Home Discord Chat
Go Back   ChiefsPlanet > Nzoner's Game Room
Register FAQDonate Members List Calendar

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 06-27-2016, 11:23 AM  
DaFace DaFace is offline
Kind of a mod
 
DaFace's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Donkey Land
Casino cash: $146899
Investing megathread extravaganza

A place to talk about investing stuff.

Last edited by DaFace; 02-19-2021 at 06:35 PM..
Posts: 52,519
DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.DaFace is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2022, 06:47 PM   #13186
HonestChieffan HonestChieffan is offline
Seeking the Truth daily
 
HonestChieffan's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: In the Country in MO
Casino cash: $414309
Quote:
Originally Posted by Buehler445 View Post
My FIL came to me in 2015 and asked me what I thought he should do with some money. Of course this was out of the blue with no associated detail. So I was like, "uhhh... What money are we talking about?"

Oh back in the 80's I put some money in a 15% CD and it's coming out now...

My ****ing brain exploded all over my damned basement.

WTF? 15%? If anyone took a picture of my face I'm sure it'd be a meme today.

I'm trying to remember. I think I told him to pay off all debt.... Don't have any... Well, I'd stick it in an ETF.

So I had to ask him how the hell he got a CD a 15%. Like ****ing seriously. He said, yeah, I scraped together every nickel I could scrounge and stuffed it in there. I needed the money (obviously he didn't - see the no debt comment), but I didn't figure I could get 15% on the farm (I think he did but he isn't doing any math and I didn't argue).

15%.....

I was living in Denver, my son was a baby (41 now) And I got a check from the company for moving expenses a couple months before. I called the broker I had an account with and said I had a few grand to sock away. He said call your bank...I stoped at bank that afternoon and got a 12 mo CD for 16.5%

That year, operating loans from Farm credit hit a max of 22% for a few days, most operating loans were 15-17%

Jimmy Carter was President.
__________________
"We read books for knowledge; We read the Bible for wisdom!"
Posts: 53,899
HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.HonestChieffan is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2022, 07:41 PM   #13187
Rain Man Rain Man is offline
Seize life. Be an ermine.
 
Rain Man's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
Casino cash: $1438491
VARSITY
Quote:
Originally Posted by Buehler445 View Post
My FIL came to me in 2015 and asked me what I thought he should do with some money. Of course this was out of the blue with no associated detail. So I was like, "uhhh... What money are we talking about?"

Oh back in the 80's I put some money in a 15% CD and it's coming out now...

My ****ing brain exploded all over my damned basement.

WTF? 15%? If anyone took a picture of my face I'm sure it'd be a meme today.

I'm trying to remember. I think I told him to pay off all debt.... Don't have any... Well, I'd stick it in an ETF.

So I had to ask him how the hell he got a CD a 15%. Like ****ing seriously. He said, yeah, I scraped together every nickel I could scrounge and stuffed it in there. I needed the money (obviously he didn't - see the no debt comment), but I didn't figure I could get 15% on the farm (I think he did but he isn't doing any math and I didn't argue).

15%.....

Times of change are times of opportunity. In all seriousness, it seems like a 99.9 percent winner to buy some long-term CDs now if we can get 5 percent or more. It seems like the Fed is really intent on getting inflation back down to 2 percent or so. Right?
__________________
Active fan of the greatest team in NFL history.
Posts: 143,134
Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2022, 08:28 PM   #13188
Buehler445 Buehler445 is offline
Supporter
 
Buehler445's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
Casino cash: $434734
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rain Man View Post
Times of change are times of opportunity. In all seriousness, it seems like a 99.9 percent winner to buy some long-term CDs now if we can get 5 percent or more. It seems like the Fed is really intent on getting inflation back down to 2 percent or so. Right?
Not currently.

From what I've read they're planning on raising it again. I saw a headline (admittedly didn't read the article) that inflation is over and the fed is dumb for continuing to raise it.

I read somewhere that the Fed Chairman like worships at the alter of Volker, so who knows.
Posts: 58,018
Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2022, 11:21 PM   #13189
BWillie BWillie is online now
The End of All Your Dreams
 
BWillie's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2006
Casino cash: $561241
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rain Man View Post
Times of change are times of opportunity. In all seriousness, it seems like a 99.9 percent winner to buy some long-term CDs now if we can get 5 percent or more. It seems like the Fed is really intent on getting inflation back down to 2 percent or so. Right?
Where can I get 5%?
Posts: 49,061
BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-22-2022, 11:23 PM   #13190
Buehler445 Buehler445 is offline
Supporter
 
Buehler445's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Scott City KS
Casino cash: $434734
Quote:
Originally Posted by BWillie View Post
Where can I get 5%?
One of my local banks has a MMSA at I think 4.

Typically if you lock it up longer they'll give you a higher rate. Asking about multi-year CDs and it can probably get you there.
Posts: 58,018
Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.Buehler445 is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 12:04 PM   #13191
myselff77 myselff77 is online now
Starter
 

Join Date: Aug 2019
Casino cash: $2490000
Anyone been tucking any money into I bonds the last year?
Posts: 557
myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 12:11 PM   #13192
ChiefChoop ChiefChoop is offline
Banned
 

Join Date: Sep 2022
Casino cash: $-199500
Quote:
Originally Posted by myselff77 View Post
Anyone been tucking any money into I bonds the last year?
Yes
Posts: 86
ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.ChiefChoop is not part of the Right 53.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 01:34 PM   #13193
myselff77 myselff77 is online now
Starter
 

Join Date: Aug 2019
Casino cash: $2490000
Quote:
Originally Posted by lewdog View Post
This is a useful link for calculating what you'll have saved for retirement (at what age you choose) and can be used to predict how long your money may last. You can manipulate variables to see how much you should be contributing, what you plan to live on in retirement and how you'll need to adjust if you're behind your goals.

https://www.nerdwallet.com/investing...ent-calculator
I always worry I do not save enough to retirement, but whenever I play around with these calculators, it makes it appear I am in good shape. I don't think I've done anything special. I have contributed to the 401k for over 20 years beginning straight out of college. It goes to a handful of funds and I pretty much keep eyes off it. I started at 6% because of a company match to that point and would raise it a percentage or two whenever I received a raise. I now direct 18% of my salary to the 401k and opened a RothIRA two years ago.

So, I hope these calculators are correct, but I guess time will tell. Anyone willing to share percentages they direct towards retirement savings accounts?
Posts: 557
myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.myselff77 is not part of the Right 53.
Thumbs Up 2 Thumbs Down 0     Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 02:18 PM   #13194
Hog's Gone Fishin Hog's Gone Fishin is offline
Fish are scared of me
 
Hog's Gone Fishin's Avatar
 

Join Date: Nov 2001
Casino cash: $-49523
Ain't no friggin way I'd tie up money for 5% a YEAR.

Or even 50% a year

Not if you have time to trade.
Posts: 40,648
Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.Hog's Gone Fishin is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 02:36 PM   #13195
BWillie BWillie is online now
The End of All Your Dreams
 
BWillie's Avatar
 

Join Date: Apr 2006
Casino cash: $561241
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hog's Gone Fishin View Post
Ain't no friggin way I'd tie up money for 5% a YEAR.

Or even 50% a year

Not if you have time to trade.
Ya but then I have to read the wall street journal or something or pay some guy 30k a year to manage my shit...with no guarantee it will even increase. There is peace of mind in knowing you will just get it for sure.
Posts: 49,061
BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.BWillie is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 02:48 PM   #13196
Rain Man Rain Man is offline
Seize life. Be an ermine.
 
Rain Man's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
Casino cash: $1438491
VARSITY
Quote:
Originally Posted by BWillie View Post
Where can I get 5%?
I wasn't saying that you can get it now, but I think it's possible that it'll climb that high.
__________________
Active fan of the greatest team in NFL history.
Posts: 143,134
Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 02:49 PM   #13197
Rain Man Rain Man is offline
Seize life. Be an ermine.
 
Rain Man's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
Casino cash: $1438491
VARSITY
Quote:
Originally Posted by myselff77 View Post
Anyone been tucking any money into I bonds the last year?
Yeah, I'm all over that. I wish the contribution limit wasn't so low.
__________________
Active fan of the greatest team in NFL history.
Posts: 143,134
Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-23-2022, 04:29 PM   #13198
Peter Gibbons Peter Gibbons is offline
Veteran
 
Peter Gibbons's Avatar
 

Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Ohio
Casino cash: $40400
Quote:
Originally Posted by myselff77 View Post
I always worry I do not save enough to retirement, but whenever I play around with these calculators, it makes it appear I am in good shape. I don't think I've done anything special. I have contributed to the 401k for over 20 years beginning straight out of college. It goes to a handful of funds and I pretty much keep eyes off it. I started at 6% because of a company match to that point and would raise it a percentage or two whenever I received a raise. I now direct 18% of my salary to the 401k and opened a RothIRA two years ago.

So, I hope these calculators are correct, but I guess time will tell. Anyone willing to share percentages they direct towards retirement savings accounts?
Early in my career I prioritized retirement and always made a point to do 15%. It became even harder once married and kids started coming but were able to do it. Now, 30+ years later, we don’t have any debt and live frugally. We now are saving well over 60% of our income (test run for retirement). It seems unfair that we have so much surplus now and scraped by so much much when younger but youth is also wasted on the young so I guess it all works out.
Posts: 1,827
Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.Peter Gibbons is blessed with 50/50 Hindsight.
Thumbs Up 2 Thumbs Down 0     Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2022, 05:23 PM   #13199
lewdog lewdog is offline
Mod Team
 
lewdog's Avatar
 

Join Date: Sep 2011
Location: Valley of the hot as ****
Casino cash: $51900
Quote:
Originally Posted by myselff77 View Post
I always worry I do not save enough to retirement, but whenever I play around with these calculators, it makes it appear I am in good shape. I don't think I've done anything special. I have contributed to the 401k for over 20 years beginning straight out of college. It goes to a handful of funds and I pretty much keep eyes off it. I started at 6% because of a company match to that point and would raise it a percentage or two whenever I received a raise. I now direct 18% of my salary to the 401k and opened a RothIRA two years ago.

So, I hope these calculators are correct, but I guess time will tell. Anyone willing to share percentages they direct towards retirement savings accounts?
I feel the same. It's just so hard to imagine getting to a certain number and it doesn't make sense until you start running the scenarios. Starting early is key.

It sounds like you're doing great. Starting right out of college is huge and it's part of what I missed. I didn't start my career until I was 26 and then didn't start investing heavily until my early 30's, so I am a bit behind in terms of compounding interest years.

If you plan to live a similar lifestyle in retirement to your current, then 15-20% of your income should accomplish that if you give yourself decades to invest. A ROTH is huge and something I'm always doing too.

I put 15-20% of my income into retirement accounts. I just started a ROTH 401k in addition a standard ROTH IRA. I am trying to build a large tax-free investment vehicle for retirement so my taxable income in retirement can be fairly low.

I still wonder what Social Security will bring for me (or not at all!) in my retirement plan. I plan it at $0 because I don't believe in the system lasting, but if I actually do collect my calculated SS amount, I'd be golden in retirement.
Posts: 46,135
lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.lewdog is obviously part of the inner Circle.
    Reply With Quote
Old 12-24-2022, 07:02 PM   #13200
Rain Man Rain Man is offline
Seize life. Be an ermine.
 
Rain Man's Avatar
 

Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: My house
Casino cash: $1438491
VARSITY
Quote:
Originally Posted by myselff77 View Post
I always worry I do not save enough to retirement, but whenever I play around with these calculators, it makes it appear I am in good shape. I don't think I've done anything special. I have contributed to the 401k for over 20 years beginning straight out of college. It goes to a handful of funds and I pretty much keep eyes off it. I started at 6% because of a company match to that point and would raise it a percentage or two whenever I received a raise. I now direct 18% of my salary to the 401k and opened a RothIRA two years ago.

So, I hope these calculators are correct, but I guess time will tell. Anyone willing to share percentages they direct towards retirement savings accounts?
I don't trust online calculators very much. There's a lot to take into account with inflation effects and returns and spending and they're too simplistic about spending in my opinion. I eventually took the time to build my own model that accounted for everything that was specific about my household. It's become my guiding document and I update it regularly.


Quote:
Originally Posted by lewdog View Post
I feel the same. It's just so hard to imagine getting to a certain number and it doesn't make sense until you start running the scenarios. Starting early is key.

It sounds like you're doing great. Starting right out of college is huge and it's part of what I missed. I didn't start my career until I was 26 and then didn't start investing heavily until my early 30's, so I am a bit behind in terms of compounding interest years.

If you plan to live a similar lifestyle in retirement to your current, then 15-20% of your income should accomplish that if you give yourself decades to invest. A ROTH is huge and something I'm always doing too.

I put 15-20% of my income into retirement accounts. I just started a ROTH 401k in addition a standard ROTH IRA. I am trying to build a large tax-free investment vehicle for retirement so my taxable income in retirement can be fairly low.

I still wonder what Social Security will bring for me (or not at all!) in my retirement plan. I plan it at $0 because I don't believe in the system lasting, but if I actually do collect my calculated SS amount, I'd be golden in retirement.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Peter Gibbons View Post
Early in my career I prioritized retirement and always made a point to do 15%. It became even harder once married and kids started coming but were able to do it. Now, 30+ years later, we don’t have any debt and live frugally. We now are saving well over 60% of our income (test run for retirement). It seems unfair that we have so much surplus now and scraped by so much much when younger but youth is also wasted on the young so I guess it all works out.
Yeah, starting early and being consistent is a big advantage. I put money into my retirement account every single year, even after I lost my job and went back to graduate school. I always figured out a way to scrape together at least the maximum independent IRA contribution at the time. Combining that with the value of time cannot be overestimated.

For a long time I thought retirement was a fruitless endeavor. I'd make some investment returns and then the market would tank, and it seemed like my progress was painfully slow. I remember around 2001 thinking that I could never retire. But then at some point it suddenly hit critical mass and the returns got bigger, which then made the next year better, and it started rolling. It really hit home for me the first year that my investment income was higher than my earned income. By saving consistently, I had essentially created a third wage earner in my household. That was a watershed moment, and I flipped from being despondent to being optimistic over the course of just a few years.

That said, I've got my detailed financial model and I have my magic number, but the thought of switching from saving mode to spending-down-savings mode terrifies me. There are a lot of powerful variables, and if we have a bad decade in the market or if inflation goes up a lot or if I live a really long time, even my magic number won't last. That's a really scary thing to me. So my dilemma is whether I work longer, knowing that the odds are that I have enough to not need to work, or whether I retire, knowing that if something goes wrong in the economy I could be screwed. I think it would be impossible for me to save enough money to never be concerned about running out of it.
__________________
Active fan of the greatest team in NFL history.

Last edited by Rain Man; 12-24-2022 at 07:27 PM..
Posts: 143,134
Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.Rain Man is obviously part of the inner Circle.
Thumbs Up 2 Thumbs Down 0     Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump




All times are GMT -6. The time now is 09:56 PM.


This is a test for a client's site.
Fort Worth Texas Process Servers
Covering Arlington, Fort Worth, Grand Prairie and surrounding communities.
Tarrant County, Texas and Johnson County, Texas.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.