Anonymous wrote:A lot of financial advisors are not particularly savvy about investing & also charge a % of your assets that they manage. Be very careful about getting sucked into that racket.
Anonymous wrote:Seven figures. Net worth is around $2 million between home, IRAs, 401Ks, stocks, etc.
Anonymous wrote:OP Here.
I was thinking an attorney to do a proper estate plan, an accountant to make sure we do our taxes right since our taxes have been easy enough that I have been able to do them and I don't want to mess up with so much on the line now, and the financial planner to help us invest wisely.
The house will be paid off in less than 5 years without the windfall and we have no other debt, but we are cash poor since I quit working in 2020 to stay home with the kids 10/12. Most of our money is in 401k's, Roth IRAs, and 529s so not easily accessible. We have about 1/3 invested mutual funds and bonds. We do have a few individual stocks to get the kids interested in investing. I would love to do a major renovation of our home and travel.
We bank with a credit union. Would it be better to open an account at a large bank instead of using our large credit union?
I'm reading Bogleheads. Thank you for sending me to that resource.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of financial advisors are not particularly savvy about investing & also charge a % of your assets that they manage. Be very careful about getting sucked into that racket.
This is completely legitimate and how financial advisors make money. If you want help from a professional, be prepared to pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. You do not need to hire anyone.
2. Just pay off whatever debt and then put the money in a total market index (like the VTSAX mentioned above).
3. Sleep well.
4. Profit.
Ugh. No, do NOT put all your money in a total market index. You need some money in cash and some money in bonds, and then yes investments. That’s literally finance 101. 5-10% cash, 10-20% bonds (I’d don’t know how old you are, but this is appropriate for middle age). As you get older you want less exposure to the market. But the big take away is you need financial advice since you are crowd sourcing DCUM and also indicate you have no financial discipline.
Anonymous wrote:1. You do not need to hire anyone.
2. Just pay off whatever debt and then put the money in a total market index (like the VTSAX mentioned above).
3. Sleep well.
4. Profit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of financial advisors are not particularly savvy about investing & also charge a % of your assets that they manage. Be very careful about getting sucked into that racket.
This is completely legitimate and how financial advisors make money. If you want help from a professional, be prepared to pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:OP Here.
I was thinking an attorney to do a proper estate plan, an accountant to make sure we do our taxes right since our taxes have been easy enough that I have been able to do them and I don't want to mess up with so much on the line now, and the financial planner to help us invest wisely.
We bank with a credit union. Would it be better to open an account at a large bank instead of using our large credit union?
Paying a percentage of assets is just a bad idea for most people
Anonymous wrote:1. You do not need to hire anyone.
2. Just pay off whatever debt and then put the money in a total market index (like the VTSAX mentioned above).
3. Sleep well.
4. Profit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband runs all of our money but we keep some at Wells Fargo. If you keep enough money with them, you have access to their high net worth advisors. Most banks offer these services.
We have investments with Fidelity, Vanguard, and Hartford. I'll see what they can offer.