Should I trust another woman who I resembling for a broker? Or the one a own flesh and blood appendage (male) picks?
Does it matter? I have a feeling patronized. Actually, I consistency mistrust.Answers: Picking a broker by gender will spawn you go broke. I see the chitchat heads on TV everyday. Some are a short time ago "talking heads" and some in reality have a accurate knowledge of the marketplace. Gender doesn't play a role.
Why not beat 80% of mutual funds and of late go near Vanguards S&P 500 Index fund ?
There is nothing wrong near being the flea market.
its depend knowlege of the market not thing its woman or broker
Talking about gold coins, what does PR68 mean? Is that a good rating? What's the best rating? Thank you.
Answers: Coins are graded on a scale of 1 to 70 with 70 meaning in flawless mint condition and 1 being poor. 50+ years ago this roughly corresponded with the dollar value of large cents of common dates in the various conditions. The PR in front of the 68 (which is close to 70 except for some very minor surface defects in the coin, probably only noticable with a magnifying glass) means that the coin is a proof strike which is a special strike struck for collectors with a higher striking pressure and a more polished die, usually including frosted surface areas for a more beautiful picture.
pr 70 is brillant uncirculated in gold coins, a pr68 is very high
grade but not entirley flawless
I would like to roll-over a small 401K into a DRIP with a large company rather than a mutual fund. Is that ok?
Answers: I may be mistaken on this answer but I do not think you can.
You can only roll a 401k into an IRA with no tax consequences. In order to do that you require an administrator. Normally that would be a stock broker or a mutual fund company but possibly a bank. A broker would hold your stock in street name which if I am not mistake does not qualify you for DRIP since the stock need to be in your name. I suppose that you might possibly talk to a bank about such a possibility, but I would be surprised if the answer were not also no.
If you do not mind the tax consequences than the game does change. Cash out the 401k, take the tax hit and but stock in the company of your choice, take delivery of the stock, and sign up for DRIP.
It' "OK" but not the best idea. Unless you know stock investing well, it's not a good idea to put well diversified funds into one equity investment. If anything happens to this one company. you're going to hurt badly.
(BTW: I doubt if any DRIPS have IRA Rollover plans. It would be especially disastrous to a pay penalties and taxes on these funds).
You have to leave your employer before you can roll over your 401k to anything. And then, if you do roll it over, and contribute to it, you lose the opportunity to roll it back into another employer's 401k or other plan.