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Started By
Message
Need advice on investments
Posted on 2/28/25 at 10:53 pm
Posted on 2/28/25 at 10:53 pm
Hello all, I have recently inherited approximately 500k that needs to generate some income. I just need about $1,700 per month after taxes to live on as I have a bit of rental income also. I am a big fan of QQQ but don't want to put the money into one fund. What else in the way of index funds can I add for diversity? What else do you guys think should be in the portfolio for safety? Would love to hear how you would allocate. FTR I am 56, no debt except for mortgage at 2.75%. Unfortunately no retirement savings of significance. Looking forward to your help.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 4:53 am to Nachomama
Look at SCHD
It’s a quality Dividend ETF.
It’s a quality Dividend ETF.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 5:00 am to Nachomama
$500k will generate $20k annually at a 4% safe withdrawal rate. You are cutting it close. It might work if you reduce withdrwals after claiming SS. There is nothing magic about dividend stocks versus selling shares they often underperform and simply force you to take taxable distributions (assuming this isn't in a tax advantaged account)
You have nothing saved for retirement. Why not keep this $ untouched and let it grow to give you more cushion rather than immediately start milking it.
You have nothing saved for retirement. Why not keep this $ untouched and let it grow to give you more cushion rather than immediately start milking it.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 5:36 am to TorchtheFlyingTiger
can it go into an inherited IRA and you deduct required minimum distributions for 10 yrs. That gets you $50k a yr and to your social security at 68
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 5:39 am
Posted on 3/1/25 at 5:51 am to makersmark1
Downvote?
The man specifically asked about income.
I guess he could do some bitcoin or maybe short some Iraqi dinars?
He is looking for 4% yield from his post.
SCHD is 3.57% and will likely grow over time.
I guess he could buy a 4% treasury bond IF income is his only goal.
He did not say it was a 401k/IRA/etc.
The man specifically asked about income.
I guess he could do some bitcoin or maybe short some Iraqi dinars?
He is looking for 4% yield from his post.
SCHD is 3.57% and will likely grow over time.
I guess he could buy a 4% treasury bond IF income is his only goal.
He did not say it was a 401k/IRA/etc.
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 6:00 am
Posted on 3/1/25 at 7:11 am to Nachomama
My serious answer is this:
Learn how to sell covered calls.
If you spent ~250k on 500 shares of QQQ then you could sell five covered calls every every week or two.
You could easily generate $3,000 a month doing this. Easily.
Even if the market drops, you’ll keep your cash received (premium).
And if the market really drops, say QQQ loses 20-30% go all in with your other 250k.
You’ll be happy about it soon after.
Learn how to sell covered calls.
If you spent ~250k on 500 shares of QQQ then you could sell five covered calls every every week or two.
You could easily generate $3,000 a month doing this. Easily.
Even if the market drops, you’ll keep your cash received (premium).
And if the market really drops, say QQQ loses 20-30% go all in with your other 250k.
You’ll be happy about it soon after.
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 7:31 am
Posted on 3/1/25 at 7:13 am to Nachomama
We had something similar with an inheritance that wasn’t that big but big enough. We want to earn the most we can with as little risk as possible as this cash will be used for college for the kids or any opportunities that arise.
We moved to a Fidelity account where the MM holding fund generates about 4.3% now virtually risk free. Then allocated about 40% into two ETFs - growth and value. It hasn’t been quite a year yet and we’re up enough to fund my 15 yr olds car without any loss of principal cash.
We could’ve dumped the whole thing into the S&P or QQQ but didn’t want the volatility or risk as this chunk should be enough to cover big expense items through me find getting ready to retire.
ETA…after reading your post our situations are different as retirement is another bucket and we should be good there. We’re treating this as bridge money.
We moved to a Fidelity account where the MM holding fund generates about 4.3% now virtually risk free. Then allocated about 40% into two ETFs - growth and value. It hasn’t been quite a year yet and we’re up enough to fund my 15 yr olds car without any loss of principal cash.
We could’ve dumped the whole thing into the S&P or QQQ but didn’t want the volatility or risk as this chunk should be enough to cover big expense items through me find getting ready to retire.
ETA…after reading your post our situations are different as retirement is another bucket and we should be good there. We’re treating this as bridge money.
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 7:16 am
Posted on 3/1/25 at 7:37 am to Nachomama
$JEPQ and take your $2500 per month and pay your cap gains tax.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 9:04 am to Nachomama
Keep all of it invested. At age 56, with no retirement money means you should make this a priority, regardless of how you invest it.
I would recommend s&p500 and would not use it for income anytime soon. You need more money working for you. Good job on not having debt other than your mortgage.
Is it absolutely necessary to have income from the money now? You mention rental income and could consider buying another rental. If paid off, you could generate enough cash flow. I will say that insurance has skyrocketed the past few years, so be sure to consider all costs to estimate cash flow if you go this route. Your tax returns are a good resource for real cash flow Info since you already own a rental.
I would recommend s&p500 and would not use it for income anytime soon. You need more money working for you. Good job on not having debt other than your mortgage.
Is it absolutely necessary to have income from the money now? You mention rental income and could consider buying another rental. If paid off, you could generate enough cash flow. I will say that insurance has skyrocketed the past few years, so be sure to consider all costs to estimate cash flow if you go this route. Your tax returns are a good resource for real cash flow Info since you already own a rental.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:05 am to bayoubengals88
Think about it this way.
He owns an asset that people are willing to pay a premium for.
He keeps the premium no matter what and may have to sell the asset at a higher price than what he paid.
I struggle to find a downside here.
He owns an asset that people are willing to pay a premium for.
He keeps the premium no matter what and may have to sell the asset at a higher price than what he paid.
I struggle to find a downside here.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:21 am to bayoubengals88
QQQ covered calls is great advice. During earnings season you’ll get even higher premiums based on volatility. I’ve been doing this for 20+ years with great success.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:41 am to Lake08
I’ll say!
8-12% on the weekly’s is easy money

8-12% on the weekly’s is easy money
This post was edited on 3/1/25 at 10:42 am
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:44 am to Lake08
Covered calls on QQQ is interesting; sounds a bit risky (which is what I am trying to avoid) but I will investigate.
I am starting a business since I was laid off last year because I was devoting too much time to caregiving before my parent died. So I will need some kind of income for the first year; I can take a little risk but not too much. Would like to work another 8 to 10 years and retire. Am scared of putting all my money in the market because I think it can easily go down from here.
I am starting a business since I was laid off last year because I was devoting too much time to caregiving before my parent died. So I will need some kind of income for the first year; I can take a little risk but not too much. Would like to work another 8 to 10 years and retire. Am scared of putting all my money in the market because I think it can easily go down from here.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 10:58 am to Nachomama
The only “risk” is if the market dips. You still own what you originally bought regardless. Over time, you’re betting on the overall market. Bull/bear markets happen. If you feel a bear market coming just sell and sit on cash…or move into something more conservative. Covered calls with 500k is something I highly recommend you look into. Good luck
Posted on 3/1/25 at 11:01 am to Lake08
Exactly. The number of shares you own doesn't drop.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 11:08 am to Nachomama
OP would receive 2,140 in premium selling just five $513 covered calls.
Then he could do the same next week.
Could make 6-8k per month doing this using just half his capital.
I’d say that’s worth looking into.
Then he could do the same next week.
Could make 6-8k per month doing this using just half his capital.
I’d say that’s worth looking into.
Posted on 3/1/25 at 11:23 am to bayoubengals88
Yep. If you “feel” the market might bump up a little the next week, write some $515 calls. Obviously you won’t make as much on the premiums, but will make more if you get called out at $515. $2/share @ 500 shares
Posted on 3/1/25 at 11:47 am to Nachomama
invest but by leaps as insurance
Posted on 3/1/25 at 12:05 pm to Nachomama
quote:But as long as you own the shares, you can continue making income on them, even if the Nasdaq enters a bear market.
Am scared of putting all my money in the market because I think it can easily go down from here.
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