Alright, for those of you who have begun careers I have a couple questions. The first involves 401k. I will soon be starting at a company that gives a 6% match on 401k investment. I currently have ~$6500 in credit card debt. A large portion of that debt is at a high interest rate due to cash advance. Long story short on one credit card the minimum payment is ~$175 and the other ~$45. Is it in my best interest to not invest anything into my 401k at first and to pay off the credit cards quicker or is that a bad idea? If I do not invest in the 401k I am loosing the 6% for a few months and the money will be taxed before I get it. I do invest, it will be a slightly slower repayment time frame resulting in extending interest on the payments. I realize without fully disclosing what my salary is and current living expenses, this is a little more vague of a question. The second questions I have is, for those of you who do invest, what do you do? I know minimal about the stock market. Should I hire an investment firm (i.e. J.P. Morgan or Lynch) and let the 'professionals' guide me?
1/14/2009 2:12:54 PM
without more information it's hard to say but in general as long as you can swing it you would be a complete idiot to not at the bare minimum take advantage of the 6% matchthere are a few exceptions and seeing as how you are a nuke grad you should be able to do the math to figure out if you are in an exception case...in my opinion you shouldn't begin any other investing until your debt is paid off - since it's so small my guess is that it shouldn't take that long - you shouldn't hire a firm at that point either because of the amount of money you will be probably be investing won't make it worth your while
1/14/2009 2:20:15 PM
I made a thread a few weeks back about getting a job and what do with my money.Pretty much it was agreed to pay off your debt, max your 401k match %, start up a Roth IRA, and save up.
1/14/2009 2:26:34 PM
6.5k isn't a lot of money - you don't need to hire anybody.Max your match on your 401k, its free moneyAnd cut your spending until the CC debt is paid. If you're really worried about that CC debt then try to find an offer for a 0% APR on balance transfers and move it to a lower effective rate.
1/14/2009 2:34:39 PM
^that pretty much covers it. This is the best time to be putting money in your 401k. The market is down, and by the time you retire in 40+/- years, the large gains up front when the market recovers in the next year or few, will translate to a huge gain from compounding over the years toward retirement. but ultimately, contribute at least enough to get that 6% match, and make paying that credit card off the #2 priority.
1/14/2009 2:54:45 PM
i lost my whole match for the whole year of 2009.... meaning im not putting anywhere near what i used to put in thereso since i already feel like im losing money, i wanna play with some risky investments with the extra money. im not gonna put it toward retirement without the awesome match i used to get. that just feels like a waste, know what i mean? anyone got any lightbulbs? maybe become a silent partner in a quiznos or something?]
1/14/2009 3:13:16 PM
lol, jp morgan or merrill lynch Bank of America won't touch you with a few thousand dollars to invest
1/14/2009 10:13:03 PM
You should be able to contribute your 401k and pay down debt....cut your spending......a 6% match is good....is it vested immediately?
1/14/2009 10:14:10 PM
Invest in something that will inflate as fast as the US dollar
1/14/2009 10:17:00 PM
don't
1/15/2009 5:39:08 AM
1/15/2009 7:20:39 AM
1/15/2009 8:52:40 AM
id invest in the stock market.
1/15/2009 8:53:33 AM
1/15/2009 10:35:24 AM
yeah i mean it' not really that high of a threshold to be able to do that (whether or not it's comfortably is up to the person)you could do it off 75k[Edited on January 15, 2009 at 10:52 AM. Reason : e]
1/15/2009 10:47:10 AM
1/15/2009 12:00:40 PM
ALWAYS max out contributions when you have a company match. ESPECIALLY when the market is so low and it's qualified dollars. You are buying cheap and getting free money to buy stocks essentially "on sale" since these are long term dollars. As for your second question, I am totally biased because of who I work for but I would go with an advisor who works for a firm that does not have products. Large investment shops like Lynch, Ameriprise, etc manufacture and deliver products. Why does that make a difference? They make more money when they sell the products of their shop, thus many of your solutions become "Lynch" solutions (using Lynch as an example!)
1/15/2009 12:05:16 PM
Thanks for all the advice. I will take the advice and go ahead and make the max equal contribution to my 401k (6%), then start paying off the cc bills, then go the IRA route once they are paid down.Are there any books, other than the magazines suggested, you all recommend I read? [Edited on January 15, 2009 at 4:42 PM. Reason : df]
1/15/2009 4:38:27 PM
Personal Finance for DummiesI enjoyed it.
1/15/2009 4:43:37 PM
1/15/2009 5:45:24 PM
1/15/2009 8:14:55 PM
You're no help Bradly.
1/16/2009 4:36:52 PM
1/18/2009 12:52:24 PM
I agree with the book suggestions.
1/18/2009 9:25:30 PM
For all those that are trying to build up a savings account, keep your money here.http://www.dollarsavingsdirect.com
1/19/2009 7:38:38 AM
bump
7/7/2012 5:02:30 PM
What?
7/7/2012 5:28:18 PM
Thought on Traditional vs. Roth IRA? Many people suggest Roth because contributions and gains can be withdrawn tax free after 60, and you can contribute for the rest of your life (with no requirement to withdraw at 70). However, the traditional gives you an immediate tax deduction, which can be helpful for those at the income limit of other tax credits (child, earned income, student loan, etc.). Also, the government has stated that Roth withdrawals will be tax free now but who knows if that will change in the next 20 years. So which one did you go with and why?
7/7/2012 9:25:57 PM
Basically, if you anticipate being in a higher tax bracket upon retirement than you are now (as it seems many younger people will be), it's the better choice. If you're converting a Traditional IRA to a Roth, you need to be mindful of tax brackets...[Edited on July 8, 2012 at 10:38 AM. Reason : ]
7/8/2012 10:22:38 AM
^^ depends on what is available to you other places. I have a 401k through work so I go with the Roth IRA for the rest of my retirement savings beyond the 401k cap.
7/8/2012 12:45:59 PM
7/8/2012 12:54:14 PM
^ I posted that and agree. Indexes are far superior. However, some plans dont offer them and they dont adjust to safer investments over time. If you are willing to reallocate every 5 years or so, indexes are the better choice. I was assuming the OP would never touch it. To someone who has no financial accumen at all and doesnt understand allocation vs. age, target funds solve that...at the cost of growth & expense ratio. Guess it depends on how invoved the op wants to be.[Edited on July 8, 2012 at 1:44 PM. Reason : Aa]
7/8/2012 1:32:17 PM
7/8/2012 1:37:39 PM
^that last statement is key.
7/8/2012 2:30:12 PM
Just to reiterate too, if you're not super comfortable picking investments you can basically get a couple index funds to cover most of the market and diversification. Index funds typically perform as good or better than funds where managers try to pick and time the market, plus the expenses are way lower. They won't make you rich by having 70~80% swings but they follow the market so things will tend to trend up over the long term and help you beat inflation.I've got my Roth with Vanguard but most consumer options now will offer some index funds.
7/8/2012 5:15:15 PM
You guys realize the original OP is from 3+ yrs ago. Just sayin'
7/8/2012 5:24:38 PM
http://www.seekingalpha.com is a pretty good site to stay up-to-date with
7/8/2012 5:44:28 PM