I'm 21 years old and making enough money from my internship this summer to start investing. I'm planning on putting $1000 in and then doing $100 every month from here on out. If you were in my shoes how would you invest it?
AggieT said:
Roth IRA. VOO.
Or bitcoin.
pretty much was going to be my advice. Don't. Save it. And when buddies want to take a trip somewhere, go. Invest when you are in the real workforce.chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
OldArmyCT said:chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
That alone will grow to over $1mm by age 60 using his strategy. That's if he does nothing else. I'm boring and sensible, I'm also 78 and 100% invested in equities. Don't own a single bond. Been buying stocks for over 40 years and where I've lost the most is low cost tech stocks bought on a whim. I've also hit a few but honestly would have been better off leaving the flyers alone. Just my opinion, not a recommendation.
chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
chris1515 said:
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
@coopercuffe said:
I'm 21 years old and making enough money from my internship this summer to start investing. I'm planning on putting $1000 in and then doing $100 every month from here on out. If you were in my shoes how would you invest it?
fauxstradamus said:
At 21 I would personally pile into bitcoin and just don't sell it
infinity ag said:fauxstradamus said:
At 21 I would personally pile into bitcoin and just don't sell it
I like this idea. I will think about it for my son.
Is it possible to buy a fraction of a Bitcoin? He does not have 100k or whatever it costs now.
Tex117 said:chris1515 said:
I strongly applaud your work ethic and frugality and desire to be saving AND investing for the future.
But…dude, you're 21. $1K + $100 a month isn't going to move the needle in the long term. Based on the attributes I listed previously, you'll be just fine in life.
Take that cash right now and go on a trip someplace. Go blow it on some life experience of some kind. Go to a casino and put it on red. Or…can't believe I'm saying THIS…buy Bitcoin!
Once you get a real job you'll have plenty of chances to open an account at Fidelity and invest in a mix of low cost index funds! If you choose to ignore what I've said, at least invest it in some "high risk" technology mutual fund., leave the boring and "sensible" investments to us old farts.
Is this a joke?
Invest the money (but don't invest so much you miss out on a very specific time of your life that you will never be able to recreate. IE 21-25). Find the right balance.
You have the right mindset.
El Chupacabra said:infinity ag said:fauxstradamus said:
At 21 I would personally pile into bitcoin and just don't sell it
I like this idea. I will think about it for my son.
Is it possible to buy a fraction of a Bitcoin? He does not have 100k or whatever it costs now.
yes, you can buy partial coins.
or bitcoin etfs
Bobaloo said:
1) Avoid debt like the bubonic plague; 2) live under your means; 3) invest in appreciating assets; 4) read at least one hour per day with some time towards financial literacy. At your age and experience, start with a simple fund that mimics the S&P 500. Then branch out and invest in companies as your implement #4 above. If you do these things, you'll be able to buy and sell most of your acquaintances in fairly short order.
RogueAg said:
My belief is that it's a little more nuanced than "avoid debt". My personal advice is to avoid BAD debt. I define bad debt as revolving credit card debt, high interest debt, etc.
It makes little sense to me to buy a car outright in cash (for example) if I can qualify for a 1% interest loan and money market accounts are paying 4-5%.
I agree that paying off CC balances monthly is a must because of the exorbitant rates that exist on cards, and the ability to build good credit over time by paying timely and keeping debt to credit ratio low. This be extension leads to increased credit scores and and the ability to put one's self in the position above. All of this is especially crucial for young people in their 20's.
The right debt can be used to your advantage.
Also definitely agree on starting off with lost cost index funds / ETF's as a great approach.