I have some very conservative investments, mostly mutual funds. What will happen to them in a deep recession?
I have some mutual funds which are made up of very conservative investments - nothing too risky. Over the past few decades this fund has done nothing but grow slowly. Sometimes it goes down a bit, sometimes it spikes a bit, but overall it shows a pattern of growth, which is great. What will happen to these investments if we go into a bad recession? Will they decrease in value a lot? Should I try and head this off by changing my portfolio? Or just ride it out? Thanks!
Public Comments
- I have read that if you're not going to buy individual stocks, that your best choice is Vanguard's S+P500. It has by far the lowest fees of all the mutual funds. Apparently mutual funds are sneaky when it comes to charging you fees and they're hard to see. Vanguard's S+P500 is a slow and steady horse with virtually none of these fees. I think it averages around 9-12%. I'm not an expert though, so do your own research.
- Generally, very conservative investments lose less value than riskier ones during recessionary periods. The upside potential is lower, but so is the downside. Definitely ride things out.
- If they made it through 2000-2002 ok I wouldnt worry about it much. And if you still have a long time to invest I wouldnt worry about. Just hang on and dollar cost average.
- Your money devalues through inflation on average by about 3 - 4% a year. You usually get 5% in a cash portfolio (interest), which keeps you just above inflation. If your fund makes less then inflation, you slowly loose your money. About 90% of all funds are money lossers and I have yet to figure out, how the existence of funds is justified.
- i agree with bosai, mutual funds suck!!!!
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