Then, in your spare time read this:
http://www.amazon.com/Random-Walk-D...=pd_bbs_2/102-3814716-1025707?ie=UTF8&s=books
Ummm... thanks for the tip, but reading 480 pages worth of "behavioral finance" is a bit much. Thanks though.
Get a Vanguard IRA account (or somewhere else with low fees and low minimums).
Concur on Vanguard. Their emerging markets fund (VEMIX), which is mostly foreign stuff, did >45% last year. It's expense ratio is a bit higher, but I wish all my funds performed like that.
Brett
I'd be a bit hesitant to invest in something called the "international fund" and here is why...
Say the global economy is stagnant, but the US economy is still growing a bit. How can you take advantage of the US economy's growth, and avoid the losses of the emerging or foreign markets? Or say the reverse is true - overseas markets are doing well, but the US economy has slowed a bit.
Get in to a mutual fund that does both - and where the money can change back and forth between the overseas investments and American securities depending on which is performing better. USAA has one of these - I think its called the Capital Growth fund. It isn't a "domestic" fund, but it isn't a "foreign" fund either. Let the fund managers worry about do which country has the up-and-coming companies and watch your account grow.
why not invest in multiple mutual funds?
Diversify yo bonds, *****.
Between my wife and myself we are invested in 18 different mutual funds ranging from a high yield bond fund to an emerging markets fund, to a precious metals fund, to small cap, etc, etc.... don't put all of your eggs in one basket.
However, I think that you'll find tax advantages better in your ROTH IRA (no tax after 59 1/2) than you will with TSP and may want to look into investing in TSP AFTER maxing out your IRA. Just my two cents there...~D
Agreed. I will say it again, unless things have recently changed, no matter how convenient you find it, go FC and you are being taken. There is no reason a 23 year-old single Ensign needs life insurance, let alone whole life. They sell it to you as a savings and investment vehicle which is BS. If you take the money you put into whole life and invest it instead, the return will be greater by the time you take the money out of what would have been your whole life policy.First command still a sham. Stay away, stay far away. You can get into those same funds FC offers via other companies (vanguard, fidelity, et al) without those huge fees. and they won't try to sell you whole life either.