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Many of us have a Health Savings Account as well. I'm curious what the forum thinks are the best equities to have in there.
For myself, I've decided it won't have individual stocks, and it won't have leveraged funds. I currently have ARKW, QQQ, VOO, and SOXX.
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Someday a balance fund will make sense again, but not anytime soon. An all world stock index fund might help VOO smooth out the tech funds.
Depends on how soon you think that you will need to hit the HSA. I'm fine with holding individual stocks, but only the widows and orphans stocks. Utilities and decent dividend payers. No extremely high yielders or tech stocks.
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Apparently E*Trade isn't the only website with occasional flaws! I just went to my health insurance site (Cigna) and it listed my HSA balance as negative! My heart stopped. But it's just a bug and it's thinking my TD Ameritrade account is negative instead of positive, so it is subtracting the investments from the current cash balance.
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08-23-2021, 08:36 AM
(This post was last modified: 08-23-2021, 08:37 AM by ken-do-nim.)
Revisiting this topic, I've decided to adopt a 3-tiered pyramid model, where the highest tier is speculative or triple-leveraged (SPXL for example), the middle tier is strong growth or double-leveraged (QQQ or SPUU for example), and the base tier is made up of solid performers (JNJ, VOO for example). Doing some math, the percentages come out to:
Top tier: 3.7%
Middle tier: 25.93%
Bottom tier: 70.37%
Rebalancing downwards will be done once a quarter.