Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you using outside help, make sure to track and compare your funds’ performance against benchmarks.
What do you mean by this?
Many funds are index funds which, follow a specific index…like the S&P 500. That funds performance will be nearly identical to the index it tracks.
Anonymous wrote:DIY here. Tax strategy in later years PP said is a good point though. Getting the most out of your money does get complicated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you using outside help, make sure to track and compare your funds’ performance against benchmarks.
What do you mean by this?
Many funds are index funds which, follow a specific index…like the S&P 500. That funds performance will be nearly identical to the index it tracks.
Anonymous wrote:DIY here, 47. Investing is what I do full time now. Started out as interest and turned into a passion.
I do had a finance degree, but it means nothing. The school tried to make an employee out of me while I wanted to invest myself into financial freedom. I learned absolutely nothing at school that would help me get there. The 10% was the biggest crap.
I would give WM $10k and tell them to get me a better return that I can get. If they can beat my 100% a year (tax free), I'd like to know how they did it. Not that easy when you manage someone else's money.
I know there are people out there who can get the 100% a year fairly often.
I don't really pay taxes and will try to keep it this way.
I will give my money away slowly, but surely. I don't care for trusts or wills. Too much paperwork. Whatever is left when I die, will belong to someone else the minute I kick the bucket.
I want to show my kids how I get my high returns. I doubt WM would do that.
Anonymous wrote:DIY here, 47. Investing is what I do full time now. Started out as interest and turned into a passion.
I do had a finance degree, but it means nothing. The school tried to make an employee out of me while I wanted to invest myself into financial freedom. I learned absolutely nothing at school that would help me get there. The 10% was the biggest crap.
I would give WM $10k and tell them to get me a better return that I can get. If they can beat my 100% a year (tax free), I'd like to know how they did it. Not that easy when you manage someone else's money.
I know there are people out there who can get the 100% a year fairly often.
I don't really pay taxes and will try to keep it this way.
I will give my money away slowly, but surely. I don't care for trusts or wills. Too much paperwork. Whatever is left when I die, will belong to someone else the minute I kick the bucket.
I want to show my kids how I get my high returns. I doubt WM would do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you using outside help, make sure to track and compare your funds’ performance against benchmarks.
What do you mean by this?
Many funds are index funds which, follow a specific index…like the S&P 500. That funds performance will be nearly identical to the index it tracks.
Anonymous wrote:DIY here, 47. Investing is what I do full time now. Started out as interest and turned into a passion.
I do had a finance degree, but it means nothing. The school tried to make an employee out of me while I wanted to invest myself into financial freedom. I learned absolutely nothing at school that would help me get there. The 10% was the biggest crap.
I would give WM $10k and tell them to get me a better return that I can get. If they can beat my 100% a year (tax free), I'd like to know how they did it. Not that easy when you manage someone else's money.
I know there are people out there who can get the 100% a year fairly often.
I don't really pay taxes and will try to keep it this way.
I will give my money away slowly, but surely. I don't care for trusts or wills. Too much paperwork. Whatever is left when I die, will belong to someone else the minute I kick the bucket.
I want to show my kids how I get my high returns. I doubt WM would do that.