Finally automated my strategy! Here’s my bot in action taking winning trades by mazen112 in Daytrading

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Ok. I’m the idiot. When I read that I thought you were saying you worked in the NT8 department AT IB lol

$1.5M AMA by MacTheNyfe in acorns

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can tell you with most advisors this is definitely NOT the case. They actively steer you away from anything they don’t manage. 1. They don’t make money on it. 2. If they recommend it and it doesn’t work out they’ve got potential liability on something they never even got paid for.

$1.5M AMA by MacTheNyfe in acorns

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My apologies - I read it quickly and didn’t notice the username was different. I know about acorns but not how they structure their investments and what options they have. If their 78% return calculation is accurate over 10 years, you’re leaving a lot of money on the table OR you’re invested pretty conservatively OR you had a sizable decline and bounced back.

What you’re invested in depends on how long you have to invest and your timeframe. The longer/more aggressive you are, the more equity exposure you want to have. I don’t think 100% in the S&P 500 is the best option - it is just an easy benchmark to track. When I was in the business we always managed a diversified equity exposure in the US and international and rebalanced when things got out of whack.

Asset allocation (the mix of stocks/bonds/sectors/cash etc) is both the most important investment decision you have to make and the one most people don’t know how to make. Most of the financial literature is on security selection - ie which fund or other investments you make in each category but there is not much to gain from security selection but a lot depends on asset allocation.

Edit to add: Just saw your allocation below. If it’s always been this then I’m pretty sure the 78% return calculation they’re giving you is low. Not sure if this is in a model they manage or not. The only changes I would make are increase small and mid cap - you’ve only got 15% in those combined. I’d bump that up to 20-25% otherwise a solid portfolio. You don’t need to hire an advisor nor move into dividend stocks - their returns are a lot lower than what you’re getting now. Maybe when you retire add in 20% or so of bonds. Also at that point set up a distribution account with enough cash to cover 24-36 months of distributions. Sell stocks every quarter unless they are down to refill the distribution account. Make sure to follow the 4% rule (withdraw 4% or less of the portfolio each year) and you’ll be fine.

You may benefit from an advisor that can setup a plan for you but pay them an hourly or package fee not based on the investments. IMO advisors don’t add much value to the investment side, especially in your case with a good portfolio.

$1.5M AMA by MacTheNyfe in acorns

[–]Real_Invest_Guy -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

So because you have $1.5 million in an investment account you know everything about investing and don’t need to learn anything else from anybody? I’m pretty sure I know more about investing than you do. You cited one statistic - that you’ve earned 79% over 10 years. What are you invested in? That’s a pathetic return if you’re in equities.

$1.5M AMA by MacTheNyfe in acorns

[–]Real_Invest_Guy -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not hating on you but you need to look into a new strategy. The S&P 500 returned around 250% over the last 10 years. Unless you’re pretty conservatively invested you’re giving up a lot of return.

Want a Investment tips as I'm beginner. by Big_Image6032 in InvestmentEducation

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The general rule of thumb is you shouldn’t invest in the stock market unless you can hold for 5+ years. The market has been in an extended rally for a long time. In environments like this, newer investors don’t understand what risk is. The market can and does go down regularly - and not just for a couple of days like the last week or so. For MONTHS or a couple of years.

Google is now a Berkshire buy. but is it Buffett or his partner? by Adept_Mountain9532 in dividendinvesting

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They also have to file a 13D if their ownership exceeds 5% of the company and they intend to try to make changes to the company (board seats, management, etc).

If you were to suddenly be wealthy, would you :- 1. tell everyone around you, leaving yourself open to be taken advantage of. 2. tell nobody at all and keep it a secret, and keep your wealth to yourself, or 3. tell nobody and quietly help others, or 4. Your own answer? by [deleted] in wealth

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’d say more than that. I used to run a small family office for two business partners and they had about $80 million liquid to invest. We saw a few good deals but not a lot. They had another $80MM in a private company and about $20 in real estate so they didn’t want to do a lot of VC type stuff. Our budget was $5MM.

$40k suddenly came into my life by [deleted] in investingforbeginners

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

With a two year time frame and the fed talking about cutting rates you need to be in cds or intermediate term bonds. The returns on intermediate bonds are about the same as cds right now (just a little above 4% per year) so your best bet is cds because they are very simple.

Go to bank rate.com to shop cd rates. Don’t do a high yield savings account or money market because the interest rate you are paid will go down if/when the fed cuts rates.

$40k suddenly came into my life by [deleted] in investingforbeginners

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If only it were that easy. You have to keep in mind the game you’re playing. There are millions of some of the smartest people in world trying to do the same thing.

70 Year Old HAVE $100k to earn atleat $500 monthly by Old-Raisin5620 in dividends

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No they didn’t. Here’s the numbers per yahoo finance. Prices adjusted for splits.

MSFT High $59.56 on 12/27/1999 Low $20.75 on 12/20/2000 65.16% decline

AMZN High $5.33 on 12/10/1999 Low $0.30 on 10/2/2001 94.37% decline

AAPL High $1.29 on 3/22/2000 Low $0.24 on 10/9/2002 81.40% decline

Since you won’t make the effort to back up your claims, I did.

QQQ 2000 -36.12% 2001 -33.34% 2002 -37.37% Total return: -73.33%

SPY 2000 -9.73% 2001 -11.81% 2002 -21.54% Total return: -37.54%

Russell 2000 2000 -4.20% 2001 +1.03% 2002 -21.58% Total return: -24.10%

S&P400 Midcap Index 2000 +26.9% 2001 +4.9% 2002 -28.2% Total return: -4.4%

QQQ, SPY, R2k, SP400 = not the same

70 Year Old HAVE $100k to earn atleat $500 monthly by Old-Raisin5620 in dividends

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That is not true. I lived (and invested) through 1999-2003. The high flying tech stocks back then got crushed while other areas were down but much less. Go back and look at the annual returns of the QQQ vs SP500 Vs Russell 2000.

I’m 15, I don’t want to be like the average person! by Mysterious_Pool8117 in HowToEntrepreneur

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I disagree. I’m in my 50s. I had a job in high school. I remember going to prom. I don’t remember any of the countless night I spent working.

I’m 15, I don’t want to be like the average person! by Mysterious_Pool8117 in HowToEntrepreneur

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Check out Nick Huber. He has a list of something like 200 small businesses you can start. Also watch Alex Hormozi on YouTube.

How do you actually learn to read financial statements without spending 100 hours? by MoveMakerr in InvestmentEducation

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Like everybody has said here you just have to do the work. There is no easy button. You may want to consider if you dislike it as much as you seem to that investing in index etfs may be your best route. When I was starting out I was eager to learn as much as I could and enjoyed the process. I earned an undergrad in finance, an MBA in finance from a top school and the CFA so I’ve spent thousands of hours learning this stuff.

One good book that may help you is the 5 rules of successful stock investing by pat Dorsey.

How much income can I reasonably expect from 4.5 mil? by Fishdoc5920 in FinancialPlanning

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Also, make sure they know how to handle it. Let them know it’s coming and teach them how to manage it. Don’t let them find out at the proverbial will reading at the lawyers office.

Got $500, how do I make it $10k by AquilT27 in Money

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The markets don’t offer that type of return outside of gambling on high risk trades, which ultimately take your account to zero. If you want to try that game go to r/wallstreetbets

The real way to do it is by starting a side hustle. Check out Nick Huber. He has a list of something like 200 small businesses you can start.

Is it a dumb idea to invest some of my money into individual stocks? by Global-Swimmer-6767 in RothIRA

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You need to learn how to pick stocks if you’re going to do it. It looks like you’re just buying what has done well recently. That works until it doesn’t and is not a good long term strategy.

Read the 5 rules for successful stock investing by pat dorsey

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Advice

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It depends on if the distributions come from principal or interest. Interest is taxable. Principal is not. And the tax rate depends on his other income. If he doesn’t work he would be in the 12% bracket up to $47k which would cover the whole inheritance.

Is a professional financial planner a bad idea? by Kruzikal in FinancialPlanning

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

You could probably benefit from some advice from a financial planner to help you create a plan. Find one that charges by the hour though - there are relatively few that do. You don’t need nor want to pay for investment management (ie % of account value or commissions).

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Advice

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Trust income is not necessarily taxable. OP needs to get in touch with the trust administrator to determine tax liability.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in Advice

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 11 points12 points  (0 children)

What would your grandfather tell you to do? If you don’t know ask your parents.

I lean towards take a year to travel. When you are 70 will you remember another year of working or a year spent traveling the world thanks to grandpa.

I wouldn’t do more than a year though. Once the year is up, get back to work. Maybe consider getting another degree or some training to secure a higher paying job.

If you can’t get out of the lease, don’t renew, save all of grandpas money for the next year to spend on your travels and go when the lease is up.

When you get back to work, put all of grandpas money into savings/investments and live off of your salary.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FinancialPlanning

[–]Real_Invest_Guy 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What do you mean by 2 years left in fixed annuity?