2026 investments

I'm about 2.5% money market

Retirement counselor guy was shocked at my equity position

No guts, no glory

Then he showed some stuff that twists facts and we ended the conversation. Don't think he's been challenged before. It was fun.
If you have time, no reason to get soft, IMO. My thoughts are i am going to retire at 60, then I’m probably going to 61 and stock piling a year so if the market has a down year I just burn into the reserves.

Then again, I can’t see myself fully retiring either.
 
If you have time, no reason to get soft, IMO. My thoughts are i am going to retire at 60, then I’m probably going to 61 and stock piling a year so if the market has a down year I just burn into the reserves.

Then again, I can’t see myself fully retiring either.

I've been running numbers.

I could retire now. The numbers actually work.

The money market funds are ohhhh kaayyyy, but I could pay down debt that has a higher rate than I'm getting.

Even in a completely awful market for 40 years the portfolio passed his tool.

So I'm not sure why I would ever be happy with a 40% bond allocation like his weak ass target date fund wants
 
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I've been running numbers.

I could retire now. The numbers actually work.

The money market funds are ohhhh kaayyyy, but I could pay down debt that has a higher rate than I'm getting.

Even in a completely awful market for 40 years the portfolio passed his tool.

So I'm not sure why I would ever be happy with a 40% bond allocation like his weak ass target date fund wants
I have one kid that I gotta get through college still (starts in August) before I consider it. Then I get to see what the wife’s plans are (could retire this summer) but insurance is one smaller thing. The big thing is she likes to buy stuff when she gets bored so no job means a lot of buying which means me trying to find another part time job to handle that. The main reason I don’t see myself actually retiring.
 
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70% VTI / 30% VXUS. Did my annual (pointless) check of things when I dumped 15k into our Roth IRAs.

Work moved our 401k to fidelity so I have a path to do some after tax contributions & convert to my Roth IRA to continue my boring ass walk to retirement
 
70% VTI / 30% VXUS. Did my annual (pointless) check of things when I dumped 15k into our Roth IRAs.

Work moved our 401k to fidelity so I have a path to do some after tax contributions & convert to my Roth IRA to continue my boring ass walk to retirement

A fellow Boglehead or no?

I’ve been into the FI movement and becoming financially independent where I don’t have to work for the money is my goal. Lots of opinions about how to structure a portfolio built to last if you do want to retire early or take a leanFIRE job.
 
I am 12% in total cash. I trade about 30% of our holdings, the rest is managed professionally. Most of our cash is in the account I manage because of profit taking the last 6 months and betting on a setback that hasn't happened. 25% of what we control is cash held as SNOXX shares. Buy, wait for a setback or sit on 25% cash. This is a ROTH account. Just curious of other opinions.
 
I am 12% in total cash. I trade about 30% of our holdings, the rest is managed professionally. Most of our cash is in the account I manage because of profit taking the last 6 months and betting on a setback that hasn't happened. 25% of what we control is cash held as SNOXX shares. Buy, wait for a setback or sit on 25% cash. This is a ROTH account. Just curious of other opinions.

Are you trying to time the market?

Not sure of your age or tax diversification but a simple CF poster here thinks there's an opportunity to get a little aggressive or at least deploy funds.

I view my accounts as a system. Aggressive growth in Roth. Don't want taxes on those gains. Traditional IRA gets bland stuff like VTI and BRKB.

401k gets better fees on simple S&P index, contrafund, some value, and international

Bonds would go traditional. Roth needs to run.
 
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Once you won the game, stop playing. If I'm at a 98% chance of success to retire and my desire age, I'm not going to take huge risks. I had to remind myself of this multiple times over the last year when I was doing things like building a TIPS ladder. Sequence of return risk is something I worry a lot about.
 
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One month in and been a pretty good run so far for the general stock market.

What are people looking at and keeping an eye on?
Qqqm. Extreme liquidity, participate in a good chunk of the ai upside with no single stock risk.

If I see something really drop, I'll sell qqqm and get into that play.

Did really well with this approach in 2025 on Google, ups, and tesla
 
I've been running numbers.

I could retire now. The numbers actually work.

The money market funds are ohhhh kaayyyy, but I could pay down debt that has a higher rate than I'm getting.

Even in a completely awful market for 40 years the portfolio passed his tool.

So I'm not sure why I would ever be happy with a 40% bond allocation like his weak ass target date fund wants
I'm with you on the idea of staying away from much of a bond allocation. In the current environment, bond yields are just too low, giving up too much potential upside for that security.

I'm still in the build phase, so pretty much VOO/VTI and chill. But thinking that as I near retirement will look to get about 3 years expenses into a money market and leave the rest in stocks. Sell stocks in up years to fund my lifestyle, live off the cash during market downturns with the thought that the market should recover within 3 years. Sell some stocks in the recovery to replenish the money market.

I'm planning to retire early, so when you are looking at a 35-40 year time horizon it still seems like it makes sense to be heavy on equities. Still a long period there for growth.
 
Are you trying to time the market?

Not sure of your age or tax diversification but a simple CF poster here thinks there's an opportunity to get a little aggressive or at least deploy funds.

I view my accounts as a system. Aggressive growth in Roth. Don't want taxes on those gains. Traditional IRA gets bland stuff like VTI and BRKB.

401k gets better fees on simple S&P index, contrafund, some value, and international

Bonds would go traditional. Roth needs to run.
Thanks I get it. Until 18 months ago we did it all ourselves. My profesionally managed Roth, they "are letting run", as you say. I appreciate the focus on what I was really saying.
 
Thanks I get it. Until 18 months ago we did it all ourselves. My profesionally managed Roth, they "are letting run", as you say. I appreciate the focus on what I was really saying.

I do wonder about this managed piece.

Typically managed funds will underperform index funds to a large extent.

I wonder if your Roth manager can beat the QQQM or FTEC after fees?

I did a restack last year and moved away from funds that I'd had for decades, but also had very high fees. Fees are corrosive to a portfolio.
 
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I'm with you on the idea of staying away from much of a bond allocation. In the current environment, bond yields are just too low, giving up too much potential upside for that security.

I'm still in the build phase, so pretty much VOO/VTI and chill. But thinking that as I near retirement will look to get about 3 years expenses into a money market and leave the rest in stocks. Sell stocks in up years to fund my lifestyle, live off the cash during market downturns with the thought that the market should recover within 3 years. Sell some stocks in the recovery to replenish the money market.

I'm planning to retire early, so when you are looking at a 35-40 year time horizon it still seems like it makes sense to be heavy on equities. Still a long period there for growth.

This was more of my thinking too but doing more research and analysis, I’m going to keep ~10-15% bonds as dry powder and protection for a lasting equities downturn for rebalancing ease.

Something like 10% cash, 15% bonds, 75% equities. I have some rental properties and a little crypto too for some diversification.

Biggest advantage in the RE movement is the flexibility to adjust spending during generational events and still have the portfolio survive. Which I definitely plan on doing.
 
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I'm about 2.5% money market

Retirement counselor guy was shocked at my equity position

No guts, no glory

Then he showed some stuff that twists facts and we ended the conversation. Don't think he's been challenged before. It was fun.
It could be absolutely appropriate for you to have that much in equities (I'm assuming you are retired or close).

1. you have a sizeable guaranteed pension so don't have worries about needing to draw down cash when the market could be down
2. you have so much amassed that 2.5% is a year or two of expenses anyway, and again, don't need to worry about drawing down in a bad market

Just pointing out to remind everyone that individual situations can vary radically, and the right answer for 90% of people could be totally wrong for you.

Good for you being smart enough to know and push back. A lot of "investment professionals" are pretty limited in what they know - limited to whatever solution they are paid to push...
 
It could be absolutely appropriate for you to have that much in equities (I'm assuming you are retired or close).

1. you have a sizeable guaranteed pension so don't have worries about needing to draw down cash when the market could be down
2. you have so much amassed that 2.5% is a year or two of expenses anyway, and again, don't need to worry about drawing down in a bad market

Just pointing out to remind everyone that individual situations can vary radically, and the right answer for 90% of people could be totally wrong for you.

Good for you being smart enough to know and push back. A lot of "investment professionals" are pretty limited in what they know - limited to whatever solution they are paid to push...

I enjoy talking finance and running scenarios

I had one heck of a run in the past decade, but I don't want to Dunning-Kruger this.

At some point I need to hit singles and doubles and stop swinging for the fence.

investing is a personal deal. Hats off to those getting it done. Retirement articles paint a tough picture. This professional was sounding good, but I had enough info to punch holes in his pitch and frustrate him.
 
Talking about bonds... I've never worried about them much when I was younger, but now in 50s feel like "shouldn't I have some bonds?" for diversification, risk reduction, et al.

Well, the answer I have come to is yes and no.

For risk reduction and diversification as part of portfolio allocation, I am seriously underwhelmed. They're more correlated than they used to be and the return is lower. And more inflation risk. Why not just buy utilities instead? Doesn't make a lot of sense to me, certainly the old 100-age % allocation thing is total BS imho.

But here is where I do think they have a purpose. Time. They do have less risk over say 2-4 years than equities, but better return than money market. So if you are doing the "buckets" thing in retirement, they work in that middle timeframe bucket. Keep the money you need for this year and next in cash/MM/CD/etc. Keep what you will need in year 3,4,5 in bonds. Keep the rest in your equities portfolio.

Now, if you want to say that all 3 buckets are your overall portfolio, then that's OK, but rather than pick an overall %, you pick the DOLLARS needed, and then the % is what it is. Two examples - $100k annual expenses needed, one portfolio has $2M assets, the other $4M.

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So just saying "you should have x% in bonds" doesn't work for me at all, its a super lazy thing to do. But I do see they have a use. IDK, maybe I have discovered that fire is hot, but this helped me think about bonds differently.
 
Are you trying to time the market?

Not sure of your age or tax diversification but a simple CF poster here thinks there's an opportunity to get a little aggressive or at least deploy funds.

I view my accounts as a system. Aggressive growth in Roth. Don't want taxes on those gains. Traditional IRA gets bland stuff like VTI and BRKB.

401k gets better fees on simple S&P index, contrafund, some value, and international

Bonds would go traditional. Roth needs to run.
The way to do it. That's how I am right now in my brokerage/roth. I am aggressively investing in the stocks that will supply those data centers that everyone talks with AI. Go to the root source! Been in metals/mining the last 5 years, plenty of room to run.
401K aggressive as I can be with funds. Other roth that's conservative.