He one time had fat fingers when I listened in the tractor. Punched in 23% instead of 13 and had this guy retiring in like 10 years. Came back about half the show later and said it would be like 25.
At least he was close.
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He one time had fat fingers when I listened in the tractor. Punched in 23% instead of 13 and had this guy retiring in like 10 years. Came back about half the show later and said it would be like 25.
If we're really going to argue about this, we should probably take it to another thread, but for now...
So given that, what makes you think the market is just going to wake up someday and get wise about financial stability? What tipping point exists that we haven't hit yet and can't see coming?
The market knows we're in debt up to our eyeballs. The market obviously isn't concerned.
(Edit: I'm not at all saying there's no recession coming. That will obviously happen at some point. Just that you seem to think there's some big reckoning coming, far beyond a typical recession, and I think your reasoning is flimsy.)
^if you pull back the shiney veneer (e.g...4.1% econ growth last quarter), there are a lot of problems that are not being addressed....probably because many people don't understand them in the first place...and they aren't a winning strategy to get a person elected in this day and age.
I realize it is not fun and actually rather depressing reading up on pending pension crisis, the vast amount of above and below ground infrastructure we've built post 1950's....and have no realistic way to pay for its ongoing maintenance, the poor financial state that most of our cities are in (but we don't see it because currently it is masked by growth), etc.
Bottomline: IMO, do everything you can to avoid and get out of debt. It is the one thing you can control. When the time comes and we have no choice but to deal with all these problems that we've hidden in a corner for too long, not having debt will be a huge part of how you'll have protected youselfl and your family.
And make sure to keep plenty of non-perishables, water, and fuel on hand at all times.
Been there. Don't want to live that again.
In my new area quite a few people are still upside down on their property. A garbage real estate market here.
I'm very concerned about the market. As of about 2 months ago, I now have 40% in Fixed income, which I hate to do. 10 years ago a 30% decline wasn't as big of a deal since I had 25 + years until retirement. Now I only have 15-20 years and the balance is a LOT higher. There are tons of warning flags about a market crash but there have been for a long time.
Don't be, we may have a short-term down trend but I'm looking to BUY BUY BUY. I have a feeling we are going to see a Blow-Off Top in the US Markets like Japan in 1999. It may be difficult to sell the top but we could go much higher. After that though, all bets are off. The Bond Market are the markets that I would really worry about, especially government bonds.
I believe the fund Dave Ramsey talks about with a 12% return is AIVSX. They have had great returns since 1934. ~12% over the last 5 years is what I found on marketwatch.com
https://www.kiplinger.com/tool/investing/T041-S001-top-performing-mutual-funds/index.php
That is a link to some of the best returns. The one Vanguard fund looks impressive with a 13.58% 20-yr return. Adding that to my list.
https://www.kiplinger.com/tool/investing/T041-S001-top-performing-mutual-funds/index.php
That is a link to some of the best returns. The one Vanguard fund looks impressive with a 13.58% 20-yr return. Adding that to my list.
The biggest problem I have with mutual funds is that they are way too limited by the sector that they are sold in. You are looking to professionals but when they are so narrowly limited I feel like they are leaving far too much opportunity on the table. So i have to figure out when to buy the Large Cap US fund and then switch to Global or Bonds etc. A fund that acts more like a Hedge Fund but run by Vanguard using their huge resources would be fantastic.
Always wondered why more people didn't try to find or post the funds that he talks about. 10% returns over the long term shouldn't be that crazy but a bad year or two really hurts.
I don't think that is one as it seems to mirror the market. The 10-year is only 9.22% versus 9.08 for the category return.
Sounds like index funds might suit you better