So, I'm average joe programmer. I contribute to 401k, and I have a high yield savings account for very short term stuff. I would like to start investing in something that will be usable in the short-medium term.
I don't know much at all about the stock market, and don't want to learn. I am thinking about putting some fixed amount of money per month in a single index fund (a large, broad index fund).
Is this enough in terms of diversification, given my other investments? Goal is to either:
1. Be able to take the money out in short-medium term (3-6 years maybe) as a down payment for a house
2. Go "all the way" and provide funding for an early retirement.
Is contributing $100ish per month through a standard online broker (scottrade, etrade, sharebuilder, whatever), to a single index fund a smart choice for somebody like me?
Some base stats:
Age: 26
Immediate liquid capital: low 5-figures, enough for 6 months of living, in a random high-yield savings.
401k contributions: ~10k/year
The obvious "put more in 401k" I don't think applies to me. I am already contributing a pretty substantial amount, and I would like to potentially have access to the money much sooner than a 401k would allow. Picking a single index-fund seems to make sense for me, since I'm going to be doing repeated small contributions, and thus will save on brokerage costs.
AAAAAAAAND I'm rambling. Any advice would be appreciated.
I put my notes on that page, but the real book is really worth reading. It sums up the wisest advice about passive investing so well.
Don't go with one fund. Do three:
#1 = An index fund representative of the US stock market in its broadest terms. (Fidelity: FSTMX, Vanguard: VTSMX)
#2 = An index fund representative of the international stock market in its broadest terms. (Fidelity FSIIX, Vanguard: VGTSX)
#3 = An index fund representative of the US bond market in its broadest terms. (Fidelity: FBIDX, Vanguard: VBMFX)
ASSET ALLOCATION:
LOW RISK = 14% stocks, 6% int'l stocks, 80% bonds
MEDIUM-LOW RISK = 28% stocks, 12% int'l stocks, 60% bonds
MEDIUM-HIGH RISK = 42% stocks, 18% int'l stocks, 40% bonds
HIGH RISK = 56% stocks, 24% int'l stocks, 20% bonds
(NOTE: all stock-holdings are 70% domestic, 30% international. Only choice is how much are stocks and how much are bonds.)