****Im in the Hurricane*****

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Can I have your account when you die?
 
Sorry, I was hammered. Just woke up and its fucking bananas outside
 
I live in South Florida. Nasty outside right now.

My laptop has 50% left. Using my iphone as a hotspot.

Lights are out.

Im toggling Sherdog and porn. My boxers are moving like crazy.

Time to go wake the GF get romantic. This time, I let the dog watch.

Im drunk on grey goose and red wine. Wish me luck.
Do you have another phone, or are you wasting your battery? lol
 
Do you think my 20K invested in S&P 500 Index fund is going to ride a bear wave due to the devastation in Florida? Fuck hope not.
Index funds typically are broadly diversified, so you have some protection in that regard. Over the long term, index funds make about 3-4% annually, so if I were you, I wouldnt withdraw anytime soon.

Not that 20K is alot, but why is your cash in an index fund? If you are somewhat young (under 40), my advice would be to keep your money in stocks, as the yield averages 8% over time. Then, as you approach retirement age, you gradually move your capital to less aggressive investment vehicles such as bonds, index funds and (if you are financially conservative), annuities.

Hope this helps
 
Index funds typically are broadly diversified, so you have some protection in that regard. Over the long term, index funds make about 3-4% annually, so if I were you, I wouldnt withdraw anytime soon.

Not that 20K is alot, but why is your cash in an index fund? If you are somewhat young (under 40), my advice would be to keep your money in stocks, as the yield averages 8% over time. Then, as you approach retirement age, you gradually move your capital to less aggressive investment vehicles such as bonds, index funds and (if you are financially conservative), annuities.

Hope this helps


Did you bang you woman during the hurricane?
 
Index funds typically are broadly diversified, so you have some protection in that regard. Over the long term, index funds make about 3-4% annually, so if I were you, I wouldnt withdraw anytime soon.

Not that 20K is alot, but why is your cash in an index fund? If you are somewhat young (under 40), my advice would be to keep your money in stocks, as the yield averages 8% over time. Then, as you approach retirement age, you gradually move your capital to less aggressive investment vehicles such as bonds, index funds and (if you are financially conservative), annuities.

Hope this helps
wtf_is_that_martin_freeman.gif
 
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