DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

Threads will be shown in descending order for the remainder of this session. To permanently display posts in this order, adjust your preferences.
DPChallenge Forums >> General Discussion >> How's your 401K doing?
Pages:  
Showing posts 1 - 25 of 84, descending (reverse)
AuthorThread
10/15/2008 06:33:17 PM · #1
Originally posted by levyj413:

Originally posted by kenskid:

Right...

If you moved your 401 money to the "safe area" a month ago, you are way ahead of the game.

If you time in right and jump back in and the market goes up 10% then you are way ahead of everyone else who simply "let it ride".


Those are huge "ifs." Go read the article I posted a while back. If you miss only a few of the best days across a period of years, you lose a huge percentage of gain.

Maybe Mick has the magic touch. If so, he'll be extremely rich. But thinking you can time the market when pretty much every expert says you can't is a dangerous bet.

Actually, they're pretty small "ifs" because that is exactly what I've done. I moved the entire balance of my old 401K into a guaranteed interest account almost two months ago. It's a sizable balance too because I've been making maximum contributions to the account for more than ten years and it's performed quite well over the years.

The entire balance of my new 401K is also in a guaranteed interest account. The balance from my old 401K is currently in the process of being rolled over to my new 401K. I probably should have rolled it into an IRA because that would give me more investment options, but I can always do that later. I'm still waiting for the rollover to hit my new 401K account. When it does, hopefully I'll be able to buy into some good investments at discount prices. Who knows, maybe I will get rich. I certainly expect to get at least a little richer. :D

The point, as I think others have pointed out, is that depressed markets are not necessarily bad news for investors. For smart investors, they can be opportunities for growth. And there's little or no gain to be had anywhere without some amount of risk.

As I said before, I'm not talking about bouncing around, constantly chasing the highest return. That is a low-percentage strategy, as most of the experts will tell you. However, "letting it ride" isn't necessarily the best strategy either. Something like 80% of 401K investors actually make less than 6% return on their investment over the life of their 401K. That's poor performance compared to the average for most professionally managed portfolios. Heck, even many amateurs do better than that. Most of the 20% of 401K investors that earn better returns use professionals to manage their investments. Why do you think they perform so much better, often averaging 15% or more? Do you think they just "let it ride" and hope for the best?


10/15/2008 04:53:10 PM · #2
Originally posted by DrAchoo:

Originally posted by levyj413:

Dow gained 11% today. I sure hope no one missed it because they'd pulled everything out and put it under their mattress.


Don't go thinking it's all roses again. My guess is tomorrow brings a 4-6% selloff and then the real question is what does it do the rest of the week.


Hmmm, well, I was off by one day and another 3-5%... :(
10/14/2008 03:05:44 PM · #3
Originally posted by DrAchoo:

Originally posted by levyj413:

Dow gained 11% today. I sure hope no one missed it because they'd pulled everything out and put it under their mattress.


Don't go thinking it's all roses again. My guess is tomorrow brings a 4-6% selloff and then the real question is what does it do the rest of the week.


Oh, I think I missed making my point by being too brief. I agree - the markets will continue to go up and down quite a bit in the short term. It's down some today, for example.

I didn't mean to say "everything's roses again," I meant to re-emphasize that you can't know when it'll go up or down, and by pulling out after it drops, you're quite likely to miss when it goes up.

Ultimately, it comes down to what you're shooting for (not you, DrAchoo, but the generic "you"). If the goal is absolute tip-top gain, then give market timing a shot. Who knows, you might get lucky. But if your goal is decent wealth in the long run, then invest a regular amount over decades and ignore short-term shifts.

I call my strategy "enough." I'm not shooting for megamillions. But with reasonable assumptions, like 8% market gain over decades, I'm going to have a whole lot of money when I retire in 20 years.

This strategy also has a side emotional benefit: I'm not getting ulcers as the market plummets.
10/14/2008 03:00:00 PM · #4
Originally posted by kenskid:

Right...

If you moved your 401 money to the "safe area" a month ago, you are way ahead of the game.

If you time in right and jump back in and the market goes up 10% then you are way ahead of everyone else who simply "let it ride".


Those are huge "ifs." Go read the article I posted a while back. If you miss only a few of the best days across a period of years, you lose a huge percentage of gain.

Maybe Mick has the magic touch. If so, he'll be extremely rich. But thinking you can time the market when pretty much every expert says you can't is a dangerous bet.

Message edited by author 2008-10-14 15:00:16.
10/13/2008 09:50:14 PM · #5
Right...

If you moved your 401 money to the "safe area" a month ago, you are way ahead of the game.

If you time in right and jump back in and the market goes up 10% then you are way ahead of everyone else who simply "let it ride".

Originally posted by Mick:

Let's say you own 1000 shares of a fund. Let's call it the SA30 fund. Each share of SA30 is worth $1.00. So, the total value of your shares is $1,000.00.

You see the market begin a dive, so you decide to move your investment from SA30 and put it in a safer fund called SA14. The SA14 fund has a long track record of maximizing interest earnings while maintaining principal. You no longer own any shares of SA30, but your money is safe and is even earning between 2% and 5% interest. At the same time, the value of shares in SA30 are steadily loosing their value as the market spirals downward.

Eventually, the share price of the SA30 fund is down to half of it's original price. But, the market is starting to recover, so you decide to buy back into SA30. During this time, your money in the safe SA14 fund has earned 3%, so you now have $1,030.00 to spend on shares in the SA30 fund.

So you buy back into SA30 at the lower price of $0.50 per share, and you now own 2060 shares of SA30. When the market eventually recovers and the value of an SA30 share is back to where it was originally, then the total value of your SA30 investment is $2,030.00. In other words, you more than doubled your money.

If you let your SA30 shares sit there throughout the market decline and recovery, you haven't lost anything. Then again you haven't gained anything either.

Right or wrong? Impossible? Can't get there from here?

10/13/2008 09:14:41 PM · #6
Originally posted by bassbone:

A one question quiz for you...

So if the market drops 10% one day and then goes up 10% the next, how did the market do? Are we back to where we started?


We are not. The markets are roughly 1% lower than they were when they started.
10/13/2008 08:54:00 PM · #7
Let's say you own 1000 shares of a fund. Let's call it the SA30 fund. Each share of SA30 is worth $1.00. So, the total value of your shares is $1,000.00.

You see the market begin a dive, so you decide to move your investment from SA30 and put it in a safer fund called SA14. The SA14 fund has a long track record of maximizing interest earnings while maintaining principal. You no longer own any shares of SA30, but your money is safe and is even earning between 2% and 5% interest. At the same time, the value of shares in SA30 are steadily loosing their value as the market spirals downward.

Eventually, the share price of the SA30 fund is down to half of it's original price. But, the market is starting to recover, so you decide to buy back into SA30. During this time, your money in the safe SA14 fund has earned 3%, so you now have $1,030.00 to spend on shares in the SA30 fund.

So you buy back into SA30 at the lower price of $0.50 per share, and you now own 2060 shares of SA30. When the market eventually recovers and the value of an SA30 share is back to where it was originally, then the total value of your SA30 investment is $2,030.00. In other words, you more than doubled your money.

If you let your SA30 shares sit there throughout the market decline and recovery, you haven't lost anything. Then again you haven't gained anything either.

Right or wrong? Impossible? Can't get there from here?

10/13/2008 07:57:57 PM · #8
Originally posted by bassbone:

A one question quiz for you...

So if the market drops 10% one day and then goes up 10% the next, how did the market do? Are we back to where we started?


If you buy on a regular basis, regardless of what the market is doing ... chances are, you bought while it was down and now you're 10% ahead.

If, instead, you were watching the market and bailed out when the market dropped ... you're now 10% down with no way to get back up (without a "real loss") unless the market dips LOWER than the point at which you sold.

Buy, buy, buy... it's the only way to keep it going up. :)


10/13/2008 07:45:36 PM · #9
A one question quiz for you...

So if the market drops 10% one day and then goes up 10% the next, how did the market do? Are we back to where we started?
10/13/2008 07:38:24 PM · #10
Originally posted by cpanaioti:

The market is going to be full of speculators for the next while. If you can wait it out, just sit back and ignore the ride. Selling is a panic reaction. If you're in good stocks then they will recover,....., eventually.


That's right. The Crash of 1929 recovered...in 1954. :(
10/13/2008 06:28:37 PM · #11
The market is going to be full of speculators for the next while. If you can wait it out, just sit back and ignore the ride. Selling is a panic reaction. If you're in good stocks then they will recover,....., eventually.
10/13/2008 06:25:54 PM · #12
Originally posted by levyj413:

Dow gained 11% today. I sure hope no one missed it because they'd pulled everything out and put it under their mattress.


Don't go thinking it's all roses again. My guess is tomorrow brings a 4-6% selloff and then the real question is what does it do the rest of the week.
10/13/2008 06:14:39 PM · #13
Dow gained 11% today. I sure hope no one missed it because they'd pulled everything out and put it under their mattress.
10/11/2008 05:45:13 PM · #14
Originally posted by Jutilda:

I'm not even looking. I figure it'll rebound eventually, since now is the time to buy all of those fallen stocks CHEAP!!


AMEN! If possible, I'm going to increase my contributions for now...
10/11/2008 03:44:22 PM · #15
I'm not even looking. I figure it'll rebound eventually, since now is the time to buy all of those fallen stocks CHEAP!!
10/11/2008 11:07:29 AM · #16
EDIT: Sorry... I calculated wrong. Since 3/1/04 I am up 44% on every dollar I contributed out of my paycheck.

Stay positive especially if you're 10+ years from retirement.

I checked my 401 and I am down 30% for the year HOWEVER:

When I look at what I actually contributed DIRECTLY OUT OF MY PAYCHECK I find that overall, since starting in 2004 I am UP 33%.

So even with last week's sprial I have still earned $33 on every $100 I invested out of my pocket since 2004.

I'm sure if you guys do the math you'll find your 401 is likely up also.

Originally posted by bergiekat:

Well, my YTD earnings is (-37.7%)for my work account.
Luckily, the previous job laid me off...I was allowed to roll my 401K into an investment account and it helped me get rid of heavy GE stocks. (They hadn't gone up in value since Immelt took over) and those haven't decreased quite as bad as my account at work. It's like dumping money into a black hole...and I don't make that much to start with!


Message edited by author 2008-10-11 11:24:07.
10/11/2008 09:53:47 AM · #17
Well, my YTD earnings is (-37.7%)for my work account.
Luckily, the previous job laid me off...I was allowed to roll my 401K into an investment account and it helped me get rid of heavy GE stocks. (They hadn't gone up in value since Immelt took over) and those haven't decreased quite as bad as my account at work. It's like dumping money into a black hole...and I don't make that much to start with!

Message edited by author 2008-10-11 09:56:02.
10/11/2008 09:32:18 AM · #18
Better look into JIMMY CARTER and Bill Clinton and the pressure ACORN put on banks to loan FAIRLY to everyone including people who could never pay back a loan.

Started with the Community Reinvestment Act.

Originally posted by jtf6agent:

Umm... correct me if I'm wrong here but didn't George Bush pick his cabinet and place his people in offices that control our gov't?? Yes I do believe that's how it works so I'll say again... Thank you George Bush.

10/11/2008 09:30:11 AM · #19
Now is the time to invest.

Why do "every day people" insist on BUYING HIGH !?!?

Originally posted by Katmystiry:

What 401k? The government ate it all up! OK .. j/k ... We've only lost about $2k as of the end of September .. I do NOT plan to make a major investment into it this year (like we did last year) until things stabilize a bit. Call me crazy but cash in the mattress is better than cash lost in investments (I'm not keeping in the mattress but you catch my drift).

10/11/2008 01:20:55 AM · #20
What 401k? The government ate it all up! OK .. j/k ... We've only lost about $2k as of the end of September .. I do NOT plan to make a major investment into it this year (like we did last year) until things stabilize a bit. Call me crazy but cash in the mattress is better than cash lost in investments (I'm not keeping in the mattress but you catch my drift).
10/10/2008 11:45:23 PM · #21
Originally posted by dwterry:

Understanding Subprime Mortgage Loans


Would've been 100 x better without the racist crap. But aside from that, it's scarily accurate.
10/10/2008 10:23:48 PM · #22
www.trustetc.com self directed IRA's Stop losing money in the market - buy real property in your IRA - and if you call - ask for Keith or "Lonz" hehehe.
10/10/2008 10:15:57 PM · #23
Originally posted by dwterry:

Understanding Subprime Mortgage Loans


lol...Nice video
10/10/2008 09:06:22 PM · #24
Understanding Subprime Mortgage Loans
10/10/2008 02:38:47 AM · #25
I think the people that control government, are the same people who put ALL these criminals in office. YOU!! Yes, YOU. The voters.
NOW....let's all embrace SOCIALISM! YEEHHAAAAAW! That is where we are heading, my friends. SO don't worry about your 401k...the gubment shall redistribute it appropriately. You can believe them.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 04/25/2024 04:35:27 AM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Prints! - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2024 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 04/25/2024 04:35:27 AM EDT.