Anonymous wrote:10 years is a long time to lock up the money. Perhaps build a bond ladder. I would use mini bonds if you’re in a high bracket. If you need most of those funds I would not put them in the market. Depends if this $800k is everything or if you separately have an emergency fund and retirement savings etc.
Anonymous wrote:We have about $800,000 split between a HYSA and a fidelity Money market. Both have been about a 4% yield. We are a high income tax bracket also. Where should we put this money so it is conservatively invested but we are not losing all returns to taxes in your opinion?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have about $800,000 split between a HYSA and a fidelity Money market. Both have been about a 4% yield. We are a high income tax bracket also. Where should we put this money so it is conservatively invested but we are not losing all returns to taxes in your opinion?
A conservative thing to do (there are many examples) is to take 50% and buy 10-year treasuries...you will earn 4.3% but avoid state tax.
Take the other 50% and just buy an S&P index fund. The dividend yield on the S&P is 1.19% but taxed at 15%.
It's hard to understand how define conservative. Clearly, the S&P index fund price will equate to daily movements in the S&P, and in theory your dividend yield will increase over time as companies grow and increase dividends.
Does this take into consideration the next few years under Trump or is it just advice in general?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have about $800,000 split between a HYSA and a fidelity Money market. Both have been about a 4% yield. We are a high income tax bracket also. Where should we put this money so it is conservatively invested but we are not losing all returns to taxes in your opinion?
A conservative thing to do (there are many examples) is to take 50% and buy 10-year treasuries...you will earn 4.3% but avoid state tax.
Take the other 50% and just buy an S&P index fund. The dividend yield on the S&P is 1.19% but taxed at 15%.
It's hard to understand how define conservative. Clearly, the S&P index fund price will equate to daily movements in the S&P, and in theory your dividend yield will increase over time as companies grow and increase dividends.
Anonymous wrote:We have about $800,000 split between a HYSA and a fidelity Money market. Both have been about a 4% yield. We are a high income tax bracket also. Where should we put this money so it is conservatively invested but we are not losing all returns to taxes in your opinion?