Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
1) max out 401k match
2) pay off your non tax deductible debts (ie: credit cards, car loans)
3) then have 6months of expenses saved up in bank acct for emergencies
4) THEN max out Roth
5) then max out 401k
What if you are just starting out and have a student loan with a moderate interest rate, say 6-8% variable? Would it be better to:
1. pay down that loan ASAP, and then build the emergency fund
2. build the emergency fund ASAP and then pay the loan down
3. do both simultaneously until the emergency fund is in place, and then finish paying down the loan ASAP?
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
1) max out 401k match
2) pay off your non tax deductible debts (ie: credit cards, car loans)
3) then have 6months of expenses saved up in bank acct for emergencies
4) THEN max out Roth
5) then max out 401k
What if you are just starting out and have a student loan with a moderate interest rate, say 6-8% variable? Would it be better to:
1. pay down that loan ASAP, and then build the emergency fund
2. build the emergency fund ASAP and then pay the loan down
3. do both simultaneously until the emergency fund is in place, and then finish paying down the loan ASAP?
you didnt lock in your student loan at 3.99% a couple of months ago?!(or whatever that rate is.)
the market is +10% on avg over 30 yrs. student loan at 8% is ~6% after tax deduction. pay the minimal on student loan, put the rest in emergency fund.
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
1) max out 401k match
2) pay off your non tax deductible debts (ie: credit cards, car loans)
3) then have 6months of expenses saved up in bank acct for emergencies
4) THEN max out Roth
5) then max out 401k
What if you are just starting out and have a student loan with a moderate interest rate, say 6-8% variable? Would it be better to:
1. pay down that loan ASAP, and then build the emergency fund
2. build the emergency fund ASAP and then pay the loan down
3. do both simultaneously until the emergency fund is in place, and then finish paying down the loan ASAP?
you didnt lock in your student loan at 3.99% a couple of months ago?!(or whatever that rate is.)
the market is +10% on avg over 30 yrs. student loan at 8% is ~6% after tax deduction. pay the minimal on student loan, put the rest in emergency fund.
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
Originally posted by: jaybert
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
thats not the general consensus at all...general consensus is to max out the 401k up to matching, then max out ROTH IRA, then finish maxing out 401k
$70,000 * .03 = $2,100Originally posted by: OneOfTheseDays
Right now my 401k is set to deduct 3% from my payroll annually for annual payments of ~$2100 to my 401k. I could definitely put in more than this since I'm single and have very little expenses at the moment.
I'd like to retire when I'm 70-75 if that helps.
Originally posted by: rufruf44
I have a distinct feeling that ROTH IRA/401K will be subject to tax one way or the other. There's already attempt by the donkey to do so in the past (Dick Gephardt).
For folks that lived in some states, traditional IRA might be more suitable than ROTH (Michigan for example).
Originally posted by: Jadow
Originally posted by: rufruf44
I have a distinct feeling that ROTH IRA/401K will be subject to tax one way or the other. There's already attempt by the donkey to do so in the past (Dick Gephardt).
For folks that lived in some states, traditional IRA might be more suitable than ROTH (Michigan for example).
fvcker is out of a job isn't he.
I tell you what, my deal with the govt is, I pay the taxes now, get it tax free later. They try to mess with that, I get my old duck n pheasant gun out and march on the capitol.
Originally posted by: Naustica
Don't invest. That's what Social Security is for. You should be living it up in your 20's.
Originally posted by: alrocky
No Emergency Cash
Popular Advice You Shouldn't Take
"According to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses...
Let's be honest: This is dull, unrealistic and -- I would argue -- not all that sensible. Even if you regularly sock away 10% of your after-tax income, it might take four years or so to amass six months of living expenses...
Sound bad? It gets worse. While you were building up your emergency reserve, you were likely neglecting important goals like funding your 401(k) plan, which might earn you a matching employer contribution, and saving for a house down payment.
My advice: Forget the emergency reserve. Instead, stick at least enough in your 401(k) to get the full company match. Next, fund a Roth individual retirement account. If you still have extra money to save each year, by all means stash it in conservative investments in a regular taxable account.
If you get hit with a financial emergency, tap the money in your regular taxable account first."
Originally posted by: vi_edit
Originally posted by: Jadow
Originally posted by: rufruf44
I have a distinct feeling that ROTH IRA/401K will be subject to tax one way or the other. There's already attempt by the donkey to do so in the past (Dick Gephardt).
For folks that lived in some states, traditional IRA might be more suitable than ROTH (Michigan for example).
fvcker is out of a job isn't he.
I tell you what, my deal with the govt is, I pay the taxes now, get it tax free later. They try to mess with that, I get my old duck n pheasant gun out and march on the capitol.
I think trying to vote out the Roth is the equivalent of political Sepuku. I know that it has a sunset timeline where they can revote on it, but I just don't see that happening. You are talking hundreds of billions of personal assets here.
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose
Welll...
Here's my take
1.) Fund your 401K and put your $ in the most agressive funds you can invest in. Your maximum contribution is currently $15,500 (including your employer matching for those under 50 years old)
2.) If after you calculate getting the maximum into your 401K you have some spare cash, put another $4,000/year in a Roth IRA if you qualify to contribute to a Roth (google for the yearly income limits)
At your age, you should attempt to become a multi millionaire. and you can do it.
Only 9% of people have >$250K saved up, of those over 40, 14% have $250K or more saved.
<---I'm a 14%er, and happy as hell I listened to a friend when I was in my early 30's and started seriously saving $.
I recently rolled over my orphaned 401K's into a discount broker rollover IRA and I'm having a blast making those massive stock purchases & sales.
"according to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses"Originally posted by: Azurik
Originally posted by: alrocky
No Emergency Cash
Popular Advice You Shouldn't Take
"According to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses...
Let's be honest: This is dull, unrealistic and -- I would argue -- not all that sensible. Even if you regularly sock away 10% of your after-tax income, it might take four years or so to amass six months of living expenses...
Sound bad? It gets worse. While you were building up your emergency reserve, you were likely neglecting important goals like funding your 401(k) plan, which might earn you a matching employer contribution, and saving for a house down payment.
My advice: Forget the emergency reserve. Instead, stick at least enough in your 401(k) to get the full company match. Next, fund a Roth individual retirement account. If you still have extra money to save each year, by all means stash it in conservative investments in a regular taxable account.
If you get hit with a financial emergency, tap the money in your regular taxable account first."
I read that a few days ago... that guy... or rather if that is representative of his intelligence, is the dumbest guy to be giving advice for the future.
Originally posted by: Azurik
Originally posted by: alrocky
No Emergency Cash
Popular Advice You Shouldn't Take
"According to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses...
Let's be honest: This is dull, unrealistic and -- I would argue -- not all that sensible. Even if you regularly sock away 10% of your after-tax income, it might take four years or so to amass six months of living expenses...
Sound bad? It gets worse. While you were building up your emergency reserve, you were likely neglecting important goals like funding your 401(k) plan, which might earn you a matching employer contribution, and saving for a house down payment.
My advice: Forget the emergency reserve. Instead, stick at least enough in your 401(k) to get the full company match. Next, fund a Roth individual retirement account. If you still have extra money to save each year, by all means stash it in conservative investments in a regular taxable account.
If you get hit with a financial emergency, tap the money in your regular taxable account first."
I read that a few days ago... that guy... or rather if that is representative of his intelligence, is the dumbest guy to be giving advice for the future.
Originally posted by: rufruf44
That's a disaster waiting to happen if that fund in the 401K plan is a mediocre one. There're plenty of 401K plan with terrible choices. One of the advantage of IRA is complete control of the investment.
Originally posted by: Pliablemoose
Originally posted by: rufruf44
That's a disaster waiting to happen if that fund in the 401K plan is a mediocre one. There're plenty of 401K plan with terrible choices. One of the advantage of IRA is complete control of the investment.
What part is a disaster?
Fund your 401K and put your $ in the most agressive funds you can invest in.
Originally posted by: alrocky
No Emergency Cash
Popular Advice You Shouldn't Take
"According to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses...
Let's be honest: This is dull, unrealistic and -- I would argue -- not all that sensible. Even if you regularly sock away 10% of your after-tax income, it might take four years or so to amass six months of living expenses...
Sound bad? It gets worse. While you were building up your emergency reserve, you were likely neglecting important goals like funding your 401(k) plan, which might earn you a matching employer contribution, and saving for a house down payment.
My advice: Forget the emergency reserve. Instead, stick at least enough in your 401(k) to get the full company match. Next, fund a Roth individual retirement account. If you still have extra money to save each year, by all means stash it in conservative investments in a regular taxable account.
If you get hit with a financial emergency, tap the money in your regular taxable account first."
Originally posted by: Special K
Originally posted by: JEDI
Originally posted by: vi_edit
General opinion is to max out your match on your 401k, then max out your Roth IRA. If you still have money left over, go back and add more to your 401k.
1) max out 401k match
2) pay off your non tax deductible debts (ie: credit cards, car loans)
3) then have 6months of expenses saved up in bank acct for emergencies
4) THEN max out Roth
5) then max out 401k
What if you are just starting out and have a student loan with a moderate interest rate, say 6-8% variable? Would it be better to:
1. pay down that loan ASAP, and then build the emergency fund
2. build the emergency fund ASAP and then pay the loan down
3. do both simultaneously until the emergency fund is in place, and then finish paying down the loan ASAP?
Originally posted by: alrocky
"according to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses"Originally posted by: Azurik
Originally posted by: alrocky
No Emergency Cash
Popular Advice You Shouldn't Take
"According to some financial experts, your top financial priority should be amassing an emergency reserve equal to six months of living expenses...
Let's be honest: This is dull, unrealistic and -- I would argue -- not all that sensible. Even if you regularly sock away 10% of your after-tax income, it might take four years or so to amass six months of living expenses...
Sound bad? It gets worse. While you were building up your emergency reserve, you were likely neglecting important goals like funding your 401(k) plan, which might earn you a matching employer contribution, and saving for a house down payment.
My advice: Forget the emergency reserve. Instead, stick at least enough in your 401(k) to get the full company match. Next, fund a Roth individual retirement account. If you still have extra money to save each year, by all means stash it in conservative investments in a regular taxable account.
If you get hit with a financial emergency, tap the money in your regular taxable account first."
I read that a few days ago... that guy... or rather if that is representative of his intelligence, is the dumbest guy to be giving advice for the future.
That's odd. JONATHAN CLEMENTS is pretty well regarded and it's fairly sound advice. There is the opportunity cost involved in saving for emergencies if that is your top financial priority. Insurance and CCs should cover most emergencies - if they can't, the mad money you started to save probably won't save your arse anyway...
You know how ghosts stick around because they have unfinished business? He'll stay as a ghost, since his unfinished business will be to get pissed off. That's kind of an open-ended commitment too, so crossing over just might not ever happen.Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: joshsquall
What really bothers me about 401k is not even knowing if I'll live long enough to collect my money. I'm going to be pissed if I die and have boatloads of cash sitting in retirement accounts that I could have used to live a better (short) life.
How can you be pissed? You'll be dead?![]()