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nemild | 5 years ago

One more to add is Reddit's Personal Finance, where this question gets asked a lot. The wiki (second link, search for Windfall) esp has a number of great articles on topics like this.

https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/

https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/index

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alex_sikora|5 years ago

I'd probably recommend https://old.reddit.com/r/FatFIRE over /r/pf as it's more likely to have people that have experienced getting a large lump sum like this.

monktastic1|5 years ago

FatFIRE is for people who want to live large off their savings (usually understood as >$100k/yr passive income, which generally requires $2.5M+ in invested assets). That doesn't seem to describe OP's position. If FIRE is an interest, then https://www.reddit.com/r/financialindependence/ is a better bet.

koolba|5 years ago

I really appreciate linking directly to old reddit rather than the crap default.

BbzzbB|5 years ago

PF will say the same thing as always (not that it's wrong), i.e. SPY if you're risk-tolerant, some Vanguard I don't recall (VOO?) if you're less so.

arcticbull|5 years ago

VOO and SPY are basically the same thing, SPY is older and structured as a trust, VOO is an ETF. Both track the S&P 500. They'll probably recommend some combination of equity and bonds, probably a split between VOO (slightly lower fees and more efficient payout of dividends -- I do mean slightly) and TLT (20+ year treasuries).

VOO and TLT have limited correlation as treasuries are seen as a safe-haven. We've seen huge spikes in treasury funds recently, since they go up in value when interest rates go down. It's a bit unintuitive, but treasury funds have to cycle through their holdings over time to track the index, so when interest rates on new issues go down, older issues command a premium in the amount of pre-paid interest.

reducesuffering|5 years ago

VOO is the same index as SPY (SP500), so that can't be it. Maybe you meant BND, a highly popular total bond market ETF that would be for the risk-intolerant?