I'm 76, have a mid-7 figure brokerage account that is 100% in equities and has been since I retired (2018). I have a cash account for paying bills and sometimes my checking gets in the $20K range. Life is too short to buy CD's.
Ag CPA said:
Sign of the times when collecting 5% risk-free is a let-down.
OldArmyCT said:
I'm 76, have a mid-7 figure brokerage account that is 100% in equities and has been since I retired (2018). I have a cash account for paying bills and sometimes my checking gets in the $20K range. Life is too short to buy CD's.
dallasattnyag said:
This is a man who can afford to take a 30% hit.
Proposition Joe said:EliteZags said:
Just curious what's the best way to go about consistent 5% guaranteed on 7 figures
Right now? There's a number of high yield savings offering 4%+. With a few like Marcus Savings with referrals you can get bumped to 5%+.
el_guapo said:Proposition Joe said:EliteZags said:
Just curious what's the best way to go about consistent 5% guaranteed on 7 figures
Right now? There's a number of high yield savings offering 4%+. With a few like Marcus Savings with referrals you can get bumped to 5%+.
I got a 5.25% savings acct at UFB Direct online bank. FDIC insured.
Andrew Dufresne said:
It's hard to pass up that guarantee.
ATM9000 said:dallasattnyag said:
This is a man who can afford to take a 30% hit.
Grasping what you can afford to lose is like 75% of understanding risk.
Maybe but we are well diversified and it's cash that I want liquid for projects. As soon as it's not earning 5.5% then maybe I'll move it elsewhere.txaggieacct85 said:
That zero return in real dollars or possibly negative with Bidenflation
I'm with you.... parking some recent bonus checks in CD's to take the 5-1/2 CD and waiting for the time being for opportunities.Quote:
By several good metrics the market is overvalued. And several metrics show a very good chance for a recession. If that happens, earnings decrease and likely, the stock market. Taking a 5% guarantee is not a bad idea regardless of your age. You can ride that decent return and when the market takes a hit, start working cash back in getting more bang for your buck. Given the current situation you might be being opportunistic rather than a puss.
txaggieacct85 said:
It's not risk free. You're missing out on much bigger gains. But at the end of the day, it's none of our business. And at this point you're barely keeping up with inflation
EliteZags said:
Suppose the million dollar question is how long do those rate stay substantial enough to stay in, and after that time will the market be cheaper to get into