How Do You Invest?
I had a lot of discussions with my friends in tech about their investing habits. It seems like most of them lack any trust in traditional financial advisers and just pick stocks/index funds/crypto themselves.
So, I'm curious, is this attitude systemic and prevalent among us?
How do you pick your investment vehicles?
4 comments
[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 23.2 ms ] threadI did work in investment finance for ~20Y and I am aware that even the top people in the field don't have some secret book of predictions to make certain cash.
Because I worked in finance I basically wasn't allowed to have many bare stocks, so I'm in the habit of using funds.
I do take account of which vehicles my broker thinks are among the best, though they can be very wrong too.
I attempt to have a decent geographic spread, though have most where I think I'll be living/retiring so most likely to have results correlate reasonably with the economic environment that I'm in.
But I'm likely doing it all wrong, of course, and this is most definitely not advice for you from me.
This is interesting - why do you take this approach? (If you don't mind sharing)
I'm hedged in so far as ~50% is geographically in my area, and the rest well spread.
I also have some spread over asset classes (eg stocks vs bonds).
As I get closer to retirement, and my stock funds increase faster than my bond funds, I rebalance by just buying more bonds when I invest new money.
I'm not a gambler. I want to beat inflation for the bulk of my hard earned money, and have some in the market to take advantage of America's great economy. The other good benefit of bonds is that you can use it as a higher interest savings account, since they are pretty stable.