Good point here. The 5.4% is a little higher when taking no state tax into consideration. I’ve been buying t bills the last year while the market continued to climb.No state income tax on profits as well.
Financial advisor here. This isn't quite true from my understanding. Any coupon payments are state tax free, the appreciation (when bought at discount) is not from my experience. An accountant could verify or deny what I believe is true.Good point here. The 5.4% is a little higher when taking no state tax into consideration. I’ve been buying t bills the last year while the market continued to climb.
Just bought some more yesterday. 6 months puts it right after the election and then hopefully it’s time to jump back into the market.
Buying t-bills or other less risky assets certainly isn’t timing the market. When it turns into “I don’t like this market right now for stocks so I’m going to sit in t-bills and then buy stocks in 6 months with that money” it becomes market timing. I didn’t quote the post but I was responding to the post directly above mine.Whether or not it is considered timing or not is debatable. Moving money into less risk with still a decent return is not always a bad thing. Over the last year, I would almost call it an insurance policy. Nothing wrong with grabbing some Tbills as well as still owning a decent amount of stocks.
Is the stock market not subject to inflation?Another thing to keep in mind is real vs nominal rates on the bills (or any asset for that matter). 5% is the nominal return, and the real return is somewhere around 2% (assuming inflation is 3% right now).
The stock market is covered by the “or any asset for that matter.” Bonds are more often talked about in real vs nominal terms.Is the stock market not subject to inflation?