elindholm
edited for content
The least I did was provide a YouTube video.
Serious question: Are you aware that anyone can create and upload a YouTube video?
The least I did was provide a YouTube video.
Not really a serious question IMO. Nonetheless, I'll bite.Serious question: Are you aware that anyone can create and upload a YouTube video?
Inverted yield curve is still the elephant right now IMO. Looks like we could be getting a resteeepening here soon. Lower short term rates and higher long end. This dynamic could easily change the Feds mind by next month. But that would likely be at the expense of lower asset prices. But, that's a lot of unknowns ATM. It will be an interesting summer in the markets. That much I know.Looks like you're going to be good on your CDs for a bit @Russ Smith. Main take aways from FOMC. I'm pretty sure we're going to see at least 25 BP in July now too from JPow's press conference.
- No rate hike increase this month
- Rate cuts are unlikely in 2023
- FED goal remains 2% inflation
- FED signals possible rate increases this year
- Two rate hikes with .25bps expected by FED this year
Looks like you're going to be good on your CDs for a bit @Russ Smith. Main take aways from FOMC. I'm pretty sure we're going to see at least 25 BP in July now too from JPow's press conference.
- No rate hike increase this month
- Rate cuts are unlikely in 2023
- FED goal remains 2% inflation
- FED signals possible rate increases this year
- Two rate hikes with .25bps expected by FED this year
Yeah, I was a kid, and I golfed with seniors during that time. I remember they were always talking about how much money they were making. My dad was always griping about how much money he was losing. That was my first introduction to economics. High rates are bad for borrowing, which my dad had to do to support a family, by having car loans, bought a house, etc. If you are saving, the high rates are great! So all the retired folks I was golfing with loved those high rates!A crazy world. My "introduction" into saving money was in HS with huge inflation under Ford and then Carter. I used CD's to save enough money to buy my first car, used VW rabbit.
I eventually sold that to my friend and bought a Mustang. I couldn't get a loan, no credit history so I did the stupid thing while changing jobs and cashed in my first 401K and took the penalty and bought the car in cash. 22 so 150 a month in insurance until I turned 25. Made literally every mistake known to mankind on that and didn't even get to build credit because I paid cash for the car. I thought I was so smart the guys at the dealership were trying to tell me dude we can finance you(I had applied at my credit union and been rejected) and I thought no I'm not falling for that.
But I learned my lesson, and have been saving ever since. and now although CD's aren't close to that now, as I'm moving into an eventual retirement I'm using CD's as a safe vehicle to save again
The longer we stay massively inverted on the yield curve the more damage is being done...The S&P earnings yield, corporate bonds, and t-bills are all offering the same yield of 5.3% which means a medium risk, low risk, and no risk asset is offering the exact same yield. Whoa.
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Questions on brokered CD's. I understand they're callable so even though the term says 12 months you aren't guaranteed that. I assume it's "best" to buy a CD that has a later callable date? For example right now I see this on Vanguard, 5.55% for JP Morgan Chase for 12 months but says callable 9/23, and then 5.5% also by JP Morgan, but it's callable 12/23.
So is it safe to assume the 5.5 one is "better" because the callable date is further out?
Since CDs are supposed to be conservative investments, I'd focus on the guaranteed dollar figure of appreciation. If you get one today with a nominal 5.55 APR and it's called on 9/23, you're walking away with maybe 1%. At the same time, you're assuming the risk of having your money trapped if interest rates rise. So it's a win-win for the bank.
Unless the yields are really tempting, I don't see any advantage to callable CDs over a money market. FDRXX has a trailing 7-day APR of 4.77%, giving you full flexibility for a fairly trivial reduction in interest rate.
Questions on brokered CD's. I understand they're callable so even though the term says 12 months you aren't guaranteed that. I assume it's "best" to buy a CD that has a later callable date? For example right now I see this on Vanguard, 5.55% for JP Morgan Chase for 12 months but says callable 9/23, and then 5.5% also by JP Morgan, but it's callable 12/23.
So is it safe to assume the 5.5 one is "better" because the callable date is further out?
I have my Vanguard set up now so I can buy other things I was thinking brokered CD or money market. Turns out money market funds are not FDIC insured, money marke ACCOUNTS are but not funds, so I am looking at brokered CD's now. I had a brokered CD in my Fidelity but I wasn't even concerned with callable then.
There's a 6 month with Goldman Sachs paying 5% no callable date because it's only 6 months. ALl the higher rates in 6 months are banks I've never heard of. 9 months Again JP Morgan has a good one 5.4% but it's callable in September so not guaranteed. I assume if rates start to come down that's when they'd call them?
Welcome news after T got crushed yesterday on the WSJ report of a potentially serious lead contamination liability.SCHW taking off, way to go Folster!
Yeah T has been an absolute disaster. Glad I got out when I did, not that VZ, which I switched into, has been a whole lot better.Welcome news after T got crushed yesterday on the WSJ report of a potentially serious lead contamination liability.
They should have an income target date fund on there that is set for retirement income. Like a 2025/2030 fund. They will naturally have a more balanced bond/stock portfolio. 60/40 ish at the very least.Geez, my 401K sucks! Last couple companies the offerings for investments are caca. So with the market so hot, I wanted to move some funds out of the market, maybe buy bonds, REITs, diversify out of my stock exposure. So they have no bonds, or bond index funds. REITs, good luck with that. They have a bunch of target date funds, that guess what, mostly invested in the market! So I looked at a couple, and they mirror the S&P 500 fund I am in now almost exactly, except not as much yield. Also, they have higher expense ratios. Great! LOL! I am still stuck in my S&P500.
I looked at the chart for the targeted one, and they let you compare to S&P 500 chart, and the S&P 500 has higher highs, and they both bottom out to the exact same lows! There's no smoothing of results by the targeted one. I am thinking if they both hit the same lows, why change? Plus the targeted is 6X the expense.They should have an income target date fund on there that is set for retirement income. Like a 2025/2030 fund. They will naturally have a more balanced bond/stock portfolio. 60/40 ish at the very least.
If not, that does suck and is ridiculous.
If the point is to diversify and take some risk off, then it's going to protect you, relatively, in the case of any significant downturn. You won't mind that expense ratio if you lose only half of what the SPX does during that timeframe. Treasuries especially will be a useful addition when the fed cuts IMO. (Which I believe is close)I looked at the chart for the targeted one, and they let you compare to S&P 500 chart, and the S&P 500 has higher highs, and they both bottom out to the exact same lows! There's no smoothing of results by the targeted one. I am thinking if they both hit the same lows, why change? Plus the targeted is 6X the expense.
I know, but when you put the S&P chart over the one with treasuries in it, somehow they mirror the S&P 500 chart, ESPECIALLY in the downturns! IDK, how they managed that! There's no apparent diversity.If the point is to diversify and take some risk off, then it's going to protect you, relatively, in the case of any significant downturn. You won't mind that expense ratio if you lose only half of what the SPX does during that timeframe. Treasuries especially will be a useful addition when the fed cuts IMO. (Which I believe is close)
Good luck.
Be really careful with REITs right now. That's an asset class that really scares me with what's going on in commercial real estate.Geez, my 401K sucks! Last couple companies the offerings for investments are caca. So with the market so hot, I wanted to move some funds out of the market, maybe buy bonds, REITs, diversify out of my stock exposure. So they have no bonds, or bond index funds. REITs, good luck with that. They have a bunch of target date funds, that guess what, mostly invested in the market! So I looked at a couple, and they mirror the S&P 500 fund I am in now almost exactly, except not as much yield. Also, they have higher expense ratios. Great! LOL! I am still stuck in my S&P500.
I was looking into them, there's two main types, actual buildings and land based ones, and then mortgage ones that do mostly mortgages backed securities. So there's scariness in both types. The mortgage ones running double digits right now. There's one I looked at with Vanguard that does a lot of houses versus commercial. I am thinking long term I want ETFs that are stocks, bonds, and real estate. Thinking I will buy when any of these sectors are undervalued, to kinda diversify and rebalance over time. I opened a Roth IRA, and when I start working again, I may just us that to invest going forward. Gotta get some tax free appreciation of my investing funds!Be really careful with REITs right now. That's an asset class that really scares me with what's going on in commercial real estate.