FarmerDan
5 year old buck +
The question is, do you know what you want? Financial well-being is a two-edged sword. It can give you independence - or it can make you a slave to always needing more.Let's see what type of response we get to this scneario:
1. You have currently have 200k in a CD drawing 3% that you can pull any time for any reason. No penalty. You have had the money sitting there 2 years to buy a farm and have not found one suitable.
2. You have an additional 50k that could be easily added to this for a total investment of $250k looking for a new home.
3. You are 40 years old
4. Already have a SEP IRA and contribute maximum annually for the past 3 years. It gained 39% last year and made you feel like an idiot cause you have 212k in the bank drawing 3% and being outpaced by the printing of new money.
5. Wife already has a healthy 401k
6. Combined income disqualifies the couple from ROTH IRA in most years.
7. Record high stock market
8. High economic uncertainty and a jobs killing administration
9. No vehicle loans, no CC debt, 10k (no interest) medical bills. 15 year mortgage at 2.1%.
Lets start there.
Are you looking for this be a means to and end or an end if-and-of-itself?
1. Cash is king. Cash presents a lot of opportunities - especially when you have it and few others do. Personally I think a 3% risk free return isn't so bad - given the alternatives.
2. It depends on your aversion to risk. Me, I'm looking at commodities, gold, foreign ETFs. Most of you don't agree with me, but there's a big market correction just simmering below the surface.
3. I remember being 40.
4. Never feel like an idiot when you gain 39%. That other money earning 2% is for other purposes...and history tells us that a portfolio of investments performs better over time than a single position. When the sands shift, as they will, you'll still have your $200k.
5. I too have a healthy 401K, and now that I'm about to start withdrawals I wonder if it was such a great retirement vehicle. See your item #4. The idea was throw high tax bracket money into a deferred account and withdraw it in retirement when you are in a lower tax bracket. I wonder how that's going to work out.
6. No sweat.
7. How high - or how low can it go? I've been thru a couple of recessions in my life...and have studied them. Maybe this time it's different - but I don't think so. The Fed is playing with marked cards in my opinion.
8. I'll give you the high economic uncertainty, but we'll have to debate the influence of either political party in economic outcome. Again, in my opinion neither party has done the American public any great favors, not ever. It might feel good now, but, the hangover is awful.
9. Good for you. Debt isn't always bad, but many are looking over the edge of a cliff. Stay the course.