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06-04-2023, 09:21 PM
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#1
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Aug 2020
Location: GUYS MILLS
Posts: 136
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FOMO
If you were only 10% in equities right now because you listened to all the brilliant talking heads listing the variety of reasons the S&P was going down would you start putting money into the market when we're currently near S&P 4,300?
Currently making around 5% +/- on the other 90% of our money but it feels like right now the market is an engine that refuses to be stopped and only gaining momentum with recent technology developments and unemployment sticking at historical lows. No matter what economic news comes out it seems we can have 5 bad numbers and 1 tiny positive number and market shoots up.
Am I the only one who has been what feels like endlessly patient but now feels like they are getting sucked in by FOMO?
If we started to leg in we'd do equal parts VTI, SCHD and RSP unless someone had a better recommendation.
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06-04-2023, 09:42 PM
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#2
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Moderator
Join Date: Apr 2012
Location: San Diego
Posts: 13,856
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I learned a long time ago that I suck at market timing. I set my asset allocation to mix of equities and fixed income and rebalance periodically. Saves me from FOMO.
__________________
Retired June 2014. No longer an enginerd - now I'm just a nerd.
micro pensions 6%, rental income 20%
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06-04-2023, 10:05 PM
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#3
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: The 850
Posts: 903
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Not sure this is helpful, never been as low as 10% equities. My 60 yr. old. sister has, but she is years from retiring. Why is that?
I don't listen to market gurus, and when I did, I never went all in on their recommendations.
I was at 85% equities while working, dropped down to 60% at ER to mitigate Sequence of Returns Risk (SORR). Have been at 70% since the worst of the SORR passed.
Been a few rough spots, but have a bit more than I started with, and after 8 years of much higher than expected expenses.
You will hear it over and over again - pick an allocation that meets your goals and allows you to sleep at night.
As to moving back in after you settle on an allocation - IMO-If you're 10-15 years from needing it, do it all now. If your window is say, 5-7 years, I would average in. May miss some upside, but SORR is reduced, and with your obvious anxious nature, you'll probably be better off that way.
__________________
Stay at home slacker dad since 2015
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06-04-2023, 10:07 PM
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#4
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Oct 2021
Posts: 432
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My asset allocation has always been, currently still is, and will always be 100% equities. Since they started tracking historical data in 1927, every rolling 30 year period has produced solid annualized returns (believe the worst 30 year rolling period was 7.2% annualized) and a 100% stock portfolio has generated better returns than all other asset allocation over long time horizons.
My portfolio is already up over 20% YTD and it’s almost back to where it was prior to the bear market.
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06-04-2023, 10:14 PM
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#5
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 685
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Why are you gambling with your investments? That’s a suckers game. Do the research and make wise decisions. Don’t buy based on what the market is doing this week or month.
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06-04-2023, 10:47 PM
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#6
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Aug 2020
Location: GUYS MILLS
Posts: 136
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Al18
Why are you gambling with your investments? That’s a suckers game. Do the research and make wise decisions. Don’t buy based on what the market is doing this week or month.
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We have not taken money out of equities. We just built up a large cash position liquidating some real estate holdings including our home last year and have that money in individual bonds, treasuries and high yield savings accounts. We have never held a large position in equities but have been wanting to put our new money to work for the past 6 months. Would like to be 60% index funds.
We are 52 and would like to possibly retire in the next year or 2 but our plan is to not touch our investments for 5 - 15 years unless we buy a home. We should have enough between small pension, note payable and deferred comp to get us by reasonably comfortable until full retirement age.
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06-04-2023, 11:12 PM
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#7
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: May 2023
Location: Nope
Posts: 55
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Yes, others have offered my thoughts, already: choose a prudent plan that works in your particular situation. My own example: I'm retired, wife still works. So we can "afford" to be heavier in equities than we otherwise might be. Still reinvesting all profit, except a token annual small chunk I remove from the T-IRA in January, every year.
I'm still down -9% from the all-time high at the end of 2021 and start of 2022. I can live with that. It will come back. I just need a little patience. Because I'm not working, no more additions are being made into the T-IRA. Instead, I've started a regular, taxable brokerage account and I buy single stocks in there. Taxes are not an issue for us.
VTI SCHD and RSP are not bad. The question is: do they serve your specific goals? With my single-stock selections, I insist on a dividend of at least 3%. Don't be too over-concentrated, either. If you're retired early, I'd bet you're dealing with a big chunk of change. I own stock in a regional bank. It's been beat down, though it spiked up by +7% in a day, last Friday. Maybe you'd find a seriously discounted asset to be to your liking, if you're going to dollar-cost-average your way back in?
I own BHB
I'm keeping my eye on: BPRN and FFIC. All three of them are still deeply discounted at the moment.
I never learned how to grow a serious stash in order to use it to buy during Market downturns. The "cash" in my portfolio is held in the mutual funds I own.
Just, whatever you do: don't be trying to "time" the Market. Make well-researched choices and stick with them. Occasionally, you'll buy a stinker. I've done it. Just unload it and eat some crow, and move on and learn from those mistakes. "Break a leg."
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06-04-2023, 11:28 PM
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#8
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Leeward Oahu
Posts: 16,017
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Establish your goal of equities. Either go all in or go in over some period - maybe 6 months. No expert so listen to everyone else as YMMV.
__________________
Ko'olau's Law -
Anything which can be used can be misused. Anything which can be misused will be.
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06-05-2023, 03:57 AM
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#9
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: NC
Posts: 20,271
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Assuming your a long term investor, decide what AA and exact holdings you want, and then invest in equities either all at once or DCA if you prefer. I don’t think equities look all that rosy for the next six months, but I’ve never been a market timer. My AA hasn’t changed much since we reached FI almost 20 years ago.
__________________
No one agrees with other people's opinions; they merely agree with their own opinions -- expressed by somebody else. Sydney Tremayne
Retired Jun 2011 at age 57
Target AA: 50% equity funds / 40% bonds / 10% cash
Target WR: Approx 2.5% Approx 20% SI (secure income, SS only)
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06-05-2023, 04:09 AM
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#10
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Mar 2011
Posts: 7,896
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Midpack
Assuming your a long term investor, decide what AA and exact holdings you want, and then invest in equities either all at once or DCA if you prefer. I don’t think equities look all that rosy for the next six months, but I’ve never been a market timer. My AA hasn’t changed much since we reached FI almost 20 years ago.
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+1. We live off our dividends (and SS) and get paid the same regardless of market condition. "Over time" is the key.
__________________
Living well is the best revenge!
Retired @ 52 in 2005
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06-05-2023, 05:08 AM
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#11
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Chattanooga
Posts: 3,709
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My plan only changes when I rebalance usually once per year it's a 60/40 asset allocation, set and forget.
__________________
Earning money is an action, saving money is a behavior, growing money takes a well diversified portfolio and the discipline to ignore market swings.
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06-05-2023, 05:13 AM
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#12
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Dec 2015
Location: Michigan
Posts: 4,478
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Cost average in over the next 6 months.
__________________
"The mountains are calling, and I must go." John Muir
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06-05-2023, 05:46 AM
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#13
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Leeward Oahu
Posts: 16,017
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Quote:
Originally Posted by frayne
My plan only changes when I rebalance usually once per year it's a 60/40 asset allocation, set and forget.
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I'm even less strict about rebalancing I tend to rebalance when it gets significantly out of whack from my AA.
__________________
Ko'olau's Law -
Anything which can be used can be misused. Anything which can be misused will be.
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06-05-2023, 06:35 AM
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#14
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Feb 2022
Posts: 95
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Quote:
Originally Posted by dobig
If you were only 10% in equities right now because you listened to all the brilliant talking heads ...
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Don't let them fool you - there are no brilliant talking heads.
As others have said, decide what % of equities you are comfortable with and just stick to that.
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06-05-2023, 07:01 AM
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#15
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Aug 2013
Location: Lost
Posts: 9,825
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I'm in the "won the game" camp and am very happy with my fixed income returns these days. I'm coming up on my 1 yr anniversary of selling all my equities in my cash and IRA accounts and have really enjoyed not playing the game.
In my 70+ years (~50 years trading) I've learned I'm not a market timer and I don't care for buying and holding equities with all the ups and downs. I like the steady and known return rates of my fixed income holdings. Sure, it's doesn't keep up with inflation but I'm actually pretty close and that is all I need, "at this point". Unless inflation goes into double digits for a decade or more, and fixed income doesn't stay close, I'm set.
So no FOMO here.
__________________
I don't know how to act my age since I've never been this old before.
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06-05-2023, 07:01 AM
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#16
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Leeward Oahu
Posts: 16,017
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Taco
Don't let them fool you - there are no brilliant talking heads.
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If "brilliant" means good earners, I would guess most of the talking heads are brilliant. And, brilliant doesn't mean you know anything about your subject (which is what I think we see in the talking heads sometimes.)
__________________
Ko'olau's Law -
Anything which can be used can be misused. Anything which can be misused will be.
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06-05-2023, 09:37 AM
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#17
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Recycles dryer sheets
Join Date: Aug 2020
Location: GUYS MILLS
Posts: 136
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Car-Guy
I'm in the "won the game" camp and am very happy with my fixed income returns these days. I'm coming up on my 1 yr anniversary of selling all my equities in my cash and IRA accounts and have really enjoyed not playing the game.
In my 70+ years (~50 years trading) I've learned I'm not a market timer and I don't care for buying and holding equities with all the ups and downs. I like the steady and known return rates of my fixed income holdings. Sure, it's doesn't keep up with inflation but I'm actually pretty close and that is all I need, "at this point". Unless inflation goes into double digits for a decade or more, and fixed income doesn't stay close, I'm set.
So no FOMO here.
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You don't miss the butterflies in your stomache during a downturn?
I've been reading your posts on the Golden Period and Treasuries and Bonds threads and you and many others have helped guide me on a good portion of my current fixed income. And you know what? I'm somewhere around 5.35% total yield, sleep well at night and the only way I can lose is if I sell some of my longer duration I've locked in if rates continue going up.
Thank you for the sanity check. No need to be chasing right now especially when our fixed income should break 6 figures later next year.
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06-05-2023, 09:50 AM
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#18
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Full time employment: Posting here.
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 716
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Car-Guy
I'm in the "won the game" camp and am very happy with my fixed income returns these days. I'm coming up on my 1 yr anniversary of selling all my equities in my cash and IRA accounts and have really enjoyed not playing the game.
In my 70+ years (~50 years trading) I've learned I'm not a market timer and I don't care for buying and holding equities with all the ups and downs. I like the steady and known return rates of my fixed income holdings. Sure, it's doesn't keep up with inflation but I'm actually pretty close and that is all I need, "at this point". Unless inflation goes into double digits for a decade or more, and fixed income doesn't stay close, I'm set.
So no FOMO here.
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+100
Since I retired 4 1/2 years ago my portfolio today being 100% fixed income is providing way more $ than I need. I have won the game.
The only question I have is when should I start collecting Social Security.   Just kidding.
__________________
you interpret daily life according to your ideas of what is possible or not possible - Seth Speaks
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06-05-2023, 10:01 AM
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#19
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Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
Join Date: Dec 2008
Location: On a hill in the Pine Barrens
Posts: 9,076
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You have time to move back to more in equities.
As most say, you need an allocation you can stick with.
Let's say your target is 50%, and you have to move 40% (from 10% to 50% overall) of your investments. You can determine what would feel right for you. Me? I'd take 1-2 years to do it. DCA or something. As a model, 2% per month for 20 months.
In a Rollover account I've been doing similar. But the idea that the money fund makes almost 5% with no angst on my part, is kinda like a drug habit.
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06-05-2023, 10:11 AM
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#20
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Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
Join Date: Dec 2016
Posts: 1,086
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Really depends on what your goals are. Do you need growth to meet them?
If you do, then heavy equity exposure is what you want. If you can mentally handle the volatility is a big consideration though.
__________________
Retired 1/6/2017 at 50 years old
Immensely grateful
“The most important quality for an investor is temperament, not intellect.”—Warren Buffett
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