Originally posted by: DaveSimmons
Originally posted by: Skoorb
At your age you need to take a more aggressive path to investing. FDIC investments are not investments; they're savings. If your return is 4%, it's hardly much of an investment.
Exactly.
You can invest $8K a year with
tax-free growth if you and your wife each open a Roth IRA at
www.Vanguard.com and buy shares of their VFINX S&P 500 index mutual fund. This is about the safest stock-based investment you can make, with historical growth over decades at 8-10% a year.
Since it's stock-based some years will do better, some will do worse (even lose a little) but over time (and you're looking at 18 years here) you'll do very well.
With the Roth IRAs, when your kids reach college age you can take out the principal (the $8K/year you put in, $144K over 18 years) penalty-free, and keep all the growth for your own retirement.
If you have more than $8K/year to invest we can suggest ways to invest the rest of it. There are college savings accounts as well as bank CDs and unsheltered brokerage accounts.