Retirement Targets

Reading about I bonds (something I didn’t know existed). If I don’t need the $10k max for 5 years, why shouldn’t I buy them? Anyone have any recommendation to not buy them? 9.62% for this bi-annual.
The rate could change in October. They are not liquid investment. That being said all the finance influencer bloggers and YouTube have been talking them up quite a bit, especially with inflation being 9.1% they keep pace with inflation. Typical year they may only pay 2 to 3% is my understanding. If you don’t need money for 3-5 years like it could be a wise decision to purchase some in my opinion * I’m not currently a fiduciary or Financial Advisor, but a lot of people in finance community or finance blogs and YouTube channels I follow seem to like them and promoting them last few months
 
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Does anyone in the group use the Personal Capital app? It’s a free finance app for budgeting and investing you can download on your phone. I’m still fairly young for investing for retirement, but have a 401k and Roth IRA of index funds with Vanguard. (Big fan of Jack Bogle and Bogleheads community) I like tracking how investments are doing vs S&P 500 and monitoring fees and asset allocation.
 
Does anyone in the group use the Personal Capital app? It’s a free finance app for budgeting and investing you can download on your phone. I’m still fairly young for investing for retirement, but have a 401k and Roth IRA of index funds with Vanguard. (Big fan of Jack Bogle and Bogleheads community) I like tracking how investments are doing vs S&P 500 and monitoring fees and asset allocation.
I tried to use it, but several of my accounts wouldn’t link. In my mind, that rendered it useless. Seems it would be good if you don’t have that problem though…
 
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Does anyone in the group use the Personal Capital app? It’s a free finance app for budgeting and investing you can download on your phone. I’m still fairly young for investing for retirement, but have a 401k and Roth IRA of index funds with Vanguard. (Big fan of Jack Bogle and Bogleheads community) I like tracking how investments are doing vs S&P 500 and monitoring fees and asset allocation.

I use it. It’s ok but the links between my accounts constantly break and it’s almost more maintenance than it’s worth for how often I check it.
 
The rate could change in October. They are not liquid investment. That being said all the finance influencer bloggers and YouTube have been talking them up quite a bit, especially with inflation being 9.1% they keep pace with inflation. Typical year they may only pay 2 to 3% is my understanding. If you don’t need money for 3-5 years like it could be a wise decision to purchase some in my opinion * I’m not currently a fiduciary or Financial Advisor, but a lot of people in finance community or finance blogs and YouTube channels I follow seem to like them and promoting them last few months
I thought you got the 9.1% for 6 months regardless of when you buy them. Sad long as it's before the rate resets..
 
I was thinking about buying more iBonds at the start of 2023. I'm now hearing at this point, that it may be better to buy 5 year TIPS. Thoughts?
 
Not sure what you invested in but my 401k is back up to positive YTD (barely but still) and I'm young and investing aggressively. I hope if you retired at 59 you accounted for market fluctuations and anything that you've lost is in investments you weren't planning on touching for awhile.
I'd be interested to hear what you've chosen for your 401k to be positive for the year. Everyone has different 401k choices but I have 30 choices and only one of those is positive for the year and that is a short term fixed income fund that is up 1.38% for the year. I'm down about 10% for the year.
 
That is really good … Im down 18% YTD.

I'd be interested to hear what you've chosen for your 401k to be positive for the year. Everyone has different 401k choices but I have 30 choices and only one of those is positive for the year and that is a short term fixed income fund that is up 1.38% for the year. I'm down about 10% for the year.
Figured it out. Forgot I rolled over an old account this year so I think it f'd up the generic tracking on my account. So honestly not sure what my YTD return is
 
Not sure what you invested in but my 401k is back up to positive YTD (barely but still) and I'm young and investing aggressively. I hope if you retired at 59 you accounted for market fluctuations and anything that you've lost is in investments you weren't planning on touching for awhile.
Saw your response as I was typing. I figured you had a lower balance (early in career) but were just starting to ramp up contributions so your contributions for the year were greater than your balance losses, thus showing a + at end of year compared to beginning of year.
 
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It's sad that I'm down 10% YTD but the previous 3 years I had 15-25% gains. With that said, I'm more worried about the inflation that we had over the last year, most of which will never go away and people rarely factor it into their losses.
 
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Not sure what you invested in but my 401k is back up to positive YTD (barely but still) and I'm young and investing aggressively. I hope if you retired at 59 you accounted for market fluctuations and anything that you've lost is in investments you weren't planning on touching for awhile.
I am talking from all time high, not from beginning of the year.
 
Anyone front load their 401k?

I started this a few years back when my industry was wonky. I wanted to get the cash in the account while I had access.

I've continued this. I front load aggressively for the first two months and then crank it down to the company match for the remainder of the year.

Only guy doing this?
 
Anyone front load their 401k?

I started this a few years back when my industry was wonky. I wanted to get the cash in the account while I had access.

I've continued this. I front load aggressively for the first two months and then crank it down to the company match for the remainder of the year.

Only guy doing this?
I front load my Roth. I put the full amount for the year in January. Then spend the rest of the year building the deposit for the next January.
 
It's sad that I'm down 10% YTD but the previous 3 years I had 15-25% gains. With that said, I'm more worried about the inflation that we had over the last year, most of which will never go away and people rarely factor it into their losses.
Inflation is transitory. Nothing to worry about.
 
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