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I do. If you plan to trade on a margin or simply borrow against your stocks Intersctive Brokers is better - their rate is only 1.6% vs 8%+ @ Etrade.
I had an etrade account a couple decades ago I think.
Since Vanguard, Fidelity and T.Rowe Price allow stock trades I don’t have etrade anymore.
I totally love Vanguard brokerage, for what it’s worth.
I buy few stocks, most of my dough is in mutual funds and a Vanguard variable annuity.
I have brokerage account with schwab,etrade and vanguard.
DonewithDebate saysI have brokerage account with schwab,etrade and vanguard.
Which one do you like better and why? I want to fund a very simple way to fund an account that I can easily buy and sell stocks. I'm not trying to be a day trader, just feel like I've missed out on stocks I "knew" were going to be winners. I was talked out of Facebook and Booger (I think) alerted us all to Trumps social media stock(?) a week(?) ago. I would have jumped on that one asap if I had already had a simple online stock trading platform I belonged to.
Can a a anybody answer if trading on Interactive brokers is completely free, incl. pennystocks and regardless of frequency and volume for all US stocks?
Can a a anybody answer if trading on Interactive brokers is completely free, incl. pennystocks and regardless of frequency and volume for all US stocks?
Question for the group. Let's say you come into a large sum of money...$5M net of taxes. How do you invest/preserve it to maximize its value to you and your family?
Do you put it in a low-risk, dividend-paying mutual fund and earn like 5% in income?
Do you take some of it and buy an annuity?
I'd like to hear ideas.
Question for the group. Let's say you come into a large sum of money...$5M net of taxes. How do you invest/preserve it to maximize its value to you and your family?
Do you put it in a low-risk, dividend-paying mutual fund and earn like 5% in income?
Do you take some of it and buy an annuity?
I'd like to hear ideas.
even no fees
porkchopexpress saysMy goal is to preserve the capital and live off the interest, but rates are dogshit. That’s why I considered a lower risk dividend/income paying mutual fund like the Wellesley, but it still pays less than 3%. I could invest in a higher-paying dividend fund or individual stocks, but then the risk goes up significantly but perhaps I’m overestimating the risk.Question for the group. Let's say you come into a large sum of money...$5M net of taxes. How do you invest/preserve it to maximize its value to you and your family?
Do you put it in a low-risk, dividend-paying mutual fund and earn like 5% in income?
Do you take some of it and buy an annuity?
I'd like to hear ideas.
It really depends on your goal and knowledge. That would determine how the $5M should be invested.
porkchopexpress saysI like the land idea and paying debt. Some would argue one should not pay off the mortgage given the tax break assuming you could invest it at a higher return elsewhere.Question for the group. Let's say you come into a large sum of money...$5M net of taxes. How do you invest/preserve it to maximize its value to you and your family?
Do you put it in a low-risk, dividend-paying mutual fund and earn like 5% in income?
Do you take some of it and buy an annuity?
I'd like to hear ideas.
@porkchopexpress
I would first of all pay off all debt.
I'd put the majority of it in about 20 reliable stocks, preferably those that pay a dividend and only rarely change any of them. I hate mutual funds with a passion, because their business is skimming your money and none of them reliably do better than the indexes.
But would also consider some land.
monitor their health to adjust my investments accordingly
Re: Vanguard brokerage
I like the web interface a lot.
I can make free trades until 25, then it costs me 2 bucks.
clambo saysRe: Vanguard brokerage
I like the web interface a lot.
I can make free trades until 25, then it costs me 2 bucks.
At Ameritrade stock trades are free. Now I do pay fees on option trades. I don't know of anyone who does free options trades.
I don’t see in any prospectus anything about a “kickback”.
The essence of investing is mutual funds.
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