
5 questions we all have about portfolio rebalancing
These are some of the most popular questions about portfolio rebalancing.
Bankrate investing editor Johna Strickland has explained complicated topics to everyday people for more than 15 years. As an editor and journalist, she has touched on nearly every aspect of personal finance and written extensively about the intricacies of public money across local, state and federal entities to help educate taxpayers.
Her coverage included focusing on the financial impacts of government budgets and projects, taxes, legal cases and legislative initiatives. She believes in investing what you can as early as you can and loves spending travel credit card rewards and fiddling with her retirement plan.
I cashed out my first 401(k), also the only one I’d have in my 20s, because I didn’t understand a rollover to a new provider. But one of the beautiful things about investing and saving for retirement is that you can start over, start again, start from a different place. I did all three.
What matters is that you start. You may make mistakes too but you’ll figure it out. Even experts were once beginners.
Investing can be risky and complicated but investing can also be affordable and straightforward. Start with the basics — fund your retirement accounts, give a robo-advisor a try, look at index funds — but start. Even if it's just $10 at first.
The reality is investing in an annuity or bonds isn’t an either-or decision.
Savings bonds are safe and easy to buy, but you can earn higher interest income elsewhere.
Real estate crowdfunding apps have seen rapid growth in recent years.
Here are the key basics on reading crypto charts for beginners.
Considering selling your annuity for cash? Here’s how to do it in five easy steps.
Delaying Social Security payments typically pays off for recipients. But not always.
You can’t easily create an ETF that trades but you can build an ETF-like portfolio.
Here are Trump’s proposed crypto policies — and what investors can expect moving forward.