The Money Mustache Community
Learning, Sharing, and Teaching => Investor Alley => Topic started by: jmr5x on February 08, 2016, 07:01:16 PM
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I have the option to invest my HSA in the following. What would a be a good method to investigate these? I just started investing in 401k last year. I was able to start a company HSA this January and hope to max out both this year.
American Funds - Foreign Large Blend, Large Growth
BlackRock - Mid-Cap Growth
Columbia - Mid-Cap Growth
Dimensional Fund Advisors - Diversified Emerging Mkts, Inflation-Protected Bond, Large Value
Dodge & Cox - Foreign Large Value
Fidelity - Intermediate-Term Bond, Large Growth, Mid-Cap Blend
Goldman Sachs - Mid-Cap Value
Heartland Fund - Small Value
JPMorgan - High Yield Bond
Oppenheimer - World Bond
PIMCO - Commodities Broad Basket, Intermediate-Term Bond
Royce - Small Blend
Schwab - Large Blend, Money Market Taxable
Vanguard - Foreign Large Blend, Large Blend, Mid-Cap Blend, Small Blend
Cohen & Steers - Realty
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You need to look at the expenses, plus the Morningstar ratings but I'd bet "Vanguard - Foreign Large Blend, Large Blend, Mid-Cap Blend, Small Blend" will be among your best bets. The only thing is I'd want to add a bond fund but I am not familiar with any of yours.
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Agree with PP regarding Vanguard. One question to ask yourself: Are you going to keep a cash balance so that you can invest more aggressively or do you need to have a bond portion for stability?
Personally, I like to keep one year's worth of out-of-pocket maximum in cash and invest the rest in to Vanguards 500 index.
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I would look into Goldman Sachs personally. There should be an options somewhere to display the ticker information, or it should be in the prospectus listed. Armed with that information you should go to the funds website (Goldman for example) and investigate for further information. Also check with morningstar. Sometimes retirement accounts offer premium funds that are much better than a index. It rests mostly in loads and fees. If Goldman's fee is close to 1% or less, I say go for it.
Look and see if Fidelity's is the Contrafund. Thats a good one.
I like certain funds from American Funds. It depends on the share classification and your fees. Growth Fund of America for example has a lifetime annual rate return of 13.5%. That is through the crappy 80's, the dot com boom, and the financial crisis. That says a lot. I like the New Economy Fund as well (I have both and will hold both). I have T Rowe Price too.
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I would look into Goldman Sachs personally. There should be an options somewhere to display the ticker information, or it should be in the prospectus listed. Armed with that information you should go to the funds website (Goldman for example) and investigate for further information. Also check with morningstar. Sometimes retirement accounts offer premium funds that are much better than a index. It rests mostly in loads and fees. If Goldman's fee is close to 1% or less, I say go for it.
Look and see if Fidelity's is the Contrafund. Thats a good one.
I like certain funds from American Funds. It depends on the share classification and your fees. Growth Fund of America for example has a lifetime annual rate return of 13.5%. That is through the crappy 80's, the dot com boom, and the financial crisis. That says a lot. I like the New Economy Fund as well (I have both and will hold both). I have T Rowe Price too.
I can't tell if there is any sarcasm in your post regarding the recommendation of a fund that has an expense ratio of 1% being a good idea.
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Agree with PP regarding Vanguard. One question to ask yourself: Are you going to keep a cash balance so that you can invest more aggressively or do you need to have a bond portion for stability?
Personally, I like to keep one year's worth of out-of-pocket maximum in cash and invest the rest in to Vanguards 500 index.
I hope to keep a cash balance for as long as possible, I do not visit the Dr very often, even those few times can really add up!
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I would look into Goldman Sachs personally. There should be an options somewhere to display the ticker information, or it should be in the prospectus listed. Armed with that information you should go to the funds website (Goldman for example) and investigate for further information. Also check with morningstar. Sometimes retirement accounts offer premium funds that are much better than a index. It rests mostly in loads and fees. If Goldman's fee is close to 1% or less, I say go for it.
Look and see if Fidelity's is the Contrafund. Thats a good one.
I like certain funds from American Funds. It depends on the share classification and your fees. Growth Fund of America for example has a lifetime annual rate return of 13.5%. That is through the crappy 80's, the dot com boom, and the financial crisis. That says a lot. I like the New Economy Fund as well (I have both and will hold both). I have T Rowe Price too.
I can't tell if there is any sarcasm in your post regarding the recommendation of a fund that has an expense ratio of 1% being a good idea.
PAMCX is Mid Caps and it has a lifetime 14% annual return rate with a 1% annual fee... whats the S&P 500? 7%..... yeah, I think its a good idea to pay the 1% sometimes.
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I consider my investable HSA balance as part of my total portfolio and choose funds based on my desired total asset allocation. Considering the tax-efficient nature of an HSA, it makes sense (for me at least) to hold bonds there - avoids tax on the monthly distributions and preserves the balance for health care costs as necessary. I would probably choose the Fidelity Interm Term Bond (fees .45%; 1.88% yield)...not great, but would serve my purpose.
My HSA has pretty lousy options when it comes to fees. Your options don't seem much better.