Retired military, I thank you for your service. You deserve a good Retirement.Retired military, TRICARE.
I have plenty.
Retired military, I thank you for your service. You deserve a good Retirement.Retired military, TRICARE.
I have plenty.
How do you feel about the covered call fund, SPYI? I've held a good amount for a while in and individual brokerage account and have made some good dividends. Makes me nervous holding it, but the monthly dividends make it hard to sell.Be careful with msty or any of the yieldmax funds. The management are complete idiots and crooks. If things go wrong and the underlying doesn't cooperate with a covered call campaign, they screw the pooch. Microstrategy has been a real good stock for a CC. NVDA is another. A warning for you, if msty starts dropping on a monthly basis by an amount equal or greater than the distribution you receive, be on guard to exit. People bought the tsla cc fund at inception thinking they would get a 100% purchase cost payback in 15 months or less with the healthy "yield"... they are still waiting almost 3 years later.
Only positive is they have a guy that came on board this week that is pretty sharp. Hopefully the nonsense with some of the strategy stuff, that is stealing shareholder assets on a weekly basis stops.
Guess we should move to Missouri, lol. Minimum 23k on insurance for house, camp, airplane, cars, boats, life insurance etc. Oh and $6k a year for a drug and dental plan even though we get "Free" health care in Canada. 17k a year for property taxes house and camp. Power bills, phones, alarm monitoring, heating oil, car parts, fuel, grandkids, renovations... the list is long. Oh ya and food is always great. Takes a minimum of 100k pretax...What? Your saying that you are taking out 36 grand total and you can't live on that? Your property taxes and insurance must be ridiculous.
Our home insurance is $1500.00 a year, real estate tax $1350.00 a year. Health insurance is about 2 grand a year. My monthly bills including food and gas for the vehicle's is around $2800 a month.Guess we should move to Missouri, lol. Minimum 23k on insurance for house, camp, cars, boats, life insurance etc. Oh and $6k a year for a drug and dental plan even though we get "Free" health care in Canada. 17k a year for property taxes house and camp. Power bills, phones, alarm monitoring, heating oil, car parts, fuel, grandkids, renovations... the list is long. Oh ya and food is always great. Takes a minimum of 100k pretax...
Plunking your retirement fund in CD's and savings accounts just because you're afraid of a downturn means you're doing nothing but losing buying power to inflation. (And making the banks happy). If anything, maybe look into a low cost target fund. I just looked, and Vanguard offers a 2035 target fund with a 0.08% ER. Not what I would do, but at least you'll see gains.My question is, if you put your funds into the market and you lose it, do you have enough time to recoup your original investment? Can you replace 25-30k in 12 year's? You might be able to do so but you wouldn't be putting much else back with it. I'm no expert on this but I did talk to several investment advisors and they all pretty much said the same thing. I think that it's best to put money in different forms of investments, I had a IRA, CD'S and a savings account.
I'm making 4.10% on my cd's, and that's for a 9 month term.Plunking your retirement fund in CD's and savings accounts just because you're afraid of a downturn means you're doing nothing but losing buying power to inflation. (And making the banks happy). If anything, maybe look into a low cost target fund. I just looked, and Vanguard offers a 2035 target fund with a 0.08% ER. Not what I would do, but at least you'll see gains.
I live on that easy. We don't live beyond our means and I usually can put back a little money on the side every monthSo, Dan, you can't live on 36 grand apparently either...
Do you even know what an expense ratio is? That's what I was referencing with the 0.08%.I'm making 4.10% on my cd's, and that's for a 9 month term.
Savings is for a emergency, that way I don't need to touch my cd's. I'm making more than 0.08% on my Savings account.
How do you feel about the covered call fund, SPYI? I've held a good amount for a while in and individual brokerage account and have made some good dividends. Makes me nervous holding it, but the monthly dividends make it hard to sell.
Thank you! I typically do low cost index growth and SP funds for my retirement accounts. The SPYI was just for some extra cash that wasn't doing anything in a non-retirement account. I appreciate the feedback.Different group (neos) than the incompetent YM
I'd rather own SPLG and sell my own calls if that is the approach chosen, especially in a retirement account.
Spyi is OK. It still trails the index in returns. I guess if you were doing reinvestment it would be close to equal. The best thing is the price remains somewhat stable since inception. Non retirement account, that dividend heads straight to the bottom line as income fed and state. Unless they are designating it somehow as return of capital.
I’m not really following.My question is, if you put your funds into the market and you lose it, do you have enough time to recoup your original investment? Can you replace 25-30k in 12 year's? You might be able to do so but you wouldn't be putting much else back with it. I'm no expert on this but I did talk to several investment advisors and they all pretty much said the same thing. I think that it's best to put money in different forms of investments, I had a IRA, CD'S and a savings account.
1 of the problems in Australia if you make a profit on Bitcoin or shares & you sell them in the first 12 month's you pay 50% gains tax with bitcoin if say it hit 1 million you must pay on the amount it even if it goes to zero. My cousin got slugged for $45,000 Tax Ill stick with Precious metalI have a confession to make-
I accidentally bought a few hundred shares of MSTY.
It's fund that (bear with me here) buys and sells options on a fund that buys and sells options on...
bitcoin
I initially purchased 100 shares because I was curious and it seemed like a way to ride the digital currency bandwagon without actually buying digital currency.
Here's the kicker-
it pays 138%!
and it pays 13 times a year.
You read that right 138% dividend. Yes, if it sounds too good to be true......
So I got my first months payout and I decided to buy 100 more shares...
...except I muffed/fat fingered the order.
Since then the share price has gone down about 15%, but I'm still getting hundreds (and hundreds) of dollars a month that I wasn't really planning on.
Can you say "conundrum"?
I guess that's a pretty good problem to have huh?
Thank you! I typically do low cost index growth and SP funds for my retirement accounts. The SPYI was just for some extra cash that wasn't doing anything in a non-retirement account. I appreciate the feedback.
What's the index for that fund, anyway?
You're right though, the share price doesn't fluctuate much, though I am up about 10% (ave.) since buying in. That doesn't count the dividends, which is considered return of capital. That's another reason I bought it (saves a ton on taxes vs typical ordinary dividends). I really need to sit down an figure out the covered call deal myself though. I know you explained it to me before. I just need to spend some time learning it to be comfortable enough to give it a shot.
So, Dan, you can't live on 36 grand apparently either...
Probably so. I'm to old to worry about it now as I'm going to be 66 in a monthI’m not really following.
The market has never gone down for 12 years. Market down is rarely greater than 50%. I would say we’ve lived through the worst market down period, the 2000’s. If you had $30k at the start of that period, and continued to put $5k into the market each year, you’d probably have $100K in 12 years, maybe more. Then probably be $200K in another 7 years.
Heck yeah, that's gotta feel good.I'm not much better off either, but in about 33 months I will be done working, and it can't come soon enough.
I wishOpen up a tittie bar.
I'm glad you are going to get to retire then, as I'm sure that you know the older we get the faster the time goesI'm not much better off either, but in about 33 months I will be done working, and it can't come soon enough.
I don't know anything about annuitiesIndex is SPX
ETF is SPY (SPY + I for income SPYI)
SPYI has monthly options.
CC's are pretty easy, just know you are giving up the upside if the underlying moves up hard.
My mom was a "i can't lose my money" depression era kid. I got it. She got suckered into annuities in her 40's, she lived to 82. I wish she would have listened to me.
Nobody knows where the market is headed. I think next year is going to be a tough. Lately the recoveries are swift. One of these drops will be followed with a few years of flattish returns, will it be the next one. I don't know...
A friend and I had the perfect idea years ago. Macon and Bibb county have an ordinance that says you cannot serve alcohol and have nude dancing in the same establishment. There's a pair of buildings on the east side of Bibb County that are mirror images and are less than 5' apart on one side. We had talked about knocking both facing walls out and replacing them with thick glass. Bar in one building with bikini servers and nude dancing in the other so you could look right out one building into the other. lolI wish
We did the rental property gig for 30 years. That was enough! I would love to invest 12K and add 1k a month and end up with love 300K in 11 years. Chances are slim that would happen.Finding a 12% return is not super easy.
I would never base my calculations on expecting that average.
There is a financial "rule of thumb" called "the rule of 72", that estimates the time to double your money.
That's probably a better short to mid term goal for that 12K than turning it into 300 thousand plus.
Be warned that there are many high dividend payers that erode the value of the shares in order to meet the payout.
That's a lot of "finicky" math to figure if it's worth holding and for how long.
My "average" portfolio dividend income over the past 20 years is about 8.5% and I'm super happy with that considering the rate of inflation.