What is the best index fund to invest in?
Is now a good time to invest with the economy as it is?
What is the min. that I can invest?
Can I add more money to my index fund?
Are index funds a good investment? Any other options?
My Related Websites
- Index Market | ING Direct Streetwise Funds Canada
- Fausta's Blog » Blog Archive » The Obama economy
- ETF DAILY NEWS » iShares Files for Global Inflation-Linked Bond …
- Six of Ten Largest Mutual Funds Currently Sport 0.99 Correlation …
- Battle Royale With Cheese: Bloody Good Time | Rock, Paper, Shotgun
- Economy Isn't Hurting Rich People | Robert Gibbs | Video | Mediaite
- Defensive medicine costs less money than physicians think …
- Brazil Stocks – Brazil ETF & Funds | InvestorPlace
- Non-U.s. Utility Company Exchange Traded Funds | Grandonk dot Com
- Invest in Index Funds….Now??????
- Google reveals how it will make money on Maps – Google 24/7 …
- Whoopi Blows Money On Michael Jordan | PerezHilton.com
- Stocks Are A Lot Less Risky Than You Think « OutOfYourRut.com
- Pawlenty requests federal health care money « Minnesota …
- Shorter School Weeks to Save Money « Liveshots
- Joe Iadanza » Victory Music Reviews “All in Good Time”
- Plan B for Obama on the economy | Economists' Forum | FT.com
- Broomall Rotary offers a barking good time | Dog Training Club
- Good Time | Brazil Videos
- A Good Time Photo Booth Open House | A Good Time Photo Booth …
Mail this post
I can only answer one and that would be to buy companies right now at low stock prices but check their report to see if they can last a few years and not go bankrupt. You never need to sell a stock and the price will increase.
S&P 500 Index. Vanguard has one with a $3k minimum.
of course, GOLD!
http://www.oilgold.cn/categories/gold
Now is absolutely the time to invest, provided you don’t need the money for 5-10 years.
The minimum you can invest depends on where you have an account and what you buy. Mutual fund accounts often have minimums (in the $1,000 – $10,000 range), but discount brokerages usually don’t.
As for index funds, go with ETF’s. They don’t require a minimum to purchase, trade like individual stocks but hold a diversified collection of stocks (like mutual funds). You only need 3 for good diversification:
Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) (U. S. companies only)
Vanguard FTSE All-World ex-US ETF (VEU) (foreign markets)
Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (BND) (bonds)
You’ll have to research what percentage to allocate to each, but many suggest:
Stocks : take 120 subtract your age and that is the total % in stocks. Of that, split it 60-70% in US, the remainder in foreign.
Bonds: the remainder of the first percent.
So, if you are 35 years old, you have (120-35) 85% in stocks and 15% bonds.