imported_Lothar
Diamond Member
- Aug 10, 2006
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-2.83% since inception.
I'm 100% stock for my 401k. The bond funds offered here are complete crap.
I'm 100% stock for my 401k. The bond funds offered here are complete crap.
Originally posted by: Cattlegod
Originally posted by: thepd7
Originally posted by: Chunkee
my father (retired) is down hundreds of thousands.
This baffles me. Why the hell would you keep money in stocks when you are retired? Your money should be completely liquid if you are within 5-10 years of needing it.
My Grandmother (76) did the same thing. I had no idea or I would have made her fire her financial guy years ago. She sold at the bottom a few weeks ago because she "couldn't afford to lose any more". It pisses me off just thinking about it, people are just idiots when it comes to this.
I disagree. Only the portion that he will need in the next 10 years should be in bonds. So you are saying to move everything to bonds if you retire at 55? What happens if you live to be 80? That is 25 years of growth you are missing out on.
Originally posted by: DLeRium
What I dont understand is when you guys saw the market tumble and you guys started dropping past 25% why didn't people switch out into some stable money market fund or something? -45% is going to take a while to rebuild. Sure you can talk about holding long term, but if you switched into something less risky you could've held onto an extra 15% or so?
Originally posted by: DLeRium
What I dont understand is when you guys saw the market tumble and you guys started dropping past 25% why didn't people switch out into some stable money market fund or something? -45% is going to take a while to rebuild. Sure you can talk about holding long term, but if you switched into something less risky you could've held onto an extra 15% or so?
Well one big thing was most people don't check their 401k daily. There was a good portion that didn't know how far they were in the whole until they got their quarterly statement. Major drops happened in one months time and so I could understand holding onto something and not realizing how much it was effected until you got that statement and by then it was too late.Originally posted by: DLeRium
What I dont understand is when you guys saw the market tumble and you guys started dropping past 25% why didn't people switch out into some stable money market fund or something? -45% is going to take a while to rebuild. Sure you can talk about holding long term, but if you switched into something less risky you could've held onto an extra 15% or so?
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: DLeRium
What I dont understand is when you guys saw the market tumble and you guys started dropping past 25% why didn't people switch out into some stable money market fund or something? -45% is going to take a while to rebuild. Sure you can talk about holding long term, but if you switched into something less risky you could've held onto an extra 15% or so?
Because every academic study done demonstrates that most people are poor at market timing. No one is able to do it consistently in the long run (i.e. over a period of decades). Remember, you have to guess correctly twice - you have to know when to get out to miss the bottom, and you have to know when to get back in so you don't miss out on the next big upswing.
It's better to just stick to an asset allocation strategy and leave your investments alone, or possibly buy even more during the downturns.
Originally posted by: DLeRium
What I dont understand is when you guys saw the market tumble and you guys started dropping past 25% why didn't people switch out into some stable money market fund or something? -45% is going to take a while to rebuild. Sure you can talk about holding long term, but if you switched into something less risky you could've held onto an extra 15% or so?
