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Hey everyone, it's my first foray into the world of finance and investment -
I'm a university student and I'm looking for some advice on what to do.
I have managed to find an excellent job throughout my uni years, and have saved enough to invest $10,000 in something - while I love the uni life of drinking and eating out all the time, I figure that if I set myself up as early as possible financially, I will have a leg up on my peers.
My current goal is to own a house within the next 6-7 years.
I am able to add another $300 a month into any investment that I make with my current job and expenses.
I guess what I'm asking for is a little bit of direction or advice as to what I can do with my money - should I invest in a share portfolio, bonds, a property trust etc.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated
Letts
... My current goal is to own a house within the next 6-7 years. ...
I put everything into a house until I owned it.
But back then, the interest rate was 17%
What types of investing are you most passionate about?
What would you prefer to do if you could do anything?
Ideally I'd like a simple portfolio of 3 major blue chip stocks, each with ~$2k each invested in them, another 3 mid-range shares with ~$1k each invested and 3-4 "penny" stocks with a total of $1k between them.
Letts if you have a look on the "for sale" thread, JTLP has a double bed on offer. Comes complete with instruction manual. That's value investing right there.
Take a look at the "Permanent Portfolio" for an easy concept to start with. $10k is not a lot in the markets, outside of buying an index fund and holding onto it for a long time, you will most likely be undercapitalised.
Corporate profit margins are currently very high and valuations on stocks are also very high. Interest rates are at historical lows. This means the avg 5-10y expected return for a 60/40 balanced portfolio is going to be quite low! If interest rates decline, then even worse.
If the projected long term return of an investment is less than cash (especially considering market volatility) then it's almost certainly a poor investment.
i.e. this is a very very expensive market for investors to be entering into.
Hi, thanks for the advice.
Would you have any advice as to another direction I could head in?
When you said "permanent portfolio", MMM's blog and the guy from Early Retirement Extreme were the first things that came to mind. I believe that it is an excellent concept for those who want to take the more passive route with some or all of their investments. Most of the guys over on the ERE forums seem to use it, actually.Check out blogs like Mr Money Moustache which show the power of saving.
When you said "permanent portfolio", MMM's blog and the guy from Early Retirement Extreme were the first things that came to mind. I believe that it is an excellent concept for those who want to take the more passive route with some or all of their investments. Most of the guys over on the ERE forums seem to use it, actually.
Hehe V, well the thing is, my personal opinion is to save in physical or allocated gold, but I didn't really feel comfortable suggesting that outright to an ASF newbie.
This "PP Shakedown" from GestaltU was a very good read for me.
http://gestaltu.blogspot.com.au/2012/08/permanent-portfolio-shakedown-part-1.html
http://gestaltu.blogspot.com.au/2012/08/permanent-portfolio-shakedown-part-ii.html
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