If you're young, open an IRA. The little bit you put in now will pay huge dividends when you're ready to retire.
But he wants to be able to take the money out whenever he wants. Not really an option with an IRA.
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If you're young, open an IRA. The little bit you put in now will pay huge dividends when you're ready to retire.
But he wants to be able to take the money out whenever he wants. Not really an option with an IRA.
CDs might be an option. It won't give you all of the liquidity you might be looking for (penalty for early w/d). For that, there are some savings accounts that pay 2% or so, as well as money market funds.
Edit: After further thinking, you'd be investing in increments. I'm thinking the MMF or savings account is the only way to go.
That's true, Thump, but as you know, it is wise to start retirement savings EARLY.
Try a mutual fund that is indexed to the S&P 500. it will go up and it will go down in the next five to seven years but history suggests you will average about 8%. It's relatively safe and its highly liquid. Any of the big names have these funds; fidelity, vanguard etc etc. (I'm not a financial advisor, but I work in the securities trading industry so I have an idea what I'm talking about)
But he wants to be able to take the money out whenever he wants. Not really an option with an IRA.
it really isn't a primary conscern at present.
I'd suggest this as well, depending on how comfortable you are with risk and how long you want to invest your money you could dip into non-index mutual funds (like international stock funds, small companies stock funds). It wouldn't be a bad idea to start a Roth IRA as well if you can.
What is your primary concern exactly? To get more return on your spending money?
the best return on investment given the parameters. i don't want to have to retire to gain access to this particular cash. i also need to have the ability to continually make deposits to this account as this is extra money that crops up every month. i can see myself letting this sit in an account for 5 to 7 years. i don't want this to sit for 50 years. i could see this money being used as a house project fund at some point, maybe buy a car outright depending on how aggressive i get with it in the future, possibly even the start of a college fund for children that to date (and hopefully no time soon) do not exist. the problem is its not enough money to do anything intelligent with, but its too much money to simply ignore. does that make sense?