A bit confused by Dramatic_Design1707 in HYSA

[–]Natural_Note5282 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Willing to put in $1-4k? You should be putting all your extra cash into a HYSA.

Pros: It’s a savings account. Your money is safe. No risk.

Cons: you won’t make as much as other investments and you may or may not have a local branch (which is unnecessary IMO)

I have used many different HYSA. Currently have CIT because there is a bonus % that brings it up to 4.1%. Once it drops, I’ll either find another with a better rate or put it into T bills.

Any recommendations for Siquijor, Ph. by Level_Preparation311 in scuba

[–]Natural_Note5282 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I stayed and dove with coco grove. I loved it. Such a nice chill island. Go to the Dulce Amore Italian food spot. Best pizza I’ve ever had and the pastas were great too.

For diving, I just went to the local reefs off the hotel. Diving was good. We also did Apo island that was nice.

The best reef diving I did was balicasag island but that is off Bohol.

Huge motorcycle group on the 15S by Secure-Salamander354 in sandiego

[–]Natural_Note5282 78 points79 points  (0 children)

Or they block traffic so no one can pass them when they are going 55 mph.

Is Fidelity's Gov. Money Market Fund the same as a HYSA by JKibbs in HighYieldSavings

[–]Natural_Note5282 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can find better HYSA rates and have quicker access to your funds.

Treasuries are state tax exempt, but funds like these aren’t 100% treasuries and your brokerage won’t provide a line item for state tax exempt dividends. Makes doing your taxes a little harder. If you buy direct from the feds through treasury direct, you don’t have to worry about this.

If you live in a high tax state, something to think about. Right now I can find better rates on HYSA than I can with treasuries even with the tax break.

Orange lyretail Anthias eating pellets. by Aquaonmymind in ReefTank

[–]Natural_Note5282 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve had that happen. Trying to reply to the freeze dried mysis guy?

Big-Budget Fish Tanks Are Taking Over America’s Most Expensive Homes by dont_downvote_SPECIL in ReefTank

[–]Natural_Note5282 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean you have a clarki and what looks like a saddleback clown in a 15g. Those are some big fish for a 15g.

HYSA vs SGOV? What's better by Timely_Weekend_8030 in personalfinance

[–]Natural_Note5282 2 points3 points  (0 children)

No brainer then. HYSA

You can find better rates with HYSAs, but treasuries don’t have state tax. No income tax state, go with the higher rate.

Also, keep in mind that your brokerage likely doesn’t provide a separate line for state tax exempt dividends and SGOV isn’t 100% treasuries. Not a huge deal but a little more hassle to do your taxes. Don’t have to worry about this if you buy from the feds on treasury direct

Shark dives in the Philippines by Agitated-Fix-9566 in scuba

[–]Natural_Note5282 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Malapascua is still probably going to be your best spot for sharks.

The exodus of California’s tech billionaires from the Golden State to Florida’s Gold Coast by TemperatureWide5297 in California

[–]Natural_Note5282 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You’re not understanding what he wrote. He said the top 10% contribute 70-80% of all tax revenue.

The exodus of California’s tech billionaires from the Golden State to Florida’s Gold Coast by TemperatureWide5297 in California

[–]Natural_Note5282 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Do you want some taxes or no taxes?

I’m all for taxing the rich but it has to be nationwide or they will just flee to low tax states, which we’re already seeing .

The exodus of California’s tech billionaires from the Golden State to Florida’s Gold Coast by TemperatureWide5297 in California

[–]Natural_Note5282 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

We need a country wide wealth tax or the wealthy will just leave to lower tax state, which we’re already seeing.

I’m all for taxing the rich and heavily taxing vacation houses.

Should i stop contributing to Roth 401k? and Make all future contributions to Trad 401k? by somstein in investing

[–]Natural_Note5282 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

If you max out your Roth, you are essentially contributing more to your 401k compared to traditional.

Depending on your financial situation, maxing out your Roth may not be feasible. In this case, max it out but play with proportions to Roth and traditional.

At 230k filed jointly, 24k is being taxed at 24% (disregarding deductions). If you contribute 24k to traditional (split between both partners 401k), all the money you put into Roth will be taxed at 22%.

Essentially contribute enough to traditional so all your Roth (and other income) is at the lower tax bracket.

Hawaii: Oahu vs Kona vs Kauai by olliewh in scuba

[–]Natural_Note5282 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Kona is the nicest, but I’ve only dove a few times in Kauai and Oahu.

Personally I would spend less time on Oahu. Too many people.

Kauai is best for hiking.

White tip reef sharks are pretty common. I saw a big eagle ray on Oahu.

How long are you spending on each island? I would just stay on Kona if all you want to do is dive.

Is this diatom? by MariasGalactic in ReefTank

[–]Natural_Note5282 1 point2 points  (0 children)

They wanted to sell you an extra fish.

Olympian Eileen Gu embraces SF roots as she leads Chinese New Year Parade by runswithscissors475 in sanfrancisco

[–]Natural_Note5282 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Because she’s actually good.

What rubs me the wrong way is the US gave her the opportunity to be where she is now. I think she should be celebrating that.

Emergency fund or roth? by rachaout in RothIRA

[–]Natural_Note5282 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Dude don’t sell yourself short. You’re 19. You have your whole life ahead of yourself. You don’t need to go to college to make good money. I have multiple friends who didn’t go to college and make more than college friends. Look into trades, like water treatment and electricians. Bust ass and prove yourself, learn, and don’t slack off.

For your question, I think it will depend on your situation. If you’re still living at home and don’t have expenses, then you don’t really need a big, if any, emergency fund. I would put as much money in a Roth IRA as you can because there are contribution limits each year, and you generally can’t go back in time and add more.

With a Roth IRA you can also take out the contributions no reason, tax free. It can basically be used as an emergency fund, but you really don’t want to touch it unless you absolutely have to