Los Angeles Times

Five good ways to invest that $10,000 windfall

It’s more than enough to meet most online broker minimums.

- By Arielle O'Shea from the money in savings. O’Shea is a staff writer at NerdWallet, a personal finance website.

Your definition of windfall may vary, but there’s little argument that $10,000 is a healthy chunk of cash — certainly enough to give you cold feet when deciding how to invest it.

The good news is that there are a lot of options: That amount is more than enough to meet most online broker minimums.

We’ve slimmed things down to five of the best ways to invest $10,000. Feel free to mix and match; there’s no rule that says you have to throw it all into one pot.

1. Get your 401(k) employer match

A guaranteed investment return is as rare as free money, and a 401(k) match gives you both: When you put dollars into the account, your employer puts dollars in too. How many dollars depends on your plan’s matching arrangemen­t, but 50% to 100% of your contributi­ons up to a limit of 3% to 6% of your salary is a pretty common range.

This $10,000 windfall may give your budget the room it needs to finally start meeting that match, if you’re not already.

The hitch: You typically can’t make a lump-sum deposit to a 401(k), so you have to get a little creative if you want to get this cash into your plan and capture matching dollars while you do it.

Put the $10,000 into a savings account, then set your 401(k) contributi­on to the level your employer matches. When that contributi­on is taken out of your paycheck, repay yourself

2. Max out your IRA contributi­on

An individual retirement account is like a 401(k) you open on your own, which means no employer match. But it has other benefits, including a wide investment selection, and if you don’t have a 401(k) at work, an IRA is far and away the next best thing. That $10,000 is more than enough to max out an IRA for the year.

The annual contributi­on limit is $5,500 right now (with an extra $1,000 allowed for those 50 or older). Max out and then select one of these other options for the rest of your cash.

3. Get guidance from a robo-advisor

Robo-advisors are what they sound like: robots — or specifical­ly, computer algorithms — that manage your money. A $10,000 investment is enough to open an account at the majority of these companies, including Wealthfron­t, which manages the first $10,000 for free.

At other advisors, you’ll pay a fee of around 0.25% to 0.35% (Wealthfron­t’s fee on assets above $10,000 is 0.25%). That fee includes the cost of management, but it doesn’t include investment expenses.

Robo-advisors typically use exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, and index funds, which are fairly low-cost passive investment­s that track sections of the market, like the Standard & Poor’s 500 index.

4. Invest in ETFs and mutual funds

If you grimaced at the mention of that robo-advisor management fee, you might be the do-it-yourself type. You can pretty easily piece together a diversifie­d portfolio of funds yourself with $10,000.

Index funds, a type of mutual fund, typically have an investment minimum, but $10,000 is more than enough to buy into several. ETFs are a kind of index fund that trades like a stock. You buy them for a share price — that’s the minimum investment — and it could be as low as $50.

If you also have a 401(k), you might want to use these individual funds to fill holes in the investment choices offered by the plan — 401(k)s have a scaled-down mutual fund selection and the ones that make the list can be high-fee.

5. Try your hand at investing in stocks

This is kind of DIY turned up a notch — index funds and ETFs are baskets full of stocks (or bonds, depending on the type of fund you’ve selected). When you use them, you get exposure to stocks without actually having to pick individual stocks.

But maybe you want to invest in stocks. Go for it, with one caveat: For a longterm goal like retirement, it’s best to stick to the options above and limit stock trading to 10% of your portfolio or less.

If $10,000 takes a bigger bite, maybe you trade stocks with the portion that overflows your IRA contributi­on limit or set aside just a small chunk of this money to play the market.

Stock buying requires researchin­g stocks — if you’re going to own a piece of a company, you want to know what you’re getting into. So make sure you’re up to the task and choose a broker that has low commission­s, so trading fees don’t eat into your investment.

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