Originally Posted By: The Critic
So, I just started a Roth IRA account with Vanguard at the suggestion of my dad.
He told me to invest 5k into the "Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund Investor Shares" (VTSMX). Not sure what they are, exactly. Dad told me to use Vanguard since he could "link" me to his Vanguard Flagship account.
Any advice from the BITOG experts on Roth IRAs? Or what to invest in? Or any thoughts on the "VTSMX" that I just invested in?
Thanks!
Regarding the fund itself. It's an index fund. There is not much for the fund manager to manage or to mess up.
http://www.google.com/finance?q=VTSMX
It invests in a very large basket of stocks, so any one industry will not destroy the portfolio like more specialized mutual funds.
It will track some index. I buy S&P 500 index funds, what your dad suggested is just a different index.
The key is not just dumping $5K in there and forgetting it, but keep dumping money in there now. So while it's good to get started, make dollar cost averaging work for you by periodically adding to your investment.
Don't get scared if the market goes down. Think of it as the fund going on sale. Like sales of motor oil, it's often wise to stock up when the price is down.
Now the entire market can go to zero. So an index fund is not without risk. However, if the whole market goes to zero, we have problems than can't be fixed by you having made a different investment choice.
I think your dad gave you some decent advice.
You might look at other index funds, or put some of that $5K into other things in the fund family, if you want to have a little more upside(and downside) potential.
I have about 1/3rd of my funds in international mutual funds, 40% or so in S&P 500, and the rest in value funds, precious metals, etc. So I'm not in just one thing.
And I kept buying when everyone was panicing 18-24 months ago.
I'm WAY up over where I was 2-3 years ago. Way up!
Now it can still go down, so I don't get too excited. But I didn't finalize any losses by selling in the fall of 2008. I bought more shares and watched the market come back.