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Which of these should be in my 401k? |
I'm in my early twenties, and looking to get myself ready for a comfortable retirement early with my company's 401k. Which of the following options should I put money into, and what percentages would you suggest? As the former leader of this country might say, define comfortable. Your key advantage is that you have several years' head start on your goal, regardless of what you consider a comfortable lifestyle to be. If you play your cards right, you can be a multi-millionaire by the time you are 60 or 70. With that said, I join the entrant who suggested you consider a total plan, to include a Roth IRA. It is unfortunate that the catalog of funds in your 401(k) are substandard. That's not to say that you will not do well with them. I am suggesting that you build a total retirement plan to include other investment vehicles. Your tolerance for risk should not be of importance (over the next 3-5 years) while you learn to invest from experience. Assuming your monthly contributions will be small to start, I recommend a simple allocation percentage of 60/40 in the Laudus International Fund and Vanguard 500 Index Fund. Between these two vehicles, you will be extremely diversified. Additionally, you will learn more from these two markets if you study them for 12 months or longer. Depends on how old you are. Check fidelity's 401k website to get recommendations on the aggressiveness you should take at different ages. Being in the early 20's means you have a lot of time which means you should put more into growth. You can check them all out yourself on morningstar.com Put your money in all of them. The more diversified your portfolio, the less likely you are to lose money, and the more likely you are to earn it. totally depends upon your risk level. You should at the very least have Int'l , mid-cap, larg cap blend and value, Bonds, and Cash. The more risk you are willing to take the lower the percentage in the bonds and cash. By diversifying to that extent you are taking the peaks off your returns but you're also filling in the valleys. So long as the overall return is still anticipated on being in the 10%-11% range you will do more than ok regardless of when you retire. don't just stick your money in all of them, at 20 or so you dont need government bonds or the stable value fund, and without looking into the others too much if you do all the others you wont need the 500 index fund, you would already have a lot of large cap companies, plus the mid cap With the options given, I would suggest putting 100% in the Vanguard 500 Index. It's a highly diversified fund and has a great 30 year record. It has both growth and value stocks, but not small stocks. However, not everybody can stand the volatility of a 100% stock portfolio. Take the quiz below and see what percent you want in Stocks Vs Other Assets. Whew! Hard to investigate these when you go by name instead of symbol ... but just by type you could go with 30% in the large-cap blend and 30% in the moderate allocation/balanced ( those are your slow growing, stable, safety funds) That is what I hate about 401k plans--very limited choice and rather bland at that. Of course it does beat 100% invested in company stock. With no better choices I have 2nd DeadDown... but I don't particularly like it. Hi, i suggest a great site with plenty of Issues related to your Investing and everything around it. it also provide clear and accurate answer to many common questions. |
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