Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Index funds are not safe. They can be just as volatile as any other investment. I would broaden how you think about risk and diversification. For example, does your portfolio include real estate, business income, cash (high yield savings/money market) in addition to stocks, and are your stocks from different sectors? I think there’s a lot more to it than just investing in an index fund. How fast we forget 2022 and the fact that the s&p took huge losses just like everything else.
Ridiculous. The "huge losses" in 2022 were a temporary dip. that lost only 1 year of gains and quickly recovered.
Anonymous wrote:DH already works in VC and tech and entrepreneurship and most of our current investments are pretty high risk/high reward. Zero stability the way I see it. I really want something that will influence him to start putting our money, especially retirement into index funds and more stable investments to counter these and they have the potential to go through major losses with the markets/economy and unforeseen events like the pandemic. Looking for something that really pushes safe and more conservative investment strategies. We sit on different ends for risk tolerance.
Anonymous wrote:Index funds are not safe. They can be just as volatile as any other investment. I would broaden how you think about risk and diversification. For example, does your portfolio include real estate, business income, cash (high yield savings/money market) in addition to stocks, and are your stocks from different sectors? I think there’s a lot more to it than just investing in an index fund. How fast we forget 2022 and the fact that the s&p took huge losses just like everything else.
Anonymous wrote:Index funds are not safe. They can be just as volatile as any other investment. I would broaden how you think about risk and diversification. For example, does your portfolio include real estate, business income, cash (high yield savings/money market) in addition to stocks, and are your stocks from different sectors? I think there’s a lot more to it than just investing in an index fund. How fast we forget 2022 and the fact that the s&p took huge losses just like everything else.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you open your own account and put whatever you have left over into index fund. Tell him you are doing it to sleep better at night.
Simple Path to wealth is lovely. Browse through the top 200 in Amazon books for personal finance and take note.
I'd be annoyed as heck to be left out of decision making when it comes to money even if DH makes millions.
Anonymous wrote:If your husband works in VC he already understands personal finance and diversification - not sure you'll be able to find the perfect book. Maybe it's more about sitting down and having a conversation around risk tolerances.