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It will be interesting to see if the pile evaporates with currency collapse of the fiat dollar.

I'm retired and 94% stocks.
I'm confident that tax rates will rise in the future, but still don't know how I'm going to spend the money.
A strange thing can happen which happened to me; I planned my retirement and then stocks rose another 100%.
still don't know how I'm going to spend the money.
we have saved in excess of 25% of our income for 30 years invested in index ETF's with low ER's. That's one formula for financial security. Fuck your new cars every 3 years, your annual $10,000 vacation, the $10,000 you spend on Christmas presents, the fancy eat out dinners 5 times a month, the home you have to stretch to afford.
Eventually, at the great reset, virtually all assets in banks, savings accounts, retirement accounts or stocks will be wiped out or paid out in a new currency for “pennies on the dollar”. It might be 50 or 100 hundred years, or it might be in our lifetime, but the dollar will fail and with it most of private citizens “wealth” and savings.
Eventually, at the great reset,
I'm confident that tax rates will rise in the future, but still don't know how I'm going to spend the money.
I see less drastic measures like a means test for Social Security such as those with income greater than 4 times the poverty limit receive at most 75% of their original Social Security. Those that make 6 times the limit or more will receive no more than 50%.
bought low p/e stocks which pay a dividend
My ObamaCare Bronze (lowest level) goes up to $902 for year 2026.
SunnyvaleCA says
My ObamaCare Bronze (lowest level) goes up to $902 for year 2026.
$902 per year? Or did you mean goes up $902, as in increased by $902?
The problem with dividend stocks is that you are forced to take income evey year.
Bitcoin, crypto, gold, silver, platinum, palladium, are not investments; they are something you speculate with.
I have accounts at T. Rowe Price, Vanguard and Fidelity. Fidelity is the smallest and Vanguard is the largest.
Over the last 5 years the S&P 500 index has risen 88%; none of my funds has beaten this as far as I can tell.
That's not a problem since they've mostly increased a lot over a 30 year period.
A mistake was buying an Emerging Market fund years ago; fuck those hell hole countries.
My changes now are from International and small company funds towards Blue Chip Growth, Dividend Growth, and Equity Income funds.
I no longer seek much capital appreciation since I have already done this.
My epiphany is I could have just bought more of my index funds probably and not obsessed over stuff like "small cap value" "small cap growth" "international growth" "science and technology" etc. funds.
Tip: If you have extra dough and filled up all Roth IRA, HSA, SEP-IRA, 401K funds, check out Vanguard Tax Managed Capital Appreciation Fund. I have made bucks with this fund since it's essentially an index fund but with a twist.
Tip: MacBook Air for $800 is "insanely great". I got one last summer and it's very good.