Greenguy's Board


Go Back   Greenguy's Board > Chit Chat
Register FAQ Calendar Today's Posts

Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Rate Thread Display Modes
Old 2006-01-19, 03:08 PM   #1
cd34
a.k.a. Sparky
 
cd34's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: West Palm Beach, FL, USA
Posts: 2,396
I have a Simple IRA set up through my company through Etrade and have a taxable account with them as well. They aren't the cheapest, but, at the time I set up the Simple IRA, not many online brokers would deal with it. In terms of research available, I prefer Etrade over the others.

I had an account with Datek, who was purchased later by Ameritrade. In terms of trading costs, I prefer Ameritrade. Ameritrade's interface is a little different than etrade, and their research lacks a bit. Either one gives real time quotes, so, if you're not doing your research through your broker, pick the cheapest one that guarantees trade executions, etc.

I know that buyandhold.com is pretty well regarded if you aren't trading frequently. I don't believe you can do limit orders, and they buy at market prices once or twice a day and charge minimal fees.

I know someone that uses scottrade.com that likes their services. At $7/trade (including limit & stop orders), they are pretty darn competitive. I've been told that their online research tools are pretty good.

I know a person that has a Merrill Lynch Cash Management Account (ml.com) which allows them to do a number of things online.

If you are doing the research yourself, I don't think you need a full service brokerage. If you wanted to dump a chunk of cash somewhere and wanted someone to invest that for you, a full service brokerage -- and possibly the CMA would be the right account for you.

If you want to play with stocks, I would take a look at scottrade.com. I haven't seen the inside of their account management system, but, from what I have been told, their online research rivals what I can get with etrade.

If you are looking for bottom line cost and are reading the newspaper and aren't trying to time the market, buyandhold.com is probably the one.

Any of them can do periodic withdrawls from a checking account and will put the money into a money-market interest bearing account until you make a decision where to invest it. Keep in mind, they pay paltry interest rates.

If you were looking to do something that you didn't want to manage, fidelity.com and their mutual funds are a decent hands-off method of investing. They have some of the lowest fees around for mutual funds as far as no-load and management, and, will easily set up a monthly withdrawl from your account. In this case, you would not be able to buy individual stocks, but, you could invest in an S&P tracker that over its 'lifetime' (not recent years) has returned an average annualized 12.2%.

With that said, if you don't have a Simple IRA or SEP IRA set up for your company, you might want to talk with your accountant about a company sponsored retirement program. I don't recall the limits for last year's Simple IRA contributions, but, I believe it was $10000 in 2005 and is $10000 in 2006. This is tax deferred money that you are putting away -- and if you set up with one of the online brokerages, you can then invest that money where you choose -- including many mutual funds.

I don't think any of the accounts are prone to security issues, and you are pretty well protected against that anyhow. Its no different than online banking.

With that said, and with this being the new year, everyone should really earmark a % of their income and bank it in a savings account until you have 90 days worth of living expenses stored away. At that point, you should start investing it in higher yield products. You don't need to add a ton of risk and can stick with investments that won't lose cash like laddering CDs, i.e. buy 1 CD that matures in 12 months every month. When you hit that 1 year point, you start investing in 2 year CDs and let your existing 1 year CD rollover.

And if you don't have an accountant or company structure set up where you can defer taxable income, you should speak with an accountant.

Compound interest over time is actually quite impresive. Taking larger risks with stocks can really inflate (or deflate) your $$. Make sure you know the risk you can afford to take.
__________________
SnapReplay.com a different way to share photos - iPhone & Android
cd34 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-01-19, 06:37 PM   #2
Tommy
NYC Boy That Moved To The Island
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 2,940
Send a message via ICQ to Tommy
Thanks Cd

when you sell a stock
it always sells ??
and for the going market price ??
__________________
Accepting New partners
Tommy is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-01-19, 06:57 PM   #3
Bill
Selling porn allows me to stay in a constant state of Bliss - ain't that a trip!
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Posts: 3,914
I buy mutual funds for my IRAs online, but thats not the same. Tax deferred accounts, the accounting and reporting for them is pretty easy, it's just buy and forget.

I'd like to start buying stocks in taxable accounts, but, like you, I'm worried about how much of a hassle it will be.

I'd go to something like Money magazine and read a few issues of it to get a better sense of the pros and cons.
Bill is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 2006-01-19, 07:02 PM   #4
Surfn
If you don’t take a chance the Angels won’t dance
 
Surfn's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Earth on occasion
Posts: 8,812
Send a message via ICQ to Surfn
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tommy
Thanks Cd

when you sell a stock
it always sells ??
and for the going market price ??
When you tell them to sell they do at THAT price. Make sure you want to sell at the price at that moment. You can also setup a sell point. What that means is if a particular stock hits a target price up or down it sells.
__________________

Surfn's Links Are you a partner?

Surfn is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 11:11 PM.


Mark Read
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.1
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
© Greenguy Marketing Inc