Anonymous wrote:He should be mostly in single stocks in order to learn. Too young for an ETF 100%.
My 11-year old know that Roblox went from $36 to $120 within a year, while funds added maybe 25%. Very different views of investing after knowing what a stock can do versus funds.
Checking account is useless. Get him your credit card and you can see how he spends.
There are mock apps for investing.
Have him read books and watch finance videos.
Open the accounts when he is 18. No need to have his name and possibly SS# out there now when identity is easily stolen.
Learning is more important than early investing. My last two year investment returns would take an ETF 14 years.
If his savings account is not earning 11%, he is losing money. You both know that, right. He needs to be in hard assets, not cash.
His money is melting in a savings account, because of the money printing.
Have him read the Lyn Alden's Broken Money, but there are many other good ones.
Peter Lynch is good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. My return of the last 10 years has been 10%. That is just with total stock funds in my Roth IRA. I am not some miracle wunderkind that knows the future, and neither is anybody else. That is also with the fees of less than one percent.
Ask the other people recommending active trading how much they paid in fees in day trading, plus it’s much riskier. An individual stock is much more likely to go down, relative to the entire stock market.
But didn't you see that Roblox went up 4x in a year? Why would you take this opportunity away from your child?
Well done. I can’t tell if your post is brilliantly sarcastic or if you’re that dingbat that wants their 11yo to be a day trader.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PP here. My return of the last 10 years has been 10%. That is just with total stock funds in my Roth IRA. I am not some miracle wunderkind that knows the future, and neither is anybody else. That is also with the fees of less than one percent.
Ask the other people recommending active trading how much they paid in fees in day trading, plus it’s much riskier. An individual stock is much more likely to go down, relative to the entire stock market.
But didn't you see that Roblox went up 4x in a year? Why would you take this opportunity away from your child?
Anonymous wrote:PP here. My return of the last 10 years has been 10%. That is just with total stock funds in my Roth IRA. I am not some miracle wunderkind that knows the future, and neither is anybody else. That is also with the fees of less than one percent.
Ask the other people recommending active trading how much they paid in fees in day trading, plus it’s much riskier. An individual stock is much more likely to go down, relative to the entire stock market.