Jamshyd
Bluelight Crew
^ I'd really appreciate your input in my Credit Unions thread. It's a few threads below this one
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To begin with, the original stated investment horizon was 10-years. If that is the time horizon, an IRA/ Roth IRA makes no sense as it's an investment vehicle for retirement. I presume the person posting the question is young and, if so, and you put your money in an IRA/Roth IRA and try to take it out in 10-years, you will pay a penalty to withdraw.
If the investment time horizon is retirement age, then an IRA/Roth IRA is definitely something the OP should consider. It is simply an investment vehicle, not an investment. The underlying investment(s) can be various things: stocks, bonds, mutual funds, etc.
Second, the stated total amount of investable dollars was $7k-$8k. If you had $700k-$800k to invest, then yes individual stock investing makes more sense than mutual funds...$70k-$80k, maybe...$7k-$8 - no way. Mutual funds give an investor access to a wide range of companies; anywhere from 100-200+ in many cases, and therefore spreads your company-risk across a wide range of investments. Instead of putting all of your eggs in one basket and potentially having your company tank (i.e. Enron, etc.) you spread your risk. Mutual funds make a TON of sense for people who want to invest with limited funds.
The statement, "If a company seems to offer a product or service that makes sense to you, buy it." shows a completely novice understanding of investing. There are many companies that have products or services "that make sense" or you might like... that doesn't mean they are run well for the long-term, doesn't mean their capital structure is strong, doesn't mean there are not micro or macro economic forces that may be poised to impact the company adversely, doesn't mean that there isn't a company or companies in their space that have even better products/services and are managed better. There are a LOT of factors to be considered when investing in a company...not just "gee, this company seems to offer a product/service i can understand".
Unless you view the $7k-8k as "Vegas" or Monopoly money that you don't really care about, unless you don't mind having your funds tied up in just a limited number of investments and unless you want to spend the time and effort to research a lot of companies and thoroughly understand them, their financial health, their management, their competition, etc., then invest in stocks. But if you do mind and you're investing with real dollars, then pick a couple or few good mutual funds to start off with. You can choose funds that are professionally managed and therefore will charge a percentage fee on annual basis OR you can invest in index funds that are based on the underlying stock index it's tied to and is NOT managed and therefore doesn't have the same fee structure.
FuturePig's BFF said:The statement, "If a company seems to offer a product or service that makes sense to you, buy it." shows a completely novice understanding of investing.
FuturePig's BFF said:There are a LOT of factors to be considered when investing in a company...not just "gee, this company seems to offer a product/service i can understand".
Soft money, 12b-1 fees, overtrading, market timing, and other management practices lower performance and virtually guarantee that most mutual fund returns will fall short of their benchmark, such as the S&P 500. Furthermore, for-profit mutual fund companies have a fiduciary obligation to their stockholders, not to their investors, and this relationship "inevitably resolves in favor of the bottom line."
If you look at the aggregate results of the mutual fund industry on an after-fee, after-tax basis and adjust it for survivorship bias, the probability that you are going to end up with market-beating returns is de minimis.
perhaps you feel investment bankers or investment advisors are all out to exploit poor investors but in this case, that is simply not true.
I was quoting Warren Buffet.![]()