which company should i use? why?
9/16/2006 10:12:27 PM
http://www.google.org
9/16/2006 10:19:48 PM
http://www.fool.com
9/16/2006 10:26:15 PM
^ive seen that, but havent spent much time on it....thanks for reminding me of the siteim lookin for a firm that allows plenty of options as for the different funds that the IRA is involved in....which i cannot do with NC SECU....right? isnt it part of their charter that they cannot sell stock, therefore a Roth through them isnt the way to go?
9/16/2006 10:40:01 PM
Ameritrade. Excellent service. Cheap trades. And now maintenece fees.
9/17/2006 9:55:49 AM
I use FirstTrade firsttrade.com
9/17/2006 10:15:37 AM
fidelity.com$200 to start and no fees
9/17/2006 10:25:47 AM
NC SECU's Roth IRA offers a 5.0% APR, which is okay, but not great. It mostly acts like a savings account, except for the part where you get taxed if you withdraw the interest. The last time I asked, they said that they were working on setting up a separate brokerage business, but that was at least a year ago. If you're already a SECU member, though, it's not a bad way to start.
9/17/2006 1:06:52 PM
Scottrade
9/17/2006 1:08:08 PM
First Investors Corp.not sure if there is a firm around here though
9/17/2006 1:45:37 PM
^^^no, that's not even ok. you'd be an idiot to fund an IRA with something with such a low yield at our age.before we go any further, let's make sure you have a handle on one basic thing: an IRA (Roth or conventional) is not an investment vehicle in and of itself. It's simply an account that you can fund with stocks, bonds, mutual funds, etc.Personally, what I'd do is open an account with a discount broker (Scottrade, E-trade, Ameritrade, etc). If you want someone else to choose for you in terms of what you're going to put in your IRA, then you'll need a full service broker.
9/17/2006 2:01:45 PM
9/17/2006 2:13:35 PM
Im with charles Schwabthey are ok but im sure that there are better ones because schwab will give you low cost (sometimes even free) trades but they have to be on the schwab select list and usually those mutual funds suck also they dont let you trade with any other investor companies mutual funds like fidelity funds for instance and they have some pretty good funds also their schwab mutual funds suck ass.but they are ok as i saidmy dad made my investing accounts so choosing schwab was his decision and i had no chance to shop and compare companies.man im so jewish
9/17/2006 2:49:48 PM
9/17/2006 2:54:41 PM
well you can invest in their mutual funds or stocks but i havent started looking at stocks yet.
9/17/2006 2:58:00 PM
Duke, you're right that the majority of mutual funds suck, but there are some really good ones out there that are going to do well over the long termLike a Davis fund, or most Marsico-managed funds.
9/17/2006 3:11:19 PM
9/17/2006 3:18:37 PM
So, if I can get a guarenteed 5% return on my money for life I should take it? WTF kind of logic is that? You'll barely outpace inflation. Get a cd if you want the damn 5% return so bad.
9/17/2006 4:08:54 PM
^^you'd be an idiot for expecting to defy the statistics that much.
9/17/2006 4:30:23 PM
9/17/2006 5:45:21 PM
i forgot what im adding to mine right now, maybe only 120 a month (pretty sure its not 120 a week), but im gonna have (supposedly) ~475k when im 65 at the rate i am adding. thats pretty cool considering i hardly miss the contribution. but its only 100k at age 50. crazy curve on those bitches, huh?
9/17/2006 5:48:08 PM
Anybody got an IRA with Vanguard? I have other accounts with them and have been pleased thus far.
9/17/2006 5:57:32 PM
9/17/2006 6:10:53 PM
isnt inflation around 3
9/17/2006 6:37:42 PM
yep, so 2% growth isn't what I would consider moderate
9/17/2006 6:46:54 PM
i dont know, i failed the hell out of finance class. all i know is that mine makes most of the money in the last quarter
9/17/2006 7:03:08 PM
right now im thinking ill go with ameritrade for the rothno maintainence fees and no minimum (although the no minimum thing doesnt really apply for what im lookin for)
9/17/2006 7:07:32 PM
I have a Roth IRA through Ameriprise but they are also handling my other investments. My IRA is for my retirement with a fairly aggressive outlook since I won't be touching the money for like 41 years.
9/17/2006 10:17:24 PM
so they just dropped the pension plan at my current job.which, im not entirely sold on the ramifications of.i currently had a roth, and a work ira, along with a pension.now they are going to allow for more % contriubuted and a higher matching, instead of a pension... but allow for pension gains to basically be frozen till retirement.my question here is, should i keep eating the tax on over funding IRAs or push more investing into other means?by overinvesting, i mean like 2-3x max contributions/year. its only a couple hundred in fees or whatever, but maybe start diversifying with bullion or something of the like?
9/17/2006 10:25:36 PM
9/17/2006 11:23:29 PM
I seriously doubt the op is approaching retirement age. You sound like one of those people who puts all their money into bonds once they retire and then run out of cash by their mid 80s.
9/17/2006 11:55:37 PM
9/18/2006 2:27:45 AM
Yes, I was wondering that as well.
9/18/2006 7:46:23 AM
9/18/2006 7:57:14 AM
im supposedly getting 8% on my stuff, so it might not be an IRA if they're doing 5. and im not sure how it works, i literally just started it a month ago or so. its a plan based off the idea of privatizing social security (ie matching a percentage of my fica withholdings). so if my fica withholding was 100 bucks for august, i would be contributing 50 for that month (not out of fica obviously).
9/18/2006 8:11:06 AM
9/18/2006 8:35:55 AM
i diversify by buying stock in bullion cubes.
9/18/2006 8:44:16 AM
beef or chicken?
9/18/2006 8:48:44 AM
both. come on now, you need to be diverse.
9/18/2006 8:51:32 AM
ok, no more serious posts when i had been drinking all day long.but overfunding your ira only warrants a 6% fee on your amount higher than the allowed maximum.and for 6-7k per year over, thats really not very significant right now.the bullion question was probably a bit dumb, but i like to keep a certian percentage of my holdings in raw commodites for stability issues. Oddly enough, i had bought a decent quantity of silver a couple of years ago due to some online poker money loopholes, and its done fairly well, until this summer. Still nearly doubled however.by percentage, i mean like 7%im the first to admidt i dont know anything about this stuff. just trying to learn, dont be an ass[Edited on September 18, 2006 at 9:12 AM. Reason : e]
9/18/2006 9:11:40 AM
9/18/2006 10:15:29 AM
9/18/2006 10:22:35 AM
9/18/2006 11:36:03 AM
The bottom line is, you pay for what you get. No-fees means no-service. I don't care what anyone says, its the truth. If you all you pay is $9.99 per trade, that's all you are getting. If thats okay with you, by all means do it, but ask yourself this question first. "Do I really have the time and knowledge to do the proper research I'll need, to make educated decisions on the trades I want to do?" The answer for the vast majority of the population is "No." Companies that want to offer you a "select list of funds" usually have behind the scenes deals that they don't readily disclose, with those fund companies. Where is the objectivity in that? When it comes to anything of long-term importance, if you aren't a professional, to do it right the first time, you hire one to help you. Your financial future is one of the most important issues you'll face throughout your life. Simply picking stocks or commodities because you "like" them or think they'll do good, is like picking your NCAA tournament picks based on team colors. It might work out, but it usually doesn't.
9/18/2006 11:36:52 AM
And assuming that paying higher fees means that you're in better hands is like paying $100 for a gucci tshirt and thinking it's higher quality than a $20 one. The real bottom line is that there is no substitute from educating yourself on personal finance and investing. You're right, your financial future is one of the most important issues in your life, so why not take the time to learn how to do it yourself? It's not rocket surgery. Ultimately no one is going to care about your financial interests more than you.
9/18/2006 11:56:02 AM
9/18/2006 12:34:48 PM
in 3 to 4 years, traditional IRA's will be obsoletehttp://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/17/business/yourmoney/17fund.html?ex=1158724800&en=c528ceddae798564&ei=5087%0A
9/18/2006 12:37:53 PM
9/18/2006 2:15:25 PM
9/18/2006 2:57:04 PM