logoalt Hacker News

fhdkweigtoday at 7:25 PM5 repliesview on HN

I moved 80% of my money out of Vanguard's Target Date Retirement funds and into a money market on June 1st. In the 1.5 months since, the remaining Target Date Retirement fund has fluctuated up and down by about 0.1%. It has basically plateaued. I don't think I am losing out on potential short term gains. I like the idea that I have cash available to buy in on the day of the crash.


Replies

le-marktoday at 7:42 PM

Good luck dude! This kind of move can pay off big or not, clearly. I’ve personally talked to fable about this a lot, suggest everyone does.

There are a lot of failure modes. The dot-com bubble looked obvious in 1997; it popped in 2000. Anyone shorting in '97-'98 was carried out on a stretcher before being vindicated. In fact 2000-2002 fell in three brutal legs over two years, and anyone who leveraged up after the first 25% leg was destroyed by the next two.

wil421today at 7:39 PM

My boss has already done this several times over the past couple years because of some impeding market crash. Then he goes back and buys a week or so later.

chasd00today at 8:01 PM

> I moved 80% of my money out of Vanguard's Target Date Retirement funds

which target date fund exactly? You can increase risk/reward buy choosing a target date fund far in the future or you can reduce risk/reward by choosing a target date fund closer to the present. The point of those funds is to gradually reduce your risk as you get closer to your planned retirement date. I moved my 401k into a target date fund about +10 years from my planned retirement (I'm 50). So a little bit on the risk++ side but not much.

show 1 reply
BeetleBtoday at 8:42 PM

Honest question: Do you expect the AI crash to have a bigger impact on the economy than a global pandemic that shut everything down did?

show 1 reply
jghntoday at 7:53 PM

what if you buy on the day of the crash only to discover that was day one of a year long crash?

show 1 reply