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What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - Printable Version +- Dividend Growth Forum (https://DividendGrowthForum.com) +-- Forum: Dividend Growth Investing (https://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=15) +--- Forum: Dividend Growth Investing (https://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=33) +--- Thread: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? (/showthread.php?tid=2012) Pages:
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RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - ken-do-nim - 08-29-2021 (08-29-2021, 05:19 AM)fenders53 Wrote: What were we talking about again. 10% at least in cash, wow okay. Now is a really good time for me to start building my cash up from here on out. I reached my goal of $500/month in dividends to draw on from the taxable account, and I've got the automated transfer all set up, so my budget is a-okay. I was planning to build my cash up anyway through March of next year because I liquidated nearly $50k of company stock and I need to be ready for the tax consequences. Plus, I've been reading all these stories about the market being overvalued and due for a massive correction, which makes me nervous to say the least. I remember that massive 3 day drop a few months back. The point isn't that it only took my portfolio about 3 weeks to recover, the point is that by day 3, everything was on sale. RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - fenders53 - 08-29-2021 (08-29-2021, 05:52 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote:Doesn't always have to be 10% but 0% means no dip buying. It's about a year since a 5% pullback so any cash seems unwise now. We can't time crashes and we have to stay invested. A 10% market dip usually means you have some 20% dips in your port. It improves my mood when I can buy some sales. Never mind crashes, routine sector rotations provide the same opportunities. Most of the buys you see on the main thread are just folks adding a few shares of whatever is down some lately.(08-29-2021, 05:19 AM)fenders53 Wrote: What were we talking about again. RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - rayray - 08-30-2021 There's about 30k cash in my kplan And 20k cash in my savings/checking account but that's for monthly/daily expenses and emergencies I am in the process of moving some money around from my mutual/ETFs in the not so distant future--when that is complete the cash reserve will be, in and around 200k. Which will then be redeployed back into the market in individual stocks, slowly. RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - EricL - 08-31-2021 Here's my portfolio weighting as of this morning. [attachment=289] RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - fenders53 - 08-31-2021 Nice pie charts Eric. Even easier to see than a spreadsheet (which I assume feeds your charts). When I started this thread I was curious if anyone has a major stake in bonds. I will when rates rise someday but they see too risky right now for the little potential reward. We still seem to keep a DGI theme though most have added some growth stocks, which has obviously been very wise. What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - bankerboy - 09-12-2021 Ok I’ll play! This is my Fidelity account, mostly a 401(K) account. Done pretty well this last year! All mutual funds, primarily S&P Fund, Total Stock Market Find, TRP BC Growth, a mid cap Value fund and a 2030 fund. ![]() Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - rayray - 10-02-2021 ok, this was kind of quick. i recently moved some money around from selling some funds--built up cash position to 210k--maybe lost about 100k on paper in the market--redeployed about 80-85k. of the cash 52k was a forced sell because i inherited a IRA that couldn't transfer from edward jones to fidelity edward jones was the first encounter i had with a firm that you as the investor literally has no control on your investments--the process is arcane at best. RE: What are your portfolio allocation percentages? - fenders53 - 10-02-2021 (10-02-2021, 07:19 AM)rayray Wrote: ok, this was kind of quick. I had a friend who worked for them and he showed me a few accounts he had recently set up for customers. It was a fee generating scheme. $100K invested in about 10 funds. If you new nothing about investing at all you'd be MUCH better off spending an hour on a Boglehead video and buying a couple index funds than paying them fees for decades. |