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I am a 24 year old high school teacher. Currently, I don't have that much capital to open two accounts. I would rather focus on one at a time until I gain more capital.

Should I start with a Roth IRA and max out $5,500 every year, or invest in the S&P 500 (I have $3000 to open an account) and build that up?

Ben Miller
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YungAznBeast
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3 Answers3

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Your question indicates confusion regarding what an Individual Retirement Account (whether Roth or Traditional) is vs. the S&P 500, which is nothing but a list of stocks.

IOW, it's perfectly reasonable to open a Roth IRA, put your $3000 in it, and then use that money to buy a mutual fund or ETF which tracks the S&P 500.

In fact, it's ridiculously common... :)

RonJohn
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A Roth IRA is simply a tax-sheltered account that you deposit funds into, and then invest however you choose (within the limits of the firm you deposit the funds with).

For example, you could open a Roth IRA account with Vanguard. You could then invest the $3000 by purchasing shares of VOO, which tracks the S&P 500 index and has a very low expense ratio (0.04 as of last time I checked). Fidelity has a similar option, or Schwab, or whatever brokerage firm you prefer.

IRAs are basically just normal investment accounts, except they don't owe taxes until you withdraw them (and Roth don't even owe them then, though you paid taxes on the funds you deposit). They have some limitations regarding options trading and such, but if you're a novice investor just looking to do basic investments, you'll not notice.

Then, your IRA would go up or down in value as the market went up or down in value.

You do have some restrictions on when you can withdraw the funds; Roth IRA has fewer than a normal IRA, as you can withdraw the capital (the amount you deposited) without penalty, but the profits cannot be withdrawn until you're retirement age (I won't put an actual year, as I suspect that actual year will change by the time you're that old; but think 60s).

The reason not to invest in an IRA is if you plan on using the money in the near future - even as an "emergency fund". You should have some money that is not invested aggressively, that is in something very safe and very accessible, for your emergency fund; and if you plan to buy a house or whatever with the funds, don't start an IRA. But if this is truly money you want to save for retirement, that's the best place to start.

**Note, this is not investment advice, and you should do your own homework prior to making any investment. You can lose some or all of the value of your account while investing.

Joe
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Investment account vs bank account

Anytime you invest in stocks, you do that inside an investment account - such as the type you might open at ETrade, Vanguard, Fidelity or Charles Schwab. Once you have the account and fund it, you can tell the system to invest some/all of your money in

  • mutual funds, such as an S&P 500 index fund
  • ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds), which are the same thing, except packaged as a stock, so you can trade it with no minimum investment, no wait-to-sell rules, and sell it instantly based on instant market pricing.

Cash account vs Roth IRA vs Traditional IRA

When you open your investment account, their first question will be whether this is a cash account, traditional IRA, or Roth IRA. The broker must report this to the IRS because the tax treatment is very different.

  • The cash account is not an IRA. You must painstakingly track each trade, report it to the IRS yourself on 1040 schedule D, and pay taxes on your gains.
  • IRA's they don't care about tracking each transaction and profits per transaction. On a Roth they don't tax you. On a traditional IRA they charge regular income tax when you withdraw.
Harper - Reinstate Monica
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