Chickenman4 said:
I'm relatively new to investing and posting on this board for that matter. Recent grad from December with about $6000 in the market. 75% in BABA. Am I being an idiot and need to diversify more or stay the course. My plan is to hold on to baba for the long haul. What do y'all think?
Depends on how active you want to be. What was your entry point? Are you cool with a 50% drop over a few months? Would you hold? Would it keep you up at night? That's the kind of questions you have to ask yourself.
I'm definitely not a financial advisor, but if I had $6k liquid when I graduated 15+ years ago (I didn't, I think I had double that the other way in debt
), here's a couple of options I'd recommend to myself depending on how many individual stocks you want to own (assuming you're at least kinda into stock picking and/or trading):
Option A (most fun & most aggressive):
- $500 IWM
- $1000 QQQ
- $1500 SPY or IVV or VOO
- $1000 Stock #1
- $1000 Stock #2
- $1000 Stock #3 or Cash
Option B:
- $500 IWM
- $1500 QQQ
- $2000 SPY or IVV or VOO
- $1000 Stock #1
- $1000 Stock #2 or Cash
If you want more individual stocks, cut those $1000 buckets in half to $500 and pick more names. This would spread your risk out a bit and probably make it more fun and interesting. Don't pick too many though because you won't be able to keep it all sorted out in your head as well (lesson learned from experience). I still only have good size in 7 individual stocks.
As you grow your bankroll by savings, every time you have another $1k to add, add in order 1) SPY 2) QQQ 3) individual stock or cash. You could also split it each add in a ratio like 30/30/30/10 for SPY/QQQ/NewStock/IWM.
Bottom line, you are already WAY ahead of the curve on your way to massive wealth over the next few decades.
For the individual stocks, look for picks from a broad range of classes. Start with a big one like AMZN, MSFT, AAPL, etc. Venture out to other stuff like V, HD, CWH, AMD, SQ, DIS, CAT, etc. This will force you to pay attention to earnings, news cycles, etc. and you'll learn a ton about different industries and how they operate and make money.
You'll learn more in a few years about so many things business/finance/investing related, you'll wonder why you ever went to college
j/k
If this post is on the B&I forum, lighten up it's just money!
Disclaimer: I'm not that smart.