Not exact matches
«They are
mostly mutual funds, index or very low - cost managed
fund with about 50/50 stock and
bond,» he says.
Right now I'm maxing my IRA and putting the rest in investment accounts (
mostly mutual funds and some
bonds)... should I be doing anything differently to ensure 35 years or so from now I will be prepared to live comfortably in retirement?
He could have you invested
mostly in a
bond mutual fund with the remainder of your money in a conservative equity
fund.
That's a separate question, and the answer will likely be the same as for stock
mutual funds vs stock ETFs, so I'll
mostly ignore the question and just say stick with
mutual funds unless you are investing at least $ 50,000 in
bonds.
within 2 - 5 years should be invested in
mostly safe, but higher paying investments such as
bonds,
bond mutual funds, and
mutual funds that limit volatility such as «balanced»
funds; and
Many
mutual funds invest
mostly in stocks or
bonds.
Most of the time, they say to make it so as soon as they see you have a system using more than a few asset classes, the returns are good compared to the markets, there's a healthy amount of
bonds, you're recommending small amounts of risky asset classes, you're not trading stocks / ETFs, not trying to predict the future, and you're using
mutual funds in a
mostly «buy and hold» fashion.
I consider to move to
mostly bonds, like Vanguard short term
bond index
mutual fund, or to vanguard inflation prot.
There are a number of risks associated with living off a portfolio of
mostly stocks,
bonds,
mutual funds and ETFs.
A: The Compass Growth Portfolio
fund is a
mutual fund that holds
mostly common shares, although it does hold some
bonds.
mostly fees and commissions from stocks
bonds mutual funds.
A
bond fund is a
mutual fund or ETF composed
mostly of
bonds and other debt instruments.
I would probably be investing in a passive
mutual fund or ETF with
mostly stocks and some
bonds, maybe 70 % stocks and 30 %
bonds (I'm 25).