Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect DCUMers will recommend taking the dollar cost avg path. I'd, however, wait it out little bit. Market is sending all kinds of warning signals that it is about to turn sour (yes, I know you can't time the market)...
OP here: That's where I'm stuck! I know we should invest the money instead of having it sit in a money market account, but the market is at an all-time high and several indicators point to a downturn.
The market spends the vast, vast majority of its existence near all time highs.
Wow. I've been through 3 market downturns. Why am I pretty sure you don't remember the last one?
Tell us where the market was when you started investing and where it is now after 3 market downturns (and probably something like 5-10 unnamed but very real market upturns)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect DCUMers will recommend taking the dollar cost avg path. I'd, however, wait it out little bit. Market is sending all kinds of warning signals that it is about to turn sour (yes, I know you can't time the market)...
OP here: That's where I'm stuck! I know we should invest the money instead of having it sit in a money market account, but the market is at an all-time high and several indicators point to a downturn.
The market spends the vast, vast majority of its existence near all time highs.
Wow. I've been through 3 market downturns. Why am I pretty sure you don't remember the last one?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I suspect DCUMers will recommend taking the dollar cost avg path. I'd, however, wait it out little bit. Market is sending all kinds of warning signals that it is about to turn sour (yes, I know you can't time the market)...
OP here: That's where I'm stuck! I know we should invest the money instead of having it sit in a money market account, but the market is at an all-time high and several indicators point to a downturn.
The market spends the vast, vast majority of its existence near all time highs.
Wow. I've been through 3 market downturns. Why am I pretty sure you don't remember the last one?
Anonymous wrote:TwistdMike wrote:Google Dave Ramsey and listen to his advices regarding inheritances, taxes, rollovers.
He also has trusted advisors in your area listed on his web site, might be a good choice in this case.
Do not do this! His trusted advsiers charge very high fees. Stick with Total Stock market like you were thinking.
I think Vanguard has a study that shows 2/3 of the time a lump sum contribution will outperform dollar cost average. That won’t matter if you wind up being one of the poor souls who lump sums in and the market declines. It IS just psychological, but if dollar cost averaging will help you commit to getting the money invested, than that is what you should do.