[quote author="Oscar" date=1229507860][quote author="blackvault_cm" date=1229499990]Oscar. Stock market is the safest place to put your money. I'm serious too. I can engineer an investment that gives me 95% protection loss and a 10.5% return. So thats 5% total risk loss with 10.5% return VS. a CD with 0.0001% risk loss with a 2.25% gain. That beats a CD imo, but others might not want to take the 5% total risk loss. (that would happen if Dow went to 0)
However, "safe" is defined by your own risk tolerance and your understanding of the investment.</blockquote>
Primarily this is 401(k) money that won't be used for another 30-40 years.
There are not a lot of choices offered for the 401(k) but everything was moved from the various mutual funds into a moneymarket fund in 11/07 and has been sitting there ever since. In hindsight this looks like brilliance considering how much of the equity loss was avoided, but it was the result of nothing more than a vague feeling that we wouldn't be seeing 14k on the DOW again for a while. But with today's Fed action and the reactions in the USD index and the Gold futures, I want to move everything, except the $5k the government has guaranteed, out of the MMF. I just don't quite know where to allocate the money yet.
Like I said before, equities look attractive. I just don't have the time to babysit a bunch of options in order to minimize my risk. I define "safe" as "it's not going to disappear while I'm still putting in the order to get out".</blockquote>
Well if you have money in the 401K you don't have the option to babysit options anyway. Unless you leave your job and roll it over to an IRA. This is why I have a strong dislike for 401Ks...Lack of flexibility.
Not that long ago I posted whether I should take this particular job....I took it regardless. So far so good. I'm also taking advantage of the 401K for couple of reasons. Tax benefits and matching contributions. Saying this I'm also allocating money into a FIF/MMF where my losses are very limited but so are my gains. However, the matching is giving me 100% return on my money not counting tax benefits. Simply put...I'm treating it as a savings account.
One day I will probably leave this job, and then I have the benefit of rolling over this money into an IRA giving me an opportunity to invest in various equities as I see fit. However, I'm not investing in any mutual fund no matter how attractive they seem.
So I gave you a scenario as to what I'm doing. Treating it as a savings account with 100% returns.
Now to your babysitting comment. You know I didn't like it and it disappoints me to be frank. I've said it many times...I lost nothing during this downturn and I was invested in equities. Even better, I have a chance to buy low for free. So if you aren't willing to put an extra effort into managing your future, can't say next time you'll avoid this economic crisis. No pain...no gain.
Good Luck and let me know if you have other specific questions.