- Oct 14, 2005
- 10,051
- 44
- 91
Hi all,
So I know you're supposed to "buy an index fund, set it and forget it" in an IRA. And for the most part that's what I do. However, I'm also still young, and recently I've been thinking about something: what about keeping 70% in an index fund, and putting something like 30% into individual stocks that have historically beat the S&P for at least 20 years? Stocks like JNJ, for example. Wouldn't this likely give a small boost and "slightly" beat the S&P while still maintaining relatively low risk?
Just curious if anyone employs this strategy. There has to be a way to take a 'slightly larger risk' than a simple index fund, while still not being stupid.
Thoughts?
So I know you're supposed to "buy an index fund, set it and forget it" in an IRA. And for the most part that's what I do. However, I'm also still young, and recently I've been thinking about something: what about keeping 70% in an index fund, and putting something like 30% into individual stocks that have historically beat the S&P for at least 20 years? Stocks like JNJ, for example. Wouldn't this likely give a small boost and "slightly" beat the S&P while still maintaining relatively low risk?
Just curious if anyone employs this strategy. There has to be a way to take a 'slightly larger risk' than a simple index fund, while still not being stupid.
Thoughts?