1D·

Savings plan

After the somewhat more restless phase, I was undecided as to whether I should run my savings plans on a monthly or weekly basis. The only option that was out of the question for me was to suspend. In the end, I stuck with monthly deposits. And how do you handle this?

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22 Comentários

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Middle way: 2x per month
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@Sauerland_Investor exciting 🧐 would of course also be a possibility
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@Sauerland_Investor That's exactly how I see it. Just 2-3 times a month.
I've been doing weekly runs for about a year now.
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I switched to weekly after the first price dips because of 🍊 and will switch back to monthly when I think it makes more sense to increase the intervals of the savings plan again.
I can hardly buy manually because I don't have much cash, but I can still reduce the buy-in in several places simply by executing the savings plan more than once.
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@Metis I had similar thoughts 💭 but decided against it in the end. However, I am actively building up a larger cash ratio in order to have funds available in the event of a major setback in the future ✌🏻
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@Phillippe Unfortunately I'm not that far along yet, I'm saving cash for another purpose on the side. :D Hence the decision to adjust the savings plan interval. But the monthly savings amount hasn't changed as a result.
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I take the middle way. Twice a month.
You also take a lot of fluctuations with you.
But there was once a comparison.
It was once on the podcast "alles auf Aktien"
They "ran" a weekly savings plan and a monthly savings plan on the MSCI World.
It turned out that there were no significant performance differences between the variants over 20 years.
The weekly plan performed a little better.
But that was in the 0, range
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@AE23 interesting 🧐 I think the most important thing in the end is that you invest. But the middle way sounds like a good compromise
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Also on a monthly basis, it doesn't make any sense to suspend when prices are falling, I agree :D
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@Variett 👍🏻 Cost averaging sends its regards
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I had also toyed with the idea of changing the rhythm, but strictly speaking it's another attempt at timing, so it's better to continue bluntly and do everything once a month.
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@Sebastian24 I agree with you 1 to 1. Even if the temptation was great, at least for me
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Switched to weekly.
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For sector ETFs, this is now weekly.
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Etf:monthly- until the end and into retirement
Shares:
variable
price and valuation in a nice corridor - monthly / 2x monthly

price favorable and share convincing- one-time purchase

price high - 1 mtl and lower amount or even suspend
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What exactly do you hope to gain by switching from a weekly to a monthly savings plan?
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@Tom_laeuft there would be a better cost averaging effect in a turbulent stock market phase
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@Phillippe I'm not sure whether that makes that much of a difference.
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Weekly at the moment
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I don't understand the question at all, I have been making savings plans weekly for as long as it has been possible and would even prefer to have daily savings plan executions.

The whole idea of a savings plan is cost-averaging. By definition, it gets better the more often you run the savings plan.
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I recently went through my statements from the 90s. Lots of shares that I had long forgotten I ever had. In other words, in 10 years it won't matter whether you bought on Monday or Thursday. Do something useful with your time. Take a walk in the fresh air, for example, and just leave everything as it is.
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