Lone Cedar's comments about Edward Jones got my memory working... when I was a young guy, I started an account with Edward Jones. My goal was not retirement, but more towards saving towards buying a home. As I recall, it seems like the agent was doing a lot of selling and buying - churning is what I would call it. I finally decided to take my money elsewhere. I had a friend who had a New York Life agent start him up with an IRA through New York Life. I did the same. Initially, I started with a Traditional IRA - with mutual funds. Later, I started Roth IRAs thru New York Life. Later yet, I started Roth IRA thru Vanguard. I converted some of the dollars in my Traditional IRA into Roth, but not all of it. So, I have one Traditional IRA mutual fund; and several Roth mutual funds. Both New York Life and Vanguard have Age-Targeted Mutual Funds. I don't use them. I pick the funds that I want to invest in, to get the portfolio fund mix that I want. Regarding 401K... I think you have to be an employee - to have a job - to invest in a 401K. You need to have income to invest in a IRA. It can be self-employment income. That is where a IRA fits a self-employed person, and a 401K does not. I think I am right on that. The IRS website has information on Retirement Plan types. There are SEP Plans, and SIMPLE Plans. I've wondered if I should have gone that route. But I haven't. A IRA or a Roth IRA is probably most restrictive on how much you can invest. IF you go the SEP or Simple Plan route, I think you can invest more. Maybe there is someone who has these types of Plans can add their two cents. Someone above mentioned investing in land. I think there is wisdom in that. Right now it is going to give you a better return than investing in the Stock Market.
Edited by martin 12/30/2022 21:21
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