I looked into Vanguard and found them to be quite fee-heavy with very high minimum balance and combined balance standards. I also looked into H&R Block Financial and found them to be a little more competitive but I decided not to use them after they screwed up three of my tax returns and refused to admit any liability or fix the error. I realize that the tax and financial sectors are different, but still felt weary about dealing with such a company.
2006-10-18 10:02:27
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Vanguard, fee heavy? Every magazine I've ever read disagrees.
Take the risk tolerance questionaire on Vanguards site to narrow down your choices. Their Riet fund has done very well, I like it, the symbol is VGSIX.
2006-10-18 10:34:33
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answer #2
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answered by Wesleystock 2
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Well it totally depends on your risk tolerance. Judging by your screenname... you are approx. 48 years old. You do not want an aggressive plan if you are retired or plan to retire in the next 10 years. Look for specific plans that have "target retirement 10 years" or similar. Good luck. You might want to also look into ETFs, less fees.
2006-10-18 11:28:32
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answer #3
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answered by amanda 3
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forefront could be a physically powerful/amazing provider. although, i'm not sure they could be interested in a organization with one hundred eighty workers. that's why you have bids by utilising your 2 cutting-edge assurance companies. They focus on smaller agencies. constancy and TR value additionally grant 401k plans & administration. they may be worth a glance.
2016-11-23 18:07:22
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answer #4
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answered by ? 4
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go to vanguard.com and see which funds are available from them for 401K, then, get the prospectus, check which ones are netting the highest return, what they are invested in and what risk level you'd be comfortable with. Read the prospectus, and talk with their advisors about what would suit your needs. Good luck.
2006-10-18 09:56:50
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answer #5
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answered by stick man 6
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