Birchtree's Account Talk

Birch
Here is the attachment I was talking about. Hope it works this time.
View attachment 10895

VWIGX is an Internatioal/Global Stock (Foreign Large Growth)
Expense ratio is .51%
2% Redemption fee is held <2 mos

The international portfolio composition for VWIGX is
22.30% Emerging Markets
52.10% Europe
18.60% Pacific
3.90% North America
3.10% Other

Thanks so much!
 
A 75% VTSMX / 25% VWIGX is about as dull and boring as one can get and that's why I like the odds. This is a sophisticated globasl approach that should be good for the next ten years - a sleep well portfolio. A slow growth portfolio will allow some sweet DCA purchases - just keep buying in rain or shine.
 
A 75% VTSMX / 25% VWIGX is about as dull and boring as one can get and that's why I like the odds. This is a sophisticated globasl approach that should be good for the next ten years - a sleep well portfolio. A slow growth portfolio will allow some sweet DCA purchases - just keep buying in rain or shine.

Thanks! That's exactly what I wanted to do. "Set it and forget it.":D
Much appreciated!
 
I've been listening to a crying Harry Reid - may he step on a bouncing betty and be done with it. Such a sorry toad - give up some of that social engineering spending.

Today would be a good day to execute the S fund trap. The momentum players are lined up and ready to be hammered down like a fine piece of silver.
 
Thinking of transferring the rest of my S shares to I. Got two IFT's burning a hole in my pockets. Think the "I" will go higher? Wish I had made the move yesterday.
 
Here's a post I made sometime in November 2008. Since panics drive stock prices to irrational and unsustainable lows, when this panic ends we are likely to see a monster rally. After such a panic, this means radically reduced volatility and a major stock market rally.The sheer levels of fear driven by such volatility were so irrational on the downside that the subsequent upside will probably end up breaking a lot of records as well. Betting long like Birchtree during a stock panic is the ultimate high-potential contrarian play and the opportunities presented by this stock panic are vast beyond belief. Since there is blood flowing in the street, and no one wants stocks, fortunes will be made by those brave few contrarians willing to buy when everyone else is selling. (Geesus, I made 432 purchases and spent $800K trying to fill up that deep well.) I will continue to ride the secular bull through turbulent spells. The stage has now been set for investment opportunities that will make anything I've seen over the last 30 years pale by comparison. It takes a lot of intestinal fortitude and patience to believe an upswing is ahead. Many of my stocks are poised for a resurgence. Dollar cost averaging in both my accounts has allowed me to leverage the market during this period of decline. The stock market is still the best long term investment strategy for a significant portion of one's assets. Now is the time to position your portfolio for the upcoming rebound, whenever it might start. Wait for definitive proof that it is underway, or that the economy has recovered, and you could miss out one some of the market's biggest gains. In the long history of the economy in general and the markets in particular, optimism has been rewarded far more often than pessimism. The market always looks ahead and begins its next bull market while a recession is still underway and worsening, while public investors are at an extreme pessimism. (And I continue to blaze my own trail today.)
 
BT,

With the price of oil hitting $110 a barrel, do you think it will have a negative impact on corporate earnings and consumers behaviors going forward resulting in a lower stock market in the coming weeks/months? I'm wondering if it might be a good idea to take 50% off the table until we see a retreat in oil prices... Personally, I think oil is driven by speculation and there is plenty of it out there floating around on ships :} Comments??
 
I think you are correct - plenty of supply. The economy will adjust and natural gas will become more prominent. The wall of worry continues to grow and stocks will continue to move up. I'm invested deep in the energy patch so a few more dollars in oil won't hurt.
 
BT,

With the price of oil hitting $110 a barrel, do you think it will have a negative impact on corporate earnings and consumers behaviors going forward resulting in a lower stock market in the coming weeks/months? I'm wondering if it might be a good idea to take 50% off the table until we see a retreat in oil prices... Personally, I think oil is driven by speculation and there is plenty of it out there floating around on ships :} Comments??


HotWings,

I await the Great Fern’s answer, but...

Why not let the market decide. If you try to guess the market (which has probably already baked the price of oil in a yummy cr@p sandwich) you will be making quick moves on guesses and hunches. You only have two IFTs in a month. If you guess wrong you will end up in 'The 700 Club' with no chance of breaking out. Give yourself a chance to make enough earnings where a five point dump doesn't make you cry - then market time a bit for a bit of growth above the 'C Fund'.

You should actually be thinking the exact opposite anyway. When the market corrects because of short term fear you have an opportunity to chew the fat on da'Boyz. You know, buy low - sell high. My guess is that this market is a huge bull rampaging the streets of Pamplona. Any market that can shrug off a cr@ppy dollar, lousy debt, high oil, a tsunami with radiation exploding into the universe, and 'The Duck of Death' driving tanks over his citizens is one heck of a market to be fully invested in:D
 
You need to take a look in Federal Times. Their talking about taking money out of both federal retirement accounts.
 
You need to take a look in Federal Times. Their talking about taking money out of both federal retirement accounts.

Merlin,

The Treasury can grab assets from Social Security Bond bonds (as the article states). Now, I know what the pension portion of my FERS retirement is invested in. Folks, that 0.8% of pay you are contributing to the FERS pension is being invested in the 'G Fund' - with 'G Fund' returns. I challenge ANYONE to provide any proof that such contributions in such invenstment vehicles will provide ANYTHING like the annual pension we will be paid. This means that the pension IS AT RISK. DO NOT COUNT ON IT. We are not paying for that benefit. And, personally, I DO NOT WANT TO PAY FOR ANYTHING POLITICIANS CAN JIGGER.

Regretfully, it appears that CSRS also invests in the 'G Fund'. The article calls it the 'Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund' - which is a bit different. My guess is that the journalist hacked up the name a bit.

Anyway, here is the graph of interest:
Geither implored Congress to extend the debt ceiling by that deadline and said that if Congress does not, Treasury will be forced to borrow money from the Civil Service Retirement and Disability Fund, and the Thrift Savings Plan's Government Securities Investment Fund, or G Fund, both of which are invested in U.S. Treasury securities. Those two moves could free up $142 billion through early July.​
My recommendation to those in FERS (TSP) - get out of the 'G Fund'. They can't grab assets from the other funds.

I absolutely love the part about 'free(ing) up $142 billion through early July'. I love that. Amazing. Confiscating assets from the retirement accounts of individuals is 'free(ing) up assets' so they can continue to borrow.

You can lend them money.

But not me, bro...

Not me...

:mad:
 
Just remember this, ...."THEY" ....have your tsp and retirement money... Not you !!

AFishEgg,

They is Blackrock Capital. The only way the Treasury can borrow 'G Fund' assets is that they are short term Social Security Bonds. Basically, Treasury borrows the borrowed money from Social Security:p.

Nice, very nice.
 
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