Submitted by BeltedHarpoon t3_126f7k7 in personalfinance
Hello everyone! Over the past couple of weeks, I have learned about the term financial independence, subsequently leading me down this rabbit hole of personal finance. In only a couple of days I have learned about Roth IRA's, Index Funds, and a plethora of other financial terms I never knew about previously. To start this off, I'll talk about my current "financial situation"
I am currently a freshman in CC and paying practically nothing per semester, giving me much more financial freedom.
I currently work and have a car I paid for in cash. I have a monthly budget already set and I am fortunate enough to live with a family that will take care of any emergencies I might encounter! I feel like now is the best time to invest my money as I do not have any debt, high-cost bills, and people that are dependent on me. I plan on transferring to a UC (In state), so the cost of university will fortunately not be something I have to worry about, as I am again fortunate enough to have parents that will pay for my tuition.
After I paid for my car, I have a total of 6k in my bank account. The second I turned 18 my father opened a credit card for me but put it under his name, meaning I am an authorized user. I am still building credit, but I am most definitely sure it's not as good as if I were to have it underneath my name alone.
Here is where my questions come in!
I have opened an account with fidelity, specifically an IRA Roth. It is my understanding that it is a retirement account to where I set aside my after-tax money into, and it has the benefit of providing tax free withdrawals after a certain age (59 or something like that). Within this IRA, I can invest in everything from mutual funds to even crypto currency (which I am definitely staying away from, at least for now). My question is, is it worth to put the majority of my money into a roth IRA? I am most definitely investing for the long game, but it is a bit crazy to me that I will not be able to take in the profits tax /penalty free until I am age 59. Is it worth opening a taxable account AND an IRA account, where I can invest in both with having the added benefit of being able withdraw money from my taxable account much earlier?
Regardless, I am with fidelity, and I would be investing (in the IRA Roth at least) into FZROX, FSKAX, FZILX, etc (Obviously let me know if you guys recommend something else as I am speaking out of the very limited knowledge I have). Even when it comes to my taxable account, I would be investing in index funds/ETFS, and would dedicate a small percentage of my saved income towards individual stocks (just so that I could get more experience with the stock market in general).
Also, just a side question, I hear so much about VTSAX, and that even though FZROX and VTSAX are extremely similar, FZROX can only be bought/and or owned at Fidelty. Is this really that big of a problem
Sorry for the long post and I truly thank anyone who took the time out of their day to read through this! I was just in a pickle and did not know how much I should be investing/what accounts I should even be investing in. Any and all thoughts are appreciated, thank you!!!!
Pass_Little t1_je8xf8q wrote
You should start by looking at the section of the faq here which describes what order to spend money. Hopefully the helpful blog will post a link since I'm mobile.
That faq will tell you that the first stage is to build up a largish savings account. I'd recommend looking at what your expenses are going to be once you get put off college and start building that up.
Normally I'd tell people not to worry about a Roth until you have that built up, but you're in a unique case.
I'd suggest visiting bogleheads.org and click on the getting started link. That is a community site 100% about index investing. A companion sub is r/bogleheads
As far as what to invest in, you should have a total us market fund, a Total International market fund, and a bond fund.
Your investmentswill be divided up in this way:
First start with the percentage of bonds. 0% is fine at your age. When you get to be 30ish you should start adding some. Let's just say it's 10% so I have a number for the example.
You buy a good low cost bond fund in the amount you want. So if you invested 1000 and wanted 10% you'd buy $100 worth of your chosen bond fund.
The remaining 90% or 900 you'd split between the us and international funds. 60/40 is a fairly commonly recommended split. So you'd buy whatever 60% of $900 is of your US fund and the rest you'd buy the international fund.
As far as what funds, if you're at fidelity, you'd want to buy fzrox or fskax for the us fund, fnilx or fziax for the international fund, and probably something like fxnax for the bond portion.
Doesn't matter which of these you pick, as long as they're in a fidelity roth. The performance between them is so close that it doesn't matter, and because it's a Roth if you need to sell them to move to somewhere else later it doesn't matter.
There is an easier way though. If you bit a fidelity freedom INDEX fund, with a year close to when you'll turn 67, fidelity will automatically buy the equivalent of the funds above and will automatically adjust the ratios to match the most common recommendations of financial advisors for someone your age. You basically buy the fund and keep buying until you retire. Note they have index and non index versions of the funds, you want the index one as they have fewer fees and should perform just as well.
Edit: one final note. There are both minimum and maximum income limits for the Roth. Please double check you're within them.