Reddit Posts
About to get an inheritance. Don't wanna screw it up.
Short-Term Investment Options for $10K/under
3.5% a year seems more appealing than being in this market rn
After 200% gains - i’m out. (B-B-BUBBLE!)
Automated investing for retirement accounts (fidelity/schwab) vs picking your own distributions. The good vs the bad. Discuss
Am I On The Right Track For Retirement? 29yo Portfolio
I’m tired of watching the market. $200,000 in my HYSA - I’m ready to join the squad!!!
Is Wall Street Bets a legitimate strategy what should I buy besides VOO ?
Next years Roth contribution sitting in HYSA
What my "trading" habits have been reduced to. Roast me.
21M, $-22 in the bank but i will reach my goal by 30!
Where should I park emergency saving HYSA or SGOV
I am at a crossroad in my mid 20s of what I should do, I'd be very appreciative for some advice
HYSA account closing. Where should I invest USD 1.5m cash?
F30 with $100k in cash just rotting in savings accounts. Help me actually do something with it
Felt hopeless in life and turned it into a miracle.
Help me re-balance my portfolio: 31F, single, hoping to buy a home in VHCOL area in near future but also work as little as possible?
A $337K Bet on the Future: The AI Stack + Space Thesis
When buying a house, good idea to sell stocks to help with a larger down payment?
31 Sharing Investments - Need Advice on Balancing
Retiring in within 2 years. Short-term bucket strategies?
Have another $200K to invest in. Should I put another $100k all in VTI right now?
Different accounts under different brokerages and banks
Edelman vs ?? anything else for investing $300,000 sitting in a Wealthfront HYSA plus $240,000 in an old 401K at Vanguard (2045 fund)
What to do with $15k? CD? HYSA? Dividend Stock like KO?
What to do with 25k cash and 2-3 year time horizon?
What's the best investment allocation for monthly leftovers?
27, decent income. No clue how to invest properly, what would you do?
It's perfectly ok to feel lousy about losing money and it's also ok to still feel lousy after you've heard all the typical responses
Is there any safe way to escape dollar devaluation without gambling on crypto?
Would your capital allocation change if you had access to 8-9% risk free time deposits?
i posted earlier asking what % of funds you put into stocks. Now I want to put more in the market...thinking of going big into msft.
23F – Roth maxed, 6% to 401k, $200/month from HYSA… should I open a brokerage and invest in S&P?
Inherited half a million in stocks. What would you do with it?
Looking to move 95% of savings out of HYSA to market fund for long term hold. Which one do you suggest?
VTINX (Vanguard retirement fund) as a medium term investment in a taxable brokerage account
Savings During Capital Rotation and the War On Globalism
Schwab money market fund, what I am not understanding?
Can someone help me understand what the hell I’m doing with my cash
Hierarchy of Risk in Terms of Different Accounts such as Roth, IRA, HSA and Taxable
What percentage of your investments/savings do you keep in a HYSA compared to stocks/funds?
24 y/o trying to get off to the right start. Suggestions?
Moved HYSA funds to brokerage for investment towards a down payment, medium term length at about 7 years.
Asset allocation for continuous USD devaluation
I don't really know what to do with some of my money due to the current political climate where Should I put it?
I don't really know what to do with some of my money due to the current political climate where Should I put it?
Looking for feedback on overall investment strategy + Solo 401(k) allocation (high 1099 income, early retirement goal)
23 M 65k net worth no debt. Feel like I’m doing pretty alright, but then some of these post make me feel broke
20 y/o making $3k/month, low expenses, best way to invest $1.5k/month for 4–5 years?
Decided to try credit card cashback for speculative holdings
im fucking out. taking my regard ~1.2M gains to multifamily
Mentions
Sell your entire portfolio and put it in an HYSA if you’re freaking out about 2%
So... Best suggestions I can give, because you're going to chase the adrenaline rush most likely.... Unless you can turn that completely off: Take out 90% of that and throw it in an HYSA for now. No dividend stocks, no bonds, just HYS. See the interest in a month. Like post nut clarity. If you need the adrenaline, take the remaining 10% and try this again, but do it with a tight stop loss. If it runs 50-100% in another short window, sell, take the profits + another percentage, and do whatever you want trading wise with the rest.
For the average working class investor this kind of stuff may as well be an alien language. The safest and best thing is just to stick with low-cost broad market index funds, invest as much as you can spare into those ideally over about 25-35 years at least, and then keep any cash that you do not need immediately available in tax-efficient cash equivalents like SGOV, a HYSA, or MMF.
There is a breaking news headline on cnbc that social security wil be depleted by 2032. Maybe its boomers pulling everything out to put in a HYSA.
I really like the app Stash. I can decide what to invest in and how much at a time. Sometimes, I put $1 at a time into a particular stock or fund. Other times, I feel like I can spend more and put in $10 or $20 at once. They have hundreds of stocks, so you can choose several that work for you. With $40K, I'd put half that in a HYSA with a decent interest rate for emergencies and put the rest into a ton of investments. This is working on the assumption that you don't have a mortgage or other significant debt.
HYSA like Ally bank. If you want the money accessible and also add to it easily (like direct deposit some of your pay check to add to it). If you are more focused on investing and can wait a couple of days to access it then brokerage accounts will have some lower cost ETF to buy into treasury bills. Something like [SWVXX](https://client.schwab.com/SymbolRouting.aspx?symbol=SWVXX) for Schwab. To access money in [SWVXX](https://client.schwab.com/SymbolRouting.aspx?symbol=SWVXX) (or similar) you first need to sell out of it the xfer the money out to a linked bank account. A solid investment to put money into long term is typically an SP500 index fund like VOO or SPY to buy into the SP500 - leave it there for decades.
My money would have been better off in a HYSA
HYSA 3.8% yes that is what it is doing
lol. You didn’t even open an HYSA for free money??
https://preview.redd.it/zkxx3zru3q5h1.jpeg?width=1179&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=964c944b2b414872e6710cb05b737b591ff54ab3 Again, I use Robinhood as my HYSA. Also this is only my Robinhood brokerage.
cash sitting in 3.8% HYSA so 2 days transfer when ready to enter market
Mid to late 2022, I remember my friends telling me to get into investing as a lot of companies and some ETFs plummeted during that time. Nearly all of them were telling me it is the best time to buy and hold. It was also when interest rates for HYSAs were climbing as high as 5.5% and they were clamoring about it, too. I still didn't listen lmao. Because I am very stingy with my money, even with my job at the time, I could have at least opened up a HYSA and let my money grow somewhat.
If you feel defeated from this, you should probably use only HYSA and CDs.
Yup, the way I look at it is that there is an \*average\* ROI on money that is invested, and there is an \*average\* ROI on money that is kept on the sideline. I think most people would agree that invested money will have a higher \*average\* ROI. Within that paradigm, there is very little reason to not invest whatever money you have available. Note: I consider a HYSA account as investing. It's just a more conservative investment than stocks. Optimal asset allocation is an entirely different discussion.
Since OP mentioned inheritance, there's no taxes on that, but yeah, taxes first if they exist. The only time you should pay off your debt is if the interest rate on the debt is higher than the market gains or existing HYSA interest rates should you be extremely risk adverse. Completely agree, emergency fund. Then you should be investing the rest of your money, before taking a vacation.
Moved over 2K from the HYSA (not much I know) to dump into this Monday morning. Regarded? Maybe… but I believe in this.
1. Do you have an emergency fund? If not, that is priority no. 1. Save up three months of expenses in a HYSA. Next: figure out how much you are going to be contributing overall for retirement. Your minimum should be 15% of gross income, so $19,500. 2. Open a Roth IRA and begin contributing to that in order to max it out. Fidelity, Schwab, and Vanguard are all excellent choices for that. 3. The Roth IRA limit of $7500 will mean that you need to contribute $12,000 to your 401k. This would mean aiming for about 9% contribution to your 401k. If you feel like you can't afford that and maxing out your Roth IRA right now, then start at maybe 4 or 5% and set it to automatically increase by 1% every six months (or 2% annually if increasing every six months is not an option). Decide whether you want to contribute pre-tax, Roth, or a mixture of both to your 401k. That will depend a lot on your current tax bracket (federal + state) and whether you think your income/tax bracket will be increasing a lot in the future. I would skip the 457b for now -- if you get to the point of maxing out your 401k and still having more money to contribute, then you can worry about the 457b.
On that salary with your husband assuming your mortgage you to be able to not only max a 401k but also a Roth, and maybe an HSA if you have access to that. Don’t forget an emergency fund in a HYSA. 6 months is good there.
Tesla has started offering a self managed savings account to its employees that pays 6% interest. I wonder if that’s connected to this SpaceX brokerage account? Forgot to ask my source if the employees are able to trade stocks in that account or if it’s just HYSA…
Put it in a HYSA if you’re that afraid of putting it in the market…
At this point, I consider HYSA as an investment strategy at least to hedge against inflation.
If they're only 5 years from retirement it be easier to just discuss HYSA or CDs if they're not doing those currently? Short of the US government disappearing there's really no risk, since they are FDIC insured, and rates are actually pretty decent currently compared to historical rates, and should roughly keep up with inflation at least. A lot of older people just keep their money in brick and mortar savings accounts where the interest rate is effectively 0%. I can definitely understand people being hesitant about buying stocks, especially if their time horizon is short, like your parents. It's unlikely but certainly not impossible they could see losses as they enter retirement, which can be problematic. I at least would be nervous about trying to talk them into stocks if they are not already inclined in that direction.
An HYSA would yield more profits than some of you regards
It’s $50/year for the annual. And again the HYSA is more of a bonus on top of the extra Roth 3% match. So every cent and more of that $50 goes right into my Roth.
I’m maxing out my Roth, which Robinhood gold gives me a 3% bonus on my contributions, which ends up being just under $100. So it’s effectively $50 free that will also grow. I also use the cash in my brokerage as a HYSA earning the bonus % with gold. That is especially worth it as it earns about $40/month. But not everyone has an emergency fund of that size. But everyone should be maxing a Roth and even then it’s worth it since it’s basically free money and your $50 gold subscription is effectively funneled into your Roth and will grow.
Same. Coincidentally, I was basically logged off the internet then for like 3 months and didn’t even realize anything had happened. Downside is, I had $50k to deploy from my HYSA and only started averaging it in during the early summer.
Looking to invest $100000 57 years old couple with $300000 into different retirement accounts ( 2 dormant 401k around $200000 and rest 1 active 401k , 2 Roth IRA and and a Roth 403b) fully funded emergency fund (12 months living expenses into HYSA) and 130000 in a taxable brokerage account. We want to retire early at 62 years ( but not in US) the insurance would be too expensive. We have possibility to live aboard In any EU country. Looking for a safer option to invest $100000 to maximize our income before 62 ( only 5 years). We will appreciate any advice.
You're in a better spot than you think. That $4k/mo pension covers baseline living expenses, so you actually have more risk capacity than most people your age. Here's what I'd do: 1) Set aside 6 months of MA rent in a HYSA (~$18-24k) as your emergency fund 2) Max the Roth IRA for this year and next ($14k total) — all in VTI or VOO 3) Pay off the truck ($9k) — frees up that payment every month 4) Put the remaining ~$120k in a taxable brokerage, mostly VTI with maybe 20% in VXUS for diversification The pension means you can afford to be aggressive with the stock allocation since you've already got a bond-like income stream. Don't overthink it — lump sum into broad indexes and let time do the work.
Sure it *could* be in a HYSA, but at her level of net worth, the interest earned on it in a HYSA is just pocket change. $40k is just 1% of her $4M. If her annual returns on the $4M was a conservative $400k, the $1500 or so she might earn in the HYSA is just a drop n the bucket. I’m in the same age range as your mom. I don’t have your mom’s level of net worth, but I do have funds in an online HYSA and an emergency fund in a local bank earning a paltry 0.01%. Without going into details, I needed immediate access to my emergency funds. I am grateful to be able to live in my own home (with new limitations).
Anyone else initially read this as “Needed this 21 million”? I was like that’s $21K not $21M, bro. So you’re 21 years old, have mom’s money, and are worried about one thousand dollars on a credit card? Soon you will learn about small potatoes, because that’s definitely what this is. Nice 4k->21k turnaround though, fwiw. Put 1k into your CC, put 30% into HYSA for the taxes, and have fun with the rest. But no, you didn’t need it lol
Learn to cycle. Whenever I find i go on a short run of option success, I immediately put 50% of recent profit in HYSA, about 20% into dividend portfolio, buy something fun for the kids, or go stock the freezer, and the remainder I'll keep in the account.
Literal meme line up of stocks. A HYSA would probably beat your portfolio long term lmao.
> Withdrawing $100k during a bull or bear market has no bearing on your future portfolio performance, it's just psychologically we feel better doing so when markets are doing well. You wanted to consider the worst-case scenario and called that a 70% decline. So let's say you need that $100k downpayment and the market has just crashed. You have $1M (total). Two scenarios: 1) You have that $100k in a HYSA and $900k in the markets. Your portfolio drops to $270k. You spend the $100k on the down payment. Five years later the market has recovered. You end up with $900k in your portfolio. 2) You have the whole $1M in the markets. The portfolio drops to $300k. You spend $100k of that on your down payment. The market recovers as-above. Your portfolio increases to $666.7k. Having to pull that money out during the crash has cost you 25% of your portfolio.
Would it make a difference how that portfolio is invested? Say for example $600k of the total $800k is locked up in a 401k. Just curious because I've thought about the pros and cons of holding onto cash as well. Even though technically my cash in an HYSA is my "emergency fund," I actually think of it more as dry powder to deploy in a market pullback. Either way, I don't think I could sleep at night being 100% invested.
The order of operations for investing are: - Emergency saving up to 3 months of your routine expenses. Use a HYSA with 3% interest or higher currently. Alternative option in states with high taxes (California and NY state) are treasury Money market funds or Treasury ETFs (SGOV or VBIL). - Try to max out a Roth IRA if you are working and earn less than $153k in 2026. The max contribution is $7,500 for 2026 according to the IRS. Within in the Roth IRA, invest into ETFs. For ETFs only use SoFI, Fidelity, or Vanguard. With those brokers, you can invest into VTI and VGT. VTI is your core fund that covers the Total USA stock market. Make this 70% of your allocation. VGT is a sector fund covering information technology area. VGT has great returns over the past 10 years, but is limited to a sector. 30% allocation is fine. - Anything extra, put it into a taxable brokerage account. Buy the same ETFs. This is also the type of account to buy Treasury ETFs like SGOV or VBIL.
HYSA has all the bennies of a typical bank account so its familiar to most people already. It's insured up to $250K by FDIC and pays the highest rates of any savings account (currently about 3.25%-3.5%) and being a bank account you can just ACH transfer your money in and out of it (typically next day) and even have your paychecks (or portions of them if your employer will do that) directly deposited for easy future savings. Money is available typically next day with ACH transfer just as it would be with any other account. In short: it's easy, safe, and familiar. If USAA pays over 3% then keep it there but if you have $100K+ sitting around for a year you may as well put it to work for you instead of the bank its sitting in. I am not a Robinhood user (never used it) but understand it offers a $5/month gold program that provides you a HYSA. The gold program apparently will match up to 3% of any of your contributions to a personal IRA you hold with them, up to about $250. You may want to look into that since you have the money its probably wise to establish an IRA for yourself, even if you only contribute $2K a year into it to get the 3% match that will cover the cost of the gold membership - but do your own research on that. Many new to investing can be overwhelmed with new language and concepts but I recommend you keep it simple, easy and most importantly consistent. Automated investing is a great way to move your $200 into the market into a low cost index fund with you being 100% hands off. Remember that time IN the market is key (decades) and never try to time the market (as tempting as it may be). My last advice is educate yourself. Unfortunately investing is not really taught in school enough (if at all) but there are plenty of good Youtube channels to learn fundamental from as well as free/cheap finance courses on platforms like Coursera. What I find most helpful and more personalized is to have a conversation with your favorite AI. Tell it you are new to investing and ask it to teach you fundamentals then ask lots of questions about investing (but don't share any personal financial info).
Max Roth IRA. Put 100k in VTI. Keep 60k in HYSA for emergencies.
Pay off all your debt and pledge to yourself you will never take a loan out on anything besides a house for the rest of your life. Put $7500 in a Roth IRA for you and another one for your wife, put 3 months of expenses saved into a HYSA, take the rest and invest it into a brokerage account.
Greetings, I'm a 23 yo truck driver based out of California (Over the Road so I won't be paying rent) saving for a house in a LCOL state such as Nebraska or North Dakota and want some advice on what would be the better route for my timetable. I currently bank with Fidelity and have SPAXX as my core position. Have been debating whether to keep it there or let things like VOO work their magic? Or maybe put it in a HYSA? What would be the smarter move for my timetable? Basically anything I make will be going towards either this or any necessary bills/ food. Thanks for any and all replies.
Definitely listen to this guy who wears fake watches. This dude is broke. Put it into the market and let it grow. HYSA you lose to inflation. Don’t listen to broke redditors.
Read this about managing a windfall: [Managing a windfall - Bogleheads](https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Managing_a_windfall) Are you currently contributing to a 401(k) and a Roth IRA? If not, put your $100k into a HYSA, and start maxing out your 401(k) and Roth IRA.
What’s not to like? Literally free money everyday. Daily returns are higher than yearly HYSA
Just hoping to get quick advice. I had a little over $6k in an Acorns taxable brokerage that I withdrew so I can stop paying for Acorns. This was pretty much all of the money I have in the stock market. If I put it all into my HYSA, I’ll break the 3-month emergency savings threshold after my next paycheck. Otherwise I’ll break it by the end of the year. My job’s pretty safe (but shit happens). However with how the stock market has been, I really just want to deposit all of it into my Robinhood and buy some shares of MU, CRDO, WPM, NBIS, etc. and let it sit there for 10+ years I feel like the “mature” play would be to put it all into my HYSA, but I don’t want to miss out on all the upward movement. What do you guys think?
Hookers and blow it is then! HYSA = high yield savings account. Not sure where they’re at now but can maybe get 4% interest so you’re keeping up with inflation. Index funds are just like investing in stocks but you buy one fund and it can have hundreds of different stocks. The thought is that it’s less risky and the market in general goes up over time so you basically just invest in the entire market rather than trying to pick winners and losers. A typical approach might be 70% VTI (US total market) and 30% VXUS (Intl market). A lot of people suggest increasing international contributions beyond 30% because the cycle is shifting and greater returns are anticipated in international stocks than US stocks in the coming years.
I think these massive IPOs going public will be the tipping point. I'm not changing my retirement account investments because they'll have time to recover in the next decades, but I'm starting to be more selective with my additional income, 50% going into HYSA and the rest into "safer" stocks like Cost/apple. Last year I've been putting most of my extra money on AMAT, amd, googl, went well so far but it's unlikely to trend up indefinitely at these rates.
I hate the idea of being forced to buy Space X, given that it used to be a prereq that companies were actually profitable. I don't think many would disagree that this sucks and is an obvious way to cover rich butt buddies at our expense. That being said I'm keeping my positions. I'm pausing my reoccurring investments and keeping that cash in my HYSA until these market highs calm down and we can see what ramifications this poses. I plan on keeping my positions in VOO for another 20 years so my current value doesn't really matter to me.
I wouldn't be too risky with it. Look at it for what it is: home equity. If/when you buy a house in the future, that equity should go back into the house, otherwise you're going to start from 0 and have to pay down another 30 year loan, which you don't want to be in the situation of having to do if you're thinking about retirement. You're 37 now, so 30 years from \*now\* is 67. A big part of retirement planning, if you own a home, is trying to get the home paid off before you retire so your living costs aren't as high & you can enjoy your retirement income more. So what do you do with it in the meantime? HYSA or a mutual fund would be my advice. You want to keep it relatively liquid (easy to get to). If you put it in a retirement fund & need access to it before you retire, you'll likely have to pay penalties. There is good advice here but if you're not sure what you're doing, it can go sideways on you if you're not sure what happens if you need the money later on. Get a financial advisor if that's the case.
*"the problem it's solving isn't a big enough problem to warrant the trouble."* This is the big reason that it was never widely adopted. I live in the U.S. so my view is admittedly American-centric, but the U.S. banking system already works well enough for the things most people need to do. Renting a physical safety deposit box to store a metal plate? Nah, I'll just skip that James Bond shit and tuck it into a HYSA, which takes minutes to set up and is secured by the FDIC/NCUA to boot.
BND is a bond fund from vanguard, its a total market ETF. It’s not the best, but has a decent return. If you’re going to invest in VOO and BND, then it’s best to do it by opening an account with Vanguard. They have a clunky website but that also helps them keep their expense ratios low. For HYSA, my favorite is Amex just because I have other credit card products with them. There’s a bunch of others that you can research.
This is the hand holding talk to me like a idiot reply I needed. Thank you good sir or ma'am. Whats the deal with the BND? Also what is the best HYSA?
If you know that you will need the money after 1 year or slightly longer and won't need it before the 1 year mark, you could look into a 1 year CD. Rates at roughly 4% so far, so would net you a bit more profit compared to HYSA. Your money is basically locked up for the duration of the CD however, that's why the APY is a little higher. You can look at the CD offerings in most brokerage apps.
The limit for zero tax is 250K if you’re unmarried and living in the same house for 5 years, which is your case. No taxes on 160K and 9 years. Here’s one way to invest: 35K in HYSA 85K in VOO or SPY or FXAIX (all are very similar). This is basically investing in pure American capitalism. 40K in BND or equivalent. This is a bond fund that you can use to buy more stocks or funds when the market is down (remember the adage: you make money when there’s blood on the streets). I would suggest that you put all your money into a HYSA right now and then invest about 10-20% every month into the 2 funds to dollar cost average (DCA).
I just did this same thing. Got the biggest cash pile I’ve ever had end of last year after selling my house. I put it in a capital one HYSA. It’s not the best return, but it’s something and I am deathly afraid to dump it all into the market rn. I do still buy into the market daily tho, just with my normal income.
Congrats man! I was in a similar situation 5 years ago. Check out these links - https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Managing_a_windfall https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Prioritizing_investments That links covers much larger windfalls. But the reason I think it applies to you right now is that I’m guessing you are between jobs. That makes it a good idea to put one year living expenses aside in a HYSA until you figure out your next move. After you’re stable in your new job and city, you can use the prioritizing investments link to choose the size of an emergency fund and then invest the rest in safe ETF’s. Or use the rest for down payment on a home, etc. whatever makes the most sense.
Park the money somewhere safe that makes some interest for you - a high yield savings account (HYSA) linked to your brokerage account. You can also part it in several T-Bill funds that will provide interest but that are still relatively liquid like SWVXX but there are others. Invest it slowly over a year or 2 every week or month into a low cost fund like VOO/SPY (for SP500) or if you can tolerate more risk QQQ or QQQM for NASDAQ100 (though it could be volatile with several huge tech IPO hitting). Or some split between the 2. You can be fancy and buy VOO/SPY that tends to be more stable as a default but if its a down day in the market buy QQQ since NASDAQ tents to fluctuate more and some feel that QQQ gives them a little more swing upward when the markets are inevitably up when you retire in several decades. Best to setup an automated investment system. In general the key is automation with several smaller contributions over time to spread the risk and low cost funds to get the historical long term annual return of 10% the market provides over decades. Have faith in the long term market returns and don't sell on any short term fears or market concerns. Often the most difficult part is to remove emotion from your investing (easier said than done).
I would tell you to invest in index funds but I’m rally concerned we’re in a bubble right now and I’m no longer putting money in the market other than some swing trades. Are you gonna stay in Mass? Why don’t you buy a place. Put the rest in a HYSA or brokerage settlement fund where you’ll earn interest and wait for the crash to put the money into index funds.
Congrats on the sale. Whatever you do, don't dump it all in one stock or meme coin. Put at least 6 months expenses in a HYSA, max out your Roth IRA for the year, and maybe throw the rest in a low-cost index fund like VOO or VT. Also talk to a tax pro - you might owe capital gains on that. Good luck man.
Honestly this is the realest take here. Everyone's out here naming mega caps but nobody knows what the next 2-5 years will look like. If you can't stomach a 40% haircut, you're better off in bonds or a HYSA.
You're smart to be researching, asking and looking around. HYSA is the best fit for your goal and timeline. A CD would lock up the money so that's no good since you said you might need to dip in unexpectedly. CDs and HYSAs are so close right now it would hardly make any difference -especially with something as small as $10K.
There are no safe investments to just dip in for a short while for easy money, that's not how it works. Growth comes with risks that you *lose* money. Stick with HYSA and other cash-equivalent assets for money that you can't afford to lose.
Your HYSA is the best option, if you need a slightly better yield and can stand to wait a couple of business days for cash, use the bond fund. Also a WF customer.
16% in 5 years Just put it in a HYSA
Just stick it in a HYSA for now. Not the greatest investment but at least it's not being wasted.
Exactly. I definitely have too much cash, and have known this for a couple years now but this is the year I finally want to do something about it. For reference, I had all cash in an HYSA until I realized it could be in SGOV instead and skip out on the state taxes. That was my “big” move this year lol. Now I am starting to realize I truly don’t need this amount of cash and might shave it down some into VT. I already have a separate trading account on Robinhood but only a few thousand in it so will probably just keep that. I will most likely reset my retirement accounts and put it into VT or a mix of VOO / VXUS. Thanks for the reply.
This pushes me up against 200k incom for the year (with work), I set aside 12k in a HYSA for 68k in realized gains.
More like 80% HYSA, 10% indices, 5% learn how to invest, 5% learn how to trade.
The standard framework: invest as much as you can while still covering: 1. Emergency fund (3-6 months expenses, in HYSA) 2. Employer 401k match (free money — always capture this first) 3. High-interest debt paid off 4. Then Roth IRA ($7k/year limit), then back to 401k "As much as possible" is the right goal, not a specific percentage. A common target is 15-20% of gross income including employer contributions, but if you can do more without sacrificing necessities, more is always better when you're young. The math is unforgiving in the best way: $10k invested at 22 is worth roughly $160k at 65 at 7% average returns. The same $10k invested at 42 is worth \~$40k. Time is your biggest asset — more than the amount. Index funds (total market or S&P 500) in a Roth IRA or 401k, set to auto-invest, and then largely ignore it. That's the whole strategy for most people.
I'm 19 in college paying for it by myself I have no family and I'm tired of being broke and worried about money. I'm also premed so shit will get more expensive. I have no HYSA only a Roth IRA I haven't even put money in I'm working this summer and actually have a decent paying job. I need help on what to do to build wealth for myself should I have a regular brokerage instead of Roth IRA
This guy has all his money in a HYSA.
You have your investments that are there for long term and then you have a liquid emergency fund which is in HYSA that is where you dip into for your additional expenses that aren’t covered by your monthly paycheck. Don’t invest until you have this fund saved up.
My portfolio was nearly all NVDA the past decade, since last fall I have been diversifying it into VT/VOO and a little SPMO/SMH. I put a small amount in MU and DRAM for FOMO but it triggered -15% stop loss and sold, then continued taking off 🤷♂️ I also have a HYSA at 4.40% APY with 3 years of expenses in it but am otherwise suspicious of the openly acknowledged market manipulation occuring by our current administration, the oil situation, tech CEOs cutting AI spend from "tokenmaxxing", public outrage against datacenters, ect. What's clear is those in power will do anything to prop up the market economy under the auspices of national security, but I already had a good run and left the corporate world and have less appetite for risk now.
I don't care how much the market has gone up, I'm not making my regular VOO purchases when the Shiller PE is at 43. Instead I'm mostly in cash (HYSA) but also on the lookout for individual stocks that I think are undervalued. Whenever I find one, I deploy that cash.
Im a 25 yr old man from tx. I have No kids, and I am single. I have no debt other than a typical car note, insurance, and phone bill. I am very frugal with my money. I don’t go out at all. I would rather live a life of luxury in my 30s,40s,50s… etc. I would like to save and invest mostly everything now. I was fortunate enough to save around $50,000. I made a fidelity account 3 days ago. I invested about $22,000 of it between maxing out my roth ira for the very first time, and putting $ into my brokerage account on fidelity. I currently don’t have a 401k since I work for myself. Coming up I was never taught the power of investing, so I had to learn everything on my own, which im still learning. I just want to make sure that I am not making costly mistakes or losing $ along the way. If anybody had some wisdom or advice it is more than welcome honestly. I plan on buying and holding forever, so Any ETF or stocks I should buy, let go, keep a eye out for let me know. Also if im I overlapping investments I don’t need? Please tell me. What are some good HYSA i plan on opening one. How much should I keep in my HYSA account. Sorry if I am asking so much. Thank you for your time, patience, and insight! Roth ira Schd Shares-46.061 -0.40% Schg Shares-106.883 +0.37% Spaxx Shares-7500 Voo Shares-3.239 +0.22% Individual brokerage account Schd Shares-44.516 -0.24% Spaxx Shares-100 Vti Shares-27.277 +0.11% Vxus Shares-33.695 -0.01%
I love how I’m readying this in May of 2026 and it’s at $231 :( (Note: 24F tired of having all my money in my HYSA and just this month learning to buy stocks) Anywayssss, should I take my L, buy now and watch it or wait to see if it drops any more?
I don’t sell unless I *need* the money. I want the maximum amount in the market making me more money and only enough cash on hand in a HYSA to meet my living needs. I divide my investments between different accounts with different risk levels and horizons. Retirement savings are consitute maybe 2/3 of my NW. * 401k, set and forget diversified total market, I’ll draw on it at retirement age. * Roth IRA, slightly more liquid, slightly more risked with a *couple* long term stock picks, though the rest is all in total stock market mutual fund. This is also long-term set and forget but I may start pulling from it before my 401k to glide path to retirement. I then have three taxable accounts. * One mirrors my Roth IRA holdings with money I haven’t had the opportunity to contribute yet. It’s what I typically draw on if I need money. * The second is where the bulk of my stock picking takes place. I have about 125 stocks in about a dozen buckets of industries I’ve done a lot of research in and picked a short list of winners. This is about 1/5 of my total investments currently, also the most profitable tranche (23% year average over a decade after adjusting for inflation). * The third is a Robinhood account where I have some more speculative stocks and run some wheel plays on. Typically this is under 5% of total investments. My tendency to want to tinker gets directed here, I more aggressively tax loss harvest here as well whenever I have to liquidate money. For any clear long term winners, I transfer them to my previously mentioned accounts. I rebalance in new tax years when certain positions have blown up and exceeded target allocations by a large margin. I dump stocks I no longer believe in a bit more liberally when I see opportunity elsewhere. *Most* of my wealth is allocated towards diversified total stock market mutual funds (like, again, over 2/3) so my stock picking ends up much lower risk in aggregate. So to answer your questions, I recommend dialing back stock picking in retirement accounts to only your highest conviction stocks, only selling when you need the money, better defining your risk per purpose each account plays, and again, only selling to either meet immediate cash needs or to rotate into better opportunities. If you have a winner, do you think it will keep winning? That’s going to depend, what is your thesis?
I think you're solving the wrong problem. The issue isn't that CDs or HYSA accounts require a person, it's that some banks make it easier than others for organizations. Plenty of nonprofits, HOAs, clubs, and associations hold CDs, money market accounts, and brokerage accounts under the organization's EIN. I'd start by talking to a few local banks or credit unions and specifically asking about business/nonprofit accounts rather than looking at consumer products. $50k sitting at 0% would drive me crazy too.
We own our home and cars. The only bills we have are our electric, gas and phone. We never wanted to be slaves to big debt. My house may not be the biggest but it is ours and that’s what matters. We have two Ira’s totaling about 500k after many years of working. I am a terrible stock picker but and never had the means to buy a stock costing over $300 so our gains are small. We lucked out with amd, avgo, google and meta but only could afford very few shares. I am now in schd, vymi, main, NBIS and spmo. Have a little in Spym and Vti. We are retired and get along fine with our SS even able to save a thousand a month which I put into our HYSA. Sure I wish I could have afforded mu but too expensive for my budget. I recently bought dram and spce and hope to make a few dollars on those. I learned about NBIS from a guy at a Verizon store. I bought 25 shares at $24. Wish I had the confidence to buy more. Oh well. Thanks for reading my rant but don’t believe everyone has made millions. You have to have money to make money. Hoping sls pays off. Good luck to all of you.
18 y/o incoming Austin nursing student. Tuition is fully covered by Pell + Texas grants, so I should graduate debt-free. Current situation: * $1,000 emergency fund * $1,400 checking buffer * Plan to increase emergency fund to $2,500 during freshman year Expected refunds: * Year 1: \~$8,250 per semester ($16,500 total) * Years 2–4: \~$6,750 per semester ($40,500 total) * Total refunds over 4 years: \~$54,000 Expected living expenses: * Rent: \~$450/month * Utilities: \~$50/month * Food: \~$200/month ( prolly gonna be larger but thats what the cushion is for ) * Total annual living costs: \~$8,400 * Total 4-year living costs: \~$33,600 Investment plan: * Keep a $2,500 emergency fund in HYSA * Invest $750 each semester during Year 1 * Invest $500 each semester during Years 2–4 * Auto-invest $50/month throughout college * Total invested over 4 years: \~$6,900 * Allocation: 70% VOO / 30% QQQ ( idk split can shift more voo? currently have a paper trading set to c how itll be ) * No individual stocks, options, crypto, or margin Based on my estimates: $54,000 total refunds * $33,600 living expenses * $6,900 invested = \~$13,500 remaining cushion/savings over 4 years (plus any summer savings if I move back home) My goal is to graduate debt-free, keep a solid emergency fund, and build a small investment portfolio while in school. Anything you'd do differently? Would you change the VOO/QQQ allocation, invest more aggressively, hold more cash, or keep the plan as-is?
I don't think everyone is getting rich, but everyone invested in anything is making money. Every green day that passes I say a prayer for my HYSA comrades
If youre not comfortable seeing red, maybe it would be better for your mental health to put your money in HYSA instead. Or just investing in the total market index fund if you have a little more resilience than that but you will still see red on occasion. Red days are inevitable in investing. But you have to ask what your risk tolerance is and how strong is your thesis and conviction in the stocks you chose.
I'm also putting in 2€ every day in to a couple of stocks (from HYSA interest)! Doing my part
RH Gold currently nets me a better yield than my actual HYSA does. Sad!
I have 2.5K in a HYSA so watch your tone when you talk to me
I’m 23 in a very similar situation. Lucked into a good paying job right out of college and live at home with very little expenses. Currently have like 95% of my savings in stocks or HYSA but find myself looking at real estate in my city constantly. At the end of the day, I think it’a about what you need. For me, getting my own place would be more of a lifestyle improvement move with potential to turn into a solid longterm investment. So I would not be looking to make a pure investment move. Either way we have time on our side; worst case scenario you can say you own a house.
With 100k, youre talking about 2% drop before you sell. 2k loss. That’s nothing. The market could drop 2% then increase by 10% overnight. Theyre trying to tell you the market is volatile. That’s why it’s a risk compared to CD or HYSA. If you need safe money soon, dont come here. If you want higher returns and have a longer time horizon to wait out lows then invest and dont worry about what it drops into. You never sell until youre absolutely ready: retirement, house purchase, life emergency, hopefully over five years down the road.
port was over +3% today... fucking HYSA... lol
I’ve got $25,000 that I’m taking from my HYSA to invest into stocks/etf’s. I already have around $19,000 invested in Nvidia, Microsoft, VOO, SOFI, TTWO (I don’t think GTA 6 is completely priced in yet and it will blow up) and other companies with a couple hundred invested in them. I’m not sure how I want to invest this $25000. Should I invest $5000 a week? Every two weeks? Or throw it in the market all at once? What would be the best strategy? As for what to actually invest in, what are some of your guy’s stocks that I should pick? How much of the $25000 should go in those stocks? Or should I buy just ETF’s instead? Should I do a mix of both? I’m 20 years old with a lot of time for my money to grow. I don’t need income from these anytime soon, but I also don’t mind throwing a couple hundred dollars at a stock for its dividends so it can start compounding now. Open to any and all suggestions, regardless of if it’s a safe investment or a risk. Whatever you would do in my situation, that’s what you should recommend.
If 1 single company is included into an index that you dont like, sell everything. HYSA for you bro
At this point why not just put in a HYSA/bonds/Tbills. That's what people with low risk tolerance invest in... which is what sounds like you have
Am I okay or should I diversify?? I started investing in 2019 and I didn’t really know what I was doing (still don’t lol). I’m a 35 year old, living in North Carolina. Here’s what I currently have, any advice is greatly appreciated!! Vanguard money market (HYSA)- $51,427 Vanguard Brokerage - VTI $90,882 vanguard Roth IRA - VFIAX $74,882 Employer 401k - NC Large Cap index fund - $18,488 Roth TSP - C fund $7647 Here’s more info about me if that helps. I’m married and we have a 3yr old. I’m a state employee, making just under $69k, 13 years of time in service. I no longer contribute to the employer 401k because there is no match, I am required to contribute to the pension plan though. I’m no longer in the military, so I do not contribute to the TSP either. Wife works part time and has $55k in her Roth IRA and $32k in her old employer’s 401k. I can safely begin contributing around $1500 per month towards investments, I’m just not sure what I should begin to invest in.
CLX is the superior form of an HYSA. Or other good dividend stocks.
At 21 with $10k, I'd keep 3-6 months expenses in a HYSA (like 4-5% right now) and dump the rest into a low-cost S&P 500 index fund. Don't try to pick individual stocks yet - your biggest asset is time in the market. Also, make sure you're not carrying any credit card debt first.
I was basically 95% equities my whole investing career. I read up on bonds and made the mistake of diversifying with them at too young an age. I am not sure what’s in your brokerage and what’s in the HYSA…maybe locking too much away. Before reallocating in the taxable account, maybe reset your retirement accounts. I would say VT or 75/25 (VOO or VTI)/VXUS.
Honestly I respect Tellus more when people are transparent about the risk instead of pretending it’s “basically a bank account” and it's good to see there are others who've used it for multiple years like me. But I personally would never mentally categorize it the same as an FDIC HYSA. Not saying it’s a scam, just that higher yield usually means higher risk somewhere in the chain. I keep a good chunk of my cash there but that's also money I’m comfortable taking additional risk on.
At 67 the priority probably shouldn’t be maximizing growth, it should be preserving capital and staying liquid. A mix of a HYSA, short-term treasuries, and maybe broad index funds depending on his risk tolerance sounds way safer than chasing returns this late.
Never sold, whatever I got in I got in I just haven’t added any. All going to a nice HYSA. I’m not greedy and I’m not giving these fuckers my hard earned money so they can fuck me and the world in the ass. You want to fund AI job losses and oil wars for a buck you won’t be able to use until you’re 60 if it doesn’t get rugpulled in the meantime (which it will) go ahead be my guest
$1m is FIRE territory Put that shit in a HYSA acc with 3%+ interest rate and let it make you 30k+ a year Fuck off to Vietnam, and enjoy the rest of your life coasting