I’m a complete newbie. The only “investing” I’ve ever done is use HYSAs. Obviously the yield there, while pretty good, isn’t as good as investing in say, the S&P 500. So I want to invest a chunk of my savings into that and just leave it there until I retire. I’m not really looking into daily/active trading or anything. The problem is I don’t know how fees work with brokers.

I saw this graph a while ago so I was thinking of Fidelty. It also helps that I already have an account there for my employer RSUs and my 401k. On the other hand, a colleague of mine suggested Schwab and said they don’t have any fees.

Can anyone suggest the best broker (minimal/no fees, easy-to-use, set-and-forget) that I should go with if I just want to invest in the S&P 500?

  • @tburkhol
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    43 hours ago

    The ‘dollar cost averaging’ narrative started as a response to people who wanted to hoard a portion of their monthly paycheck waiting for a good time/correction to buy into the market. It’s essentially a corollary of ‘time in market beats timing market,’ and both could be stated as ‘invest it all, right now.’ Especially if your horizon is 10+ years out: a few percentage points today is nothing to the doubling you can expect in a decade.