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Which one is a good investment for ira?

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I want to invest $5,000 into an IRA.

I narrowed it down to either a mutual fund or an index fund now my question is...

the index fund i like had a good return over the past few years. 11.55% since inception which was 08/31/1976. But it only grew 3.43% in 10 years. the fees on avg for this fund is 0.15%.

The other fund - a mutual fund had a 7.03% increase since inception which was started in 2006. A greater increase then the index fund in the 10 year avg. but then again this is too new to determine. The fees on this fund is 0.20%.

I think the amount of time i'm are going to leave it in there is ~ 10 years. Well past the 59 1/2 restriction on an IRA.

Which one is a better investment? Index Funds are good because of their low fees and they do well overtime while the mutual fund is good too; the fees aren't that high and so far it has a good return but it's too young to tell.

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this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index funds

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theman2 said: this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index funds

I think you will get some red because you aren't suppose to mention specific funds here, but if you find something at diehards.org it would be nice if you linked it because I am fairly interested in this also.

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oh really? i dindt know that. let me edit my original post then. THANKS!

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xCarsonx said:theman2 said: this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index funds

I think you will get some red because you aren't suppose to mention specific funds here, but if you find something at diehards.org it would be nice if you linked it because I am fairly interested in this also.

alright. i'll go post on there now and i'll let you know. thanks!

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It's ok to mention individual funds, but individual stocks is a no-no.

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RedCelicaGT said:It's ok to mention individual funds, but individual stocks is a no-no.

Dodge and Cox has a new global fund starting next month

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Airjdirectx23 said:I want to invest $5,000 into an IRA.11.55% since inception which was 08/31/1976. But it only grew 3.43% in 10 years. the fees on avg for this fund is 0.15%.

The other fund - a mutual fund had a 7.03% increase since inception which was started in 2006... so far it has a good return but it's too young to tell.


Past Performance does not indicate future results.

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theman2 said:this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index fundsis there one for fidelity investors?

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ArbolLoco said:theman2 said:this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index fundsis there one for fidelity investors?Just call fidelity. Free of charge, they will give you a somewhat-custom-tailored list of low-cost, well-diversified funds to invest in. Basically, you talk to a guy about how old you are and when you want to retire, and your risk tolerance, and a few other things, and he enters all that crap into the computer and emails you 10 or so fund picks.

I did that as a jumping-off point for my one account that is not managed by my portfolio manager. Not all of the funds were fidelity, by the way. All were low expense ratio and no transaction fee. I didn't follow the computer model exactly, but it helped narrow things down a bit.

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ArbolLoco said:theman2 said:this question is better suited to diehards.org which is a forum of mostly vanguard investors who discuss investing in index fundsis there one for fidelity investors?there are a couple fidelity holdouts there too. fidelity has some very low expense ratio index funds as well

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well if this is your first investment and you are starting out with 5K i would recommend you to go with Target date retirement fund with 90% stock / 10% bond .e.g. vanguard's 2050 fund has an expense ratio of 0.21% and you won't go wrong with it .

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Airjdirectx23 said:I want to invest $5,000 into an IRA.If this is for tax year 2007, just put the money into a money market fund IRA or Roth IRA for now. You can switch to it to a different investment later.

I narrowed it down to either a mutual fund or an index fund now my question is...An index fund is a mutual fund.

the index fund i like had a good return over the past few years. 11.55% since inception which was 08/31/1976. But it only grew 3.43% in 10 years. the fees on avg for this fund is 0.15%.Do you know what Vanguard founder and index fund advocate John Bogle said about people who invested in index funds on the basis of their track records? He said they were damn fools. You don't choose an index fund -- or any particular fund -- because of its past returns because they don't predict the future very well. You should instead look for investments that best fit your asset allocation and cost little. For any given asset class, costs predict future performance better than anything else does, but even they don't predict returns very well.

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