Anonymous wrote:Going to law school at the best one that accepted me T-15, instead of taking a near total tuition free ride at a respectable T-25 school.
Anonymous wrote:In 2000 I sold $5k in the Vanguard Index 500 and split it between Janus Enterprise and Janus Global Life Sciences. Floundered for a decade and then I bailed. Should have left it in the index.
Dad/financial advisor: “If that’s the most expensive mistake you make, count yourself lucky.”
Anonymous wrote:Taking out a $300K second mortgage in December 2020 and then using all of it to buy PYPL stock. We bought 1200 shares at $250 per share and now have only 500 shares remaining worth a measly $30K. We ended up selling 700 shares throughout 2022-2023 at a huge loss just to make our payments on the second mortgage.
We have 27 years of $1300 payments remaining and maybe 2 years of runway in remaining stock until we’re insolvent.
I never would have done this before, but so many people on DCUM were going on and on about refinancing at historically low rates and using the leverage to invest.
Anonymous wrote:Taking out a $300K second mortgage in December 2020 and then using all of it to buy PYPL stock. We bought 1200 shares at $250 per share and now have only 500 shares remaining worth a measly $30K. We ended up selling 700 shares throughout 2022-2023 at a huge loss just to make our payments on the second mortgage.
We have 27 years of $1300 payments remaining and maybe 2 years of runway in remaining stock until we’re insolvent.
I never would have done this before, but so many people on DCUM were going on and on about refinancing at historically low rates and using the leverage to invest.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is making me glad I got AAPL. Thought about buying it for two years, then finally did in 2015. Felt like it was "too late," but still holding onto it.
As for regrets, we are still renting in our 40s. I wished we pushed harder to buy a place a few years back when rates were lower and prices weren't sky high. Feels incredibly out of reach to buy anywhere these days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop investing in the market after the 2008 crash.
Ugh. Same. We were never in heavily, but pulled everything out just before the crash. Felt lucky. Finally got back in just before the correction in 2018. Ugh. But thankfully we stayed in, though with very conservative allocations. We are doing better now, and gaining traction. But man, it is hard to take how much we missed out on.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda.
Not sure if this is a mistake. The economy in reality has been terrible since 2008. (How else do you think somebody like Trump could have ever gotten elected?)
The fact that they were able to prevent a Great Depression by printing money and increasing inequality is not really a ringing endorsement of the economy. Stocks did well in a zero-interest-rate environment, but it was not at all obvious that things would turn out like they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop investing in the market after the 2008 crash.
Ugh. Same. We were never in heavily, but pulled everything out just before the crash. Felt lucky. Finally got back in just before the correction in 2018. Ugh. But thankfully we stayed in, though with very conservative allocations. We are doing better now, and gaining traction. But man, it is hard to take how much we missed out on.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stop investing in the market after the 2008 crash.
Ugh. Same. We were never in heavily, but pulled everything out just before the crash. Felt lucky. Finally got back in just before the correction in 2018. Ugh. But thankfully we stayed in, though with very conservative allocations. We are doing better now, and gaining traction. But man, it is hard to take how much we missed out on.
Woulda, coulda, shoulda.
Anonymous wrote:I'll start:
1. When we bought our house two years ago, the interest rates just began to increase. So our mortgage rate is 5.5%. We could have bought it down to 4.5% if we had paid an additional $60k for a couple of points, and over the course of the loan that would have saved us $600k (we have a crazy high mortgage loan). But we thought that we could soon refinance into a 3.5% interest rate, so did not take that deal...
Now our plan is to pay off the mortgage aggressively, even though we would invest in the stock market if we had a lower interest rate.
2. We should have moved to our current area way sooner; then we could have bought a house way sooner and cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Selling AAPL stock instead of holding.