Quote:
Originally Posted by Rain Man
How old are you? Are you playing defense or offense?
I've been banging the drum for CDs for a while now. Etrade has a 10-year CD at 5.0 percent and a 5-year CD at 5.3 percent, both with small banks. I've been spreading my money around at a bunch of different banks through the CD tools at the brokerages, so I don't know that I'd put a large amount of money in any of these tiny banks, but I don't think we'll see a 5.3 CD rate again for many years, and it's almost guaranteed to beat inflation.
If you're younger and still accumulating, that might be too conservative, but if you're courting retirement, it's a good safe way to beat inflation.
As far as stocks, I always struggle to recommend stocks, because I worry that I'll recommend a stock that's up when it's too late for other people, or that I'll recommend a stock that's down and it's down for a good reason. I'll look to see what I'm more bullish on, but I really have no expertise at all other than trying to link stocks to trends in society. I really don't do in-depth analysis of stocks other than looking at growth trends.
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Thanks! I'm mid/late 40s, so kind of in a weird spot for risk. I've got a fairly large investment portfolio after years of 401k, ESPP, and RSUs, so I've got a nice nest egg going. Ideally, looking to retire as soon as reasonable, but realistically, that's likely at least 10yrs away.
CDs feel a little too conservative on that timeline, but maybe I'm not thinking about it properly. The market tear also makes me worried about a pullback, but I'd think a 10yr horizon should negate that long term. I was thinking maybe an index fund for the native diversification, but so many options on that front.
Then there's the AAPL, AMZN, MSFT, and NVDAs of the world - those always feel like good long term holds, but who knows, I'm not a great stock mind.