 a month social security. Hopfully you fully funded your tax free Roth so you can pull out extra like when you want a Cady or vacation. Then as you get even older you start pulling 50k a year from the million and you reverse mortgage the house. Now you are and old fart that never made more than enough to make ends meet but you have a 175K retirment income and you live like a king. What if you only save 50K and a gun freak leaves his cannon in his jeep for the sterio crook to find and shoots you because he parked his junk next to you. He ruins your ability to work but at least with the 50K you can still get a used wheelchair van and a nice chair. In other words you will never regret edjucation or saving money.