How you guys balance between contributing to tax advantage accounts and your brokerage account. I'm in a fortunate position to max my tax advantage contributions but won't have enough for a regular brokerage.
Would love to buy a home someday just not sure when so I was thinking about putting some cash in a normal brokerage account.
Btw anyone here come from Reddit? Would love to see this instance grow.
I don’t have a great answer for you, but one thing I learned from buying my first house is that you don’t have to put down as big of a down payment as you might think. My wife and I did 3.5%. We were fortunate that we made a good amount and had good credit, but we had very little in savings. We were both putting a ton toward student loans.
Although a small down payment is tough to swallow these days considering that means you’re financing more house at 7% plus.
I haven’t consciously done much to balance it. When I was fresh out of college I couldn’t afford more than tax advantaged space and so I just did that. 15 years on I’m fortunate enough that income has made it a non-issue.
I came over from Reddit during the API dust up and never really went back, but it’s very quiet here.
Since your timeline for buying a house is "someday" I would keep maxing tax advantaged accounts. Once you have a more firm timeline (within a couple of years), I'd start funnelling my money to a down payment fund.
I'm in a similar phase right now. We plan on moving in 3-4 years and I'm leaning towards turning our current home into a rental. We bought it at $300k and it's now worth $650k. We are now putting money into a regular brokerage to save for the next down payment. I don't think we'll have enough saved in time so we're leaning towards lowering our tax advantage contributions until then.
High interest rates —> financial indicators continue to be strong (inflation) —> Fed may raise interest rates much higher than previously expected —> panic sell from riskier companies that may struggle with higher borrowing costs and move to cash/treasuries.
I haven't gotten a raise in a few years. I did one of those inflation conversion calculators and now make less than when I was hired accounting for inflation ☹️
If only I could find somewhere that doesn't seem like a step down in terms of work life balance...