NT: Official Personal Finances Thread

I would suggest putting more into your 401k first if your looking for a tax deduction. Then putting into an IRA. I like lending club as an investment to help diversify your investments, but not as your primary investment. I've had it for about 2 years, and averaging a little over 11%

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No. At this point in life be aggressive. You're not going to be pulling it for another 30 years and the difference in 1-3% annually over that time can be hundreds of thousands.

Personally, I've cooled to Lending Club over the past several months. I have had 3 accounts go into default after only a couple months of payments. One person took out the loan and didn't even try to make payments. Just took the money and ran. :|

I set up my portfolio as a 9% target. So far, it's netting 3.44%. If you want to do it as an alternative to a savings account it can be a good option. But personally I would stay away from bond/debt type investing for retirement at this point in life.

I started a investment account a while ago and out of about 25 notes I have one bad apple. Mostly C-D notes. One person filed for chapter 7 bankruptcy. Their credit score went from 745 to 600.
 
 
 
I'm looking to start an IRA account in the near future. I'm thinking of opening a lending club retirement account. I love the idea of making interest off of my money and it going into a tax deductible retirement account. Right now I really dont care about being aggressive with that money. I just want to put it somewhere safe. I'm really just doing it for the tax deduction.


thoughts ?
No. At this point in life be aggressive. You're not going to be pulling it for another 30 years and the difference in 1-3% annually over that time can be hundreds of thousands.

Personally, I've cooled to Lending Club over the past several months. I have had 3 accounts go into default after only a couple months of payments. One person took out the loan and didn't even try to make payments. Just took the money and ran.
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I set up my portfolio as a 9% target. So far, it's netting 3.44%. If you want to do it as an alternative to a savings account it can be a good option. But personally I would stay away from bond/debt type investing for retirement at this point in life.
What is the penalty for that person just a bad credit report?

Lending club doesnt put out a court order or anything like that right?
Right. Apparently just TU & Experian though.

Most unsecured lenders don't put out a court order. They'll typically sell the debt to a collection agency for pennies on the dollar.
I would suggest putting more into your 401k first if your looking for a tax deduction. Then putting into an IRA. I like lending club as an investment to help diversify your investments, but not as your primary investment. I've had it for about 2 years, and averaging a little over 11%
I would err towards an IRA instead unless you get a match, in which case I would only contribute to the match then go back to an IRA. The reason being that with an IRA you'll have more investment options. Companies typically choose a 401k that only has a handful of choices since most people won't invest at all if given too many opportunities (paralysis by analysis).
 
[COLOR=#red]Paid off my student loans yesterday.[/COLOR] Been throwing a ton of money at them all year long, and its finally done. Have a small stub piece of debt left, but I can get rid of that easily if I attacked it like I did my student loans.

Four years, eight months, and two refinancings. One day I'm gonna call all my lenders and get an exact dollar amount how much I paid in total. I have to see it. 

If/when I do go back to school at least now I'll be able to do this in a much smarter way, and not have this dominate my finances like it did the first go around.


Welcome the free man's club...



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Now that your loan(s) are paid off, what are you going to do with the funds that were previously allocated to them?

I shifted mine towards my emergency fund.





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11% Annualized Return? I've never paid lending club any mind but sheesh. I know several posts have been made about it before, so I'll look into it.
 
Paid off my student loans yesterday. Been throwing a ton of money at them all year long, and its finally done. Have a small stub piece of debt left, but I can get rid of that easily if I attacked it like I did my student loans.

Four years, eight months, and two refinancings. One day I'm gonna call all my lenders and get an exact dollar amount how much I paid in total. I have to see it. 

If/when I do go back to school at least now I'll be able to do this in a much smarter way, and not have this dominate my finances like it did the first go around.

Welcome the free man's club...








Now that your loan(s) are paid off, what are you going to do with the funds that were previously allocated to them?

I shifted mine towards my emergency fund.





...
Well I blew out of my savings to pay my loans off so I have to rebuild that but my plans are the following:
  • Rebuild emergency fund
  • Raise  401(k) withdrawals to Max out 401(K)
  • Help my brother pay off his loans from time to time
  • Save X dollars a year.
I dont want to get ahead of myself with the planning because I know a few things are going to change in regards to my take home pay, but the amount I was putting out towards my loans was extremely high so I should really have enough post 401(K) to really do what I intend to do. 

I am taking one of my paychecks and blowing it recklessly though. I already have a few other things worked out. Saving through investments as opposed to cash, I have no use for cash right now. 

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Shout out to this though 
 
 
^ Jesus piece + da hemi
There will be a reckless purchase in my future for sure. My brother and I do this thing where when we get new jobs/promotions we buy ourselves a gift, and I haven't done it the last two times. That combined with this, is more than enough reason for me to do something crazy.
 
 
^ Jesus piece + da hemi
There will be a reckless purchase in my future for sure. My brother and I do this thing where when we get new jobs/promotions we buy ourselves a gift, and I haven't done it the last two times. That combined with this, is more than enough reason for me to do something crazy.



#treatyourself2016


Ayyy...everyone...Antidope got money to blow now...he treatin' all o' us to dinner at red lobster...:smokin :smokin ...:lol




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Yo antidope antidope if you want to do something really crazy, I got some student loan payments that need to be paid 8o 8o


:lol

Congrats on the freedom tho for real. Treat yo self to something super dope :hat
 
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My loan provider sent me a T-Shirt, sticker, and handwritten letter for paying off my student loans.

Outside of this, I would highly recommend them, the rate I got was very competitive and I didnt have to meet some crazy stringent requirement like SoFi has.
 
Shout out to you fam that's major.

Thank you, it means a lot.

I still have a long way to go (approximately $191,435.00 to be specific :lol), but getting back to $0 seemed like an accomplishment worth sharing. Still off putting to know that I'm more valuable dead than alive with insurance and what not, but the Debts category will be back at $0 soon enough as well.
 
Shout out to you fam that's major.

Thank you, it means a lot.

I still have a long way to go (approximately $191,435.00 to be specific :lol), but getting back to $0 seemed like an accomplishment worth sharing. Still off putting to know that I'm more valuable dead than alive with insurance and what not, but the Debts category will be back at $0 soon enough as well.
Join the fake your death club. My whole idea around insurance was to have enough to absolve my family of all their debts in case it ever happens.

Same way their debt is my debt. None of my money is really mine as far as I'm concerned, it's either for them or for kids if I ever have any.
 
For the first time since I accepted a student loan, my net worth is positive.

For everyone who has ever experienced the hopelessness that can stem from being in debt, there is light at the end of the tunnel.
Awesome! Congrats. I'll always remember the day I became debt free. A minor celebration every year.
 
any suggestion on where i should open my IRA at?
The internet seems to like ETRADE and TD Ameritrade, but look around for what brokerage offers the best match to what you're goals are. I have a Roth IRA (I recommend this over a traditional) with Scottrade just for the low commission fees and already having a brokerage account there.
 
any suggestion on where i should open my IRA at?
The internet seems to like ETRADE and TD Ameritrade, but look around for what brokerage offers the best match to what you're goals are. I have a Roth IRA (I recommend this over a traditional) with Scottrade just for the low commission fees and already having a brokerage account there.


For IRA go Vanguard. No commission, pennies for expense ratios.
 
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