I've now chosen to split my investments. 75% in safety, 25% in funds with varied aggressiveness. Inflation is clearly outpacing my gains. Now with the current fluctuations, I'm even farther back. While the "index" is trending back up, my stocks are still heading the other way. In my life, it could not be any other way.
Despite an entire career of full payments into an IRA, I have something like $35K in my IRA. Every "correction" did a great job wiping me out. Every bull market left me flat. Disgusting and infuriating. I've tried 4 firms, all with instructions to choose wisely and diversify, all 4 provide the same results. Fast losses, slow gains. I recently became quite annoyed and visited my advisors at UBS in Jacksonville. Incredibly fancy office on a top floor, I also noticed the expensive clothes and a stunning number of expensive cars in the parking lot under the building. I know exactly who paid for all that.
I don't have any other way to say it, gambling carries risk.
I will also say this: Where did a Venezuelan invest to protect their assets and outpace inflation? Answer, nowhere in Venezuela.
Despite an entire career of full payments into an IRA, I have something like $35K in my IRA. Every "correction" did a great job wiping me out. Every bull market left me flat. Disgusting and infuriating. I've tried 4 firms, all with instructions to choose wisely and diversify, all 4 provide the same results. Fast losses, slow gains.
I heard the recommendations is to SPEND NOW to prevent inflation from munching up your portfolio.Since the original investor thread goted , let’s try the second edition.
2022. Inflation. Rising taxes. The shifting into a new economy. How are you adapting your investments and portfolios?
Sorry to say this, but you chose poorly. I did 2k into an IRA for 7 years which racked up gains where it was worth 45k. Then the dot com bubble wiped out a lot of it, but it was still worth over 20k. Bought shares in a mutual fund and never sold them. Dollar cost averaged to buy them. I avoid the firms now and just do buy and hold. I had Fidelity try and manage some of my funds as they talked about how they were the experts and I was just a guy who was holding onto various funds. So I let them do half, I had about the same amount in my Roth IRA as my IRA and after 2 years, they underperformed and the only thing the guy would say to me was that I didn't give them enough time. Mind you in that time period they had gone through some up times and down times and I noticed that I tended to outperform them when it was up and also when it was down. They claimed they'd do better in a down market and they actually did worse. I also noticed most of the funds they had me in didn't have long track records. That's also another clue, bad funds don't stick around long. I've since consolidated down to 3 core mutual funds. My method to outperform them was to hold the same funds throughout the entire time period they managed my funds where they were buying and selling various funds to adjust the allocation.Despite an entire career of full payments into an IRA, I have something like $35K in my IRA. Every "correction" did a great job wiping me out. Every bull market left me flat. Disgusting and infuriating. I've tried 4 firms, all with instructions to choose wisely and diversify, all 4 provide the same results. Fast losses, slow gains. I recently became quite annoyed and visited my advisors at UBS in Jacksonville. Incredibly fancy office on a top floor, I also noticed the expensive clothes and a stunning number of expensive cars in the parking lot under the building. I know exactly who paid for all that.
Oh yeah, there are also people like that out there that don't know how to invest. There was a secretary that was just putting her 401k money into a money market fund because she didn't know what other funds to pick. I told her to stick it in an S&P 500 index fund that was available and that I was also invested in. She went ahead and did that and I remember about a year later she was up several thousand dollars as I think it had a good year. She said thank you.Cujet's story is the perfect example for us laypeople with very limited financial knowledge to be extremely cautious about internet chatter. For all of the investment success stories, there are many Cujet experiences also. The success stories seem to show up more and have more weight vs. the calamities.
At my workplace, I bump into people that boast how much better their plan x choice performed vs. my plan y choice, causing me to second guess. Then, I hear the occasional Cujet story that brings me back to reality. For the past 40 years I followed the basic rules-of-thumb 403B/Roth principles that you guys have preached for years: invest for the long term, more risky while young/more conservative towards retirement, don't panic - ride the wave up/down, diversify, etc.. Be wary about what greed might cause.
I believe that I could be over 1/4 million $ richer had I more actively managed my funds. But then, you hear a Cujet story...........
Be careful people about following the opinions here. There's literally only about a dozen people participating here actively. Absolutely no offense to you guys. I learn a lot from you. But you are a minority that seem to understand what you are doing in a very complex matter.