Werewolfdad
Werewolfdad t1_j23skp2 wrote
Generally yes, the TSP is hard to beat and is generally only equaled by the very best plans at the very best employers.
And if she ever leaves federal service, she should keep the TSP since it accepts rollovers from everything, making consolidating very easy
Werewolfdad t1_j23sesq wrote
Reply to I failed to give 60 day notice to my current apartment and already have a lease somewhere else. Is there anything I can do to not throw away money on an empty space? by Wonderful_Advice_169
Subleasing is really your only option, if your lease allows it. You can't make assumptions about lease terms and 60 days notice is fairly common
Werewolfdad t1_j1zmp75 wrote
Reply to What kind of fund can someone set up for their parent? The only contributions would be from my earned income. by Fattywatah
For what purpose?
Werewolfdad t1_j1x8a0w wrote
Reply to comment by mbcook in I just got an AMEX card. Is this vastly different from Visa? Why is there a 4 and a 3 digit code on this? by BlueSky1877
I got my blue cash in like 2010 I think? And saw posts about it being amazing back to around the mid 2000s back when I was doing big manufactured spend
Werewolfdad t1_j1x5qg1 wrote
Reply to comment by mbcook in I just got an AMEX card. Is this vastly different from Visa? Why is there a 4 and a 3 digit code on this? by BlueSky1877
Oh sure, I had assumed by the questions he meant the charge cards. That’s good clarification though
Amex has had regular credit cards like the Blue cash since at least..2006? Maybe earlier.
Werewolfdad t1_j1x23t4 wrote
Reply to I just got an AMEX card. Is this vastly different from Visa? Why is there a 4 and a 3 digit code on this? by BlueSky1877
> What’s the purpose of having a 4 and a 3 digit code?
The four digit code on the front is the cvv
> Isn’t my spending limit simply the credit limit on the card?
Charge cards have no credit limit. They have a “floating spending limit”
> Curious question: When did AMEX change from everything being due at the end of 30 days to making payment like a regular card?
They didn’t. You have to use the pay over time feature
Werewolfdad t1_iyfee03 wrote
>What is the best way to get it into m current retirement account without getting taxed or penalized with fees
You roll it over.
Read the rollover entry in the wiki
Werewolfdad t1_iyfd4xp wrote
Reply to Is the cost of living everywhere in America pretty much the same (except housing)? by atoz88
Essentially things you can buy online are mostly the same everywhere. Everything else can be quite different.
Werewolfdad t1_iyf9gyn wrote
Reply to comment by harrison_wintergreen in Is adding dividends to your Roth a good idea to hedge against inflation? by Flameboy465
Oh hey buddy, where you been?
>As you can see in figure 1, the highest quintile outperformed the broad S&P 500 Index by over 1.3% per year, which turned into nearly 141% outperformance over time. And it did this with a lower beta. Even the second quintile outperformed the S&P 500 by over 1.5% per year, for a total of more than 159% outperformance over time, with less risk.
>but what does one of the top finance professors at one of the top business schools in the world know?
I mean his chart shows that three of the five quintiles underperform the sp500.
This begs the question then, if its so easy to beat the market by picking dividend paying companies, why doesn't every (or at least many) fund manager(s) beat the market?
I'm not saying eschew dividends, I'm saying that whatever most retail investors do is probably going to be wrong, so go with the least wrong option (buying the market)
Werewolfdad t1_iyf8vio wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Yes it’s the same thing for all intents and purposes
Werewolfdad t1_iyf76fo wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
I thought you were comparing it to a TDF?
Werewolfdad t1_iyf6cdl wrote
What’s wrong with the three fund portfolio? Dividends aren’t anything special
Werewolfdad t1_iyf69mp wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Then it doesn’t matter I guess. Didn’t realize they made it free
Werewolfdad t1_iyf5tew wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Fees
> For Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Premium, there is an initial planning fee of $300 upon enrollment and a $30 per month advisory fee charged on a quarterly basis as detailed in the Schwab Intelligent Portfolios Solutions™ disclosure brochures.
Werewolfdad t1_iyf395c wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Tdf rebalances automatically (that’s essentially the whole point of them)
Werewolfdad t1_iyf25tt wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Yeah I don’t think they provide any additional value
Werewolfdad t1_iyf1t3j wrote
Reply to comment by xxxITthrowaway in Weighing my options: maxing 401k via annual bonus vs spread out over the year? by xxxITthrowaway
And the later in life you are (and larger the balance is) the less it matters since you start with a larger and larger balance each Jan 1
Werewolfdad t1_iyf0m4m wrote
Americans pay taxes on their world wide income
Werewolfdad t1_iyf09p8 wrote
Reply to Need help cleaning up IRA/401k by Trytofindmenowbitch
Are you saying you made non deductible contributions to an ira? Or did you deduct them on your taxes?
Did you file your form 8606 each year?
Werewolfdad t1_iyerzga wrote
Reply to Only have 6k in my Schwab Roth IRA so far, planning to have a max ~38k. Should I invest with their Intelligent Portfolio or with the Schwab Target Index Fund? by [deleted]
Robo advisors are just gussied up, expensive target date funds
Werewolfdad t1_iyepbgm wrote
Reply to comment by scarletpetunia in Best way to retire by age 65 given these financials? by [deleted]
Big oof. Need to get that invested
Start here: https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/commontopics
Werewolfdad t1_iyeo1lq wrote
Reply to comment by scarletpetunia in Best way to retire by age 65 given these financials? by [deleted]
Is that $710k in cash?
You’d need about $1.65 million in todays dollars to generate $5500 in monthly income given a 4% safe withdrawal.
If what you have is all invested, you should have 2.2 million in 15 years assuming a 7% inflation adjusted return. If you earn only 5%, you’d end with about 1.68 million
Werewolfdad t1_iyemokf wrote
Reply to comment by scarletpetunia in Best way to retire by age 65 given these financials? by [deleted]
Well, you need to figure that out since that’s your target/goal you’re trying to solve for
What is your monthly spend now?
How much and when will you take social security?
Werewolfdad t1_j23t1n6 wrote
Reply to comment by buskingengineer in Girlfriend is changing jobs. Should she move her 401K into the TSP? by buskingengineer
Completely agree. Just wanted to offer an option should something arise, since many people tend to want to leave the TSP and its almost always a super bad idea.