Investment company?

When you need the cash and need to sell, the guy who says he will buy them gives you an offer of 50% what the market says it’s worth. Every person who buys a good bar from Costco will soon figure out that Costco doesn’t buy them back.
For the little I have into them might be a day when you trade them for something other than cash. Doubtful and probably laughable i know, but it does cross my mind.
 
In 2007 you could have posted the same thing on using Value instead of Growth. You are overweighting the most recent history. This is why the SEC makes them put “past performance is not a predictor of future performance” on every marketing doc.
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1. I have a hard time believing that we're in the same economic setting as pre-1990, let alone the 1920s-1950s.
2. At what point do you have to evaluate something on the scale over which you are/can be involved? I can't own value for 100 years. I will own growth for 20-40.

Another way to say it. Is 2025-2030 going to be more like 1920-1925 or 2020-2025? I don't want to use irrelevant data to make my decisions.
 
I have a handful of index funds/ETFs I buy monthly via Fidelity.

Up about 20% this year.

I spend about 10 minutes a month thinking about it.

Could probably make more doing something different, thinking about it more but I keep it very simple and so far, so good.
 
Those are all very fair questions, @Irrelevant. I guess the main question then becomes what is a better investment?

That’s where I get stuck on low cost, S&P 500 index tracking-type investments.
 

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