| You should spend your time educating yourself on how to invest or seek out a financial planner. You don't like bonds, pick individual stocks, and now you are concerned about timing the market with 10% of your portfolio. A prudent investor doesn't do those things. |
I have a lot of investments...very heavy in equities (about 65%) for someone already in retirement. So now again, I ask, wait until correction to invest in equities? We bought a few mini dips when the war got started and it worked out well for us. |
PS: 65% equities, 24% bonds, 11% money market (including about $370K in a 529 for a rising college student), to be exact. |
| with that kind of money, not sure why you're looking for free financial advices from strangers on a forum..I call troll. |
I hold t-bills and even those aren't paying that high. |
I mean, I don’t have your money but we haven’t done badly (close to $10 million net worth) and I get professional help instead of humble bragging to strangers on the internet. |
+1. F@cng troll. Anyone savvy enough about appear not looking for advice here. Gtfo |
| Op, I'll help you. Let me invest it for you and you would get high level return beating S&P. LOL |
That's what I'm doing.. but then, I've been in this mode for years now and missed the '22, '25 and '26 opportunities. Waiting for the big collapse that's supposedly around the corner. |
| Correction looks like it may be over. Strong bounce of 21 day averages today, which is typically bullish. |
yes i don’t get it. we have less than this poster and have wealth advisors do everything. Tax planning, tax preparation, investment strategies, etc etc. we aren’t over here randomly guessing if google is experiencing a dip or are dumb enough to keep 1M + on the sidelines timing the market. |
| I had the same question about my measly 6k in cash and no one would answer it |
| What we do is keep 2-3 years of expenses in cash so if there is a correction we can ride it out. |
The stock market can have negative returns for over a decade. That cash wouldn't have helped much in the 70s with high inflation and abysmal stock market returns. |
OP here. Well we already did pretty well investing some of it in March when the market took a dip. Should have invested more, honestly. We have enough money to live comfortably until death and will still leave our kids more than we have right now. So I don't stress about having so much cash...just trying to figure out whether I should invest now (seems stupid) or wait for another dip like the one in March. Also, how do you know we don't have an advisor. Of course he thinks I should invest it all so it will be part of the AUM. |