Muse
Lifer
- Jul 11, 2001
- 39,975
- 9,646
- 136
It's the only thing I invest in except when the market is sour, then I have been parking my equity at online savings accounts, all FDIC insured and with the highest APY available. I buy shares in SPY, the S&P500 index. My RothIRA is still at TDAmeritrade (who bought the company I used to trade with), but I moved my trading account from them to E*Trade because they were (at the time) offering a higher bonus for moving funds to them... a secondary consideration, but I figured it didn't matter (trades were free at both and no maintenance fees, so WTH).You want insane easy gain like +25% annual return?
Here's a bit secretive index fund. Buy it only if you can tolerate it. It's called S&P500.
S&P 500 Index Price Calculation
S&P 500 Total Return Price Calculation
Price Based On 2021 Begin Dec 31 Close Return Jan 4 Open 3764.61 4766.18 26.605% Dec 31 Close 3756.07 4766.18 26.893%
Price Based On 2021 Begin Dec 31 Close Return Jan 4 Open 7,777.41 9,986.70 28.407% Dec 31 Close 7,759.35 9,986.70 28.705%
I suppose there are better things I could do with my cash when I'm out of the market than online savings (that's why I'm checking this thread). I mean, right now the highest APY in online savings I could find the other day was 0.70%. That was Barclays and LendingClub. The other ones are at 0.60%.
Using the _system_ I have the question is when to buy and when to sell. I've been basing that on the golden cross versus death cross signals. When the 50 day exponential moving average crosses above the 200 day exponential moving average you have a golden cross. When it crosses the other way you have the death cross. My rule is to wait 3 weeks for the crossover to hold and if it does I have my signal.
I backtested this system against the life of the SPY back about 2013 and found that using these buy/sell rules gave about a 2% advantage over just holding on through thick and thin. The average year was 10% for the index and 12% using my rules. I heard the other day that the S&P500 has yielded on average 9% since way back when, so there seems to be a 1% disparity there for some reason.