SaggyWoman
Active Member
Since the economic downturn and now upswing, did you change any of the placements of your retirement dollars? If so, how? If not, why?
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I've been buying solid bluechips and growth funds like they're going out of style. I'm as aggressive as they come. I do have some bond funds to even out my riskier international stocks/funds, but I'm well over 85% in equities.Since the economic downturn and now upswing, did you change any of the placements of your retirement dollars? If so, how? If not, why?
Yes, I INCREASED my contributions. This is a GREAT time to buy. Prices will probably never be this low again!!Since the economic downturn and now upswing, did you change any of the placements of your retirement dollars? If so, how? If not, why?
I am running contrary to everyone here. My 401K is with the federal government called the TSP. I was heavily in the market until late 07 when I moved to 100% government treasuries, and have been there since. It pays between 3.5 and 4%. I retired last Friday, and plan to keep it there until the market is growing because of private business, not a artifical, government induced rally.Since the economic downturn and now upswing, did you change any of the placements of your retirement dollars? If so, how? If not, why?
I've been buying solid bluechips and growth funds like they're going out of style. I'm as aggressive as they come. I do have some bond funds to even out my riskier international stocks/funds, but I'm well over 85% in equities.
You should've been more conservative well before 2007. Now that you're in retirement, trying to grow your money instead of guarding your money will only produce a catastrophe. You can find conservative investments that would give you better ROI than 3.5%. Annuities beat that. Some bond funds would, too.I am running contrary to everyone here. My 401K is with the federal government called the TSP. I was heavily in the market until late 07 when I moved to 100% government treasuries, and have been there since. It pays between 3.5 and 4%. I retired last Friday, and plan to keep it there until the market is growing because of private business, not a artifical, government induced rally.
Commodities are far too volatile for my liking for my retirement dollars.Going forward my changes deal more with a higher allocation to commodities than with stocks, bonds, or cash. I am doing this because I believe we are in for a whopper of an inflationary period.