FSRRX
FIDELITY STRATEGIC REAL RETURN FUND FIDELITY STRATEGIC REAL RETURN FUND
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15-20%. partly it's just testing things out of curiosity to see how an investment thesis plays out. partly it's small holdings in alternatives intended to act as hedges. RLY, FSRRX, PRPFX.
>Valuations are sky-high the US market overall does have sky-high valuations. but many other nations are reasonably valued or cheap, as are parts of the US market. more than a few professionals and institutional investors are recommending under-weight US stocks (especially large growth) and over-weight international. >We're seeing mass layoffs. No worse than other times in history. >government's role in the economy is further decreasing that's a good thing >inflation is still above target true. but there are inflation hedges like I-bonds, TIPS, commodities and natural resource stocks. FSRRX, RLY, PAAIX, etc. >Tariffs will further aggravate inflation (a) assuming tariffs remain long-term and are not a short-term bargaining tactic; (b) the alarm about tariffs is very selective, did you panic during the 2009-2011 trade war with Mexico? >Does this not set up the US (and hence, the world) economy for a recession/stagflation scenario? this is difficult for some people to believe, but the USA is not the center of the world. the US is ~4% of global population and ~25% of GDP. there is no reason to assume stocks will crash globally if stocks crash in the USA.
- any US small cap fund or mid cap fund/ETF - any US value fund will have limited holdings in those stocks, and any ranks stocks by dividends, cashflow, revenue, or other variables other than market cap. - any fixed income fund - any international fund - any tactical fund will have little or no holdings in those stocks, eg. RLY, PRPFX, FSRRX ... there are hundreds and hundreds of options.
It's hard for me to put an exact number on that. I'm 42 and unless the economy completely tanks I should be retired by 45. Most of my investments are in a Roth ira. I've been converting a traditional ira to that Roth for the past several years. That and a HSA is what I was thinking of putting in FSRRX. I won't need that money for at least 20 years. It's all currently in a Fidelity target date index fund and it's taking a beating. I'm just looking for something safer, to preserve what I have
>FSRRX I was looking at all time, and google shows that as -6.59%.
Stick it all in the ETF TRTY or the mutual fund FSRRX. You won't see gigantic gains, but with the yield you will come out positive for the year without losing capital. Then in a year sell it all and inves in a index fund.
TRTY a ETF that holds a lot of assets to fight inflation that are not stocks as well as dividend yielding companies. FSRRX a mutual fund that is basically designed with fighting inflation in mind.
TRTY, FSRRX, would be good bets.