lrb1200
Member
I'm 63 as I speak, so retirement is on the near horizon.
Me like maybe many of you are heavily invested in 401K's.
I watched as the bottom fell out of the Dow Jones at the end of 2007, and realized too late that I was "pot committed",
and it would be financial suicide to get out of the stock market at that point, I had no choice but to ride it out.
I watched my 401K lose 45% of it's value and could do nothing, except throw the 401K statements that came in the mail in the garbage without even opening them.
That was scary, and the stock market took many years to recover just to get back to where it was at the end of 2007.
I saw similar indications happening again in December of 2014 and dumped everything into a safe retirement fund.
I don't have seven years of time to wait for recovery again before I will need to access that account.
Every professional investment advisor I ever read says don't get out. I doubt if any of them are 63 years old.
Me like maybe many of you are heavily invested in 401K's.
I watched as the bottom fell out of the Dow Jones at the end of 2007, and realized too late that I was "pot committed",
and it would be financial suicide to get out of the stock market at that point, I had no choice but to ride it out.
I watched my 401K lose 45% of it's value and could do nothing, except throw the 401K statements that came in the mail in the garbage without even opening them.
That was scary, and the stock market took many years to recover just to get back to where it was at the end of 2007.
I saw similar indications happening again in December of 2014 and dumped everything into a safe retirement fund.
I don't have seven years of time to wait for recovery again before I will need to access that account.
Every professional investment advisor I ever read says don't get out. I doubt if any of them are 63 years old.
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