im lookin to invest some money i have saved up but i have no clue where to start. I want to invest it for 2 years while I am gone out of country. What places do yaw suggest and what to aviod in being scamed.thanksbtw. i cant spell[Edited on June 22, 2006 at 11:36 PM. Reason : .]
6/22/2006 11:36:24 PM
Well, whatever you do don't invest overseas. That said, pay off any debt you may have, always. Beyond that, 2 years is not a long time, but your basic mutual fund should do nicely, just be ready to sell if your returns get much above 10%. Well right now we are advising our clients to put all they can into canned food and shotguns.[Edited on June 22, 2006 at 11:46 PM. Reason : .,.]
6/22/2006 11:44:49 PM
6/22/2006 11:46:39 PM
^ Hmm, my expectation was that the dollar was close to an historical low so even if you manage 10% returns overseas with a 10% rise in the dollar (quite possible) you would have managed to earn nothing. Investing overseas is just too much like investing in money markets to me
6/22/2006 11:48:54 PM
Buy an umbrella.
6/23/2006 1:16:12 AM
6/23/2006 1:38:46 AM
^AgreedAlso, Emerging Markets bonds have done quite well recently.
6/23/2006 1:54:31 AM
rule of thumb...100 - your current age = % that should be in bonds and such.... your current age is what % should be in stocks (including of course mut. funds) etc...paying off debt is by far the best thing to do...I'd be careful about investing in stocks right now though. I'd wait until they drop, and they will. I guess it also depends on when you're going to be out of the country...my question is, where are you going to be that you won't be needing the money or have access to it?
6/23/2006 3:40:55 AM
6/23/2006 5:26:26 AM
This thread is mostly BS from the second post onwards.
6/23/2006 5:43:25 AM
6/23/2006 6:33:37 AM
Get a 2 year CD, end of story.A mutual fund is a longer-term investment. The only funds you should even remotely consider are no-load funds with absolutely no redemption fees. As for stocks, they should also be long term.The 2 year CD is where its at, or perhaps if you have enough money, a ladder of CDs ending in 2 years.As most people already said, pay off any debt first (except mortgages). If you look at what your debt interest rate is and you can't beat it handily, then you're losing money not to pay it off.
6/23/2006 7:28:12 AM
With free advice, there's only one guarantee: you'll get exactly what you paid for, and nothing less.
6/23/2006 8:49:01 AM
6/23/2006 9:05:45 AM
^ Probably. Remember, only a year or two ago they were offering cutrate deals on auto financing.
6/23/2006 12:07:47 PM
well i have no debt; it wont have alot of money to invest, im thinkin it will be about $1200 bucks. so yaw think that i should do CD instead of mutual funds.
6/23/2006 12:33:50 PM
^yeah.the fees alone for a mutual fund will be too much for that amount/time of investment. Plus you'll probably need more than that to buy the fund you want.[Edited on June 23, 2006 at 12:42 PM. Reason : .]
6/23/2006 12:40:04 PM
For $1200? Yea, a CD is the optimal choice. http://www.bankofinternet.com/open/cd.aspThey claim they will give you 5.34% compounded daily. I won't vouche for "Bank of Internet USA", it sounds seedy. Wachovia here in Raleigh says they will give you 5.15% for an 18month CD.
6/23/2006 1:02:36 PM
6/23/2006 7:08:54 PM
I agree with the recommendation to get a CD. Over such a short period, you are just as likely to lose money in mutual funds (and things are looking bad right now). Even if you managed to get 8% per year in mutual funds, that isn't much money when your only putting up $1200.[Edited on June 23, 2006 at 7:16 PM. Reason : ?]
6/23/2006 7:12:33 PM