What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?












4















I'm looking to buy a house, but lacking in the capital to make an adequate down payment on said house. My lease expires in a year from now, so I am looking to build up my capital through investment banking - our first real attempt at investments in our lifetime.



Next month I will be able to open up an investment account through my bank with an initial $500 payment and $50 monthly payment into the account, which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



I'm looking for growth in my investment, but I'm not looking to take such a big risk that I could stand to lose all $1100.



What type of investment should I make for this type of savings goal?



Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)










share|improve this question





























    4















    I'm looking to buy a house, but lacking in the capital to make an adequate down payment on said house. My lease expires in a year from now, so I am looking to build up my capital through investment banking - our first real attempt at investments in our lifetime.



    Next month I will be able to open up an investment account through my bank with an initial $500 payment and $50 monthly payment into the account, which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



    I'm looking for growth in my investment, but I'm not looking to take such a big risk that I could stand to lose all $1100.



    What type of investment should I make for this type of savings goal?



    Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)










    share|improve this question



























      4












      4








      4








      I'm looking to buy a house, but lacking in the capital to make an adequate down payment on said house. My lease expires in a year from now, so I am looking to build up my capital through investment banking - our first real attempt at investments in our lifetime.



      Next month I will be able to open up an investment account through my bank with an initial $500 payment and $50 monthly payment into the account, which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



      I'm looking for growth in my investment, but I'm not looking to take such a big risk that I could stand to lose all $1100.



      What type of investment should I make for this type of savings goal?



      Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)










      share|improve this question
















      I'm looking to buy a house, but lacking in the capital to make an adequate down payment on said house. My lease expires in a year from now, so I am looking to build up my capital through investment banking - our first real attempt at investments in our lifetime.



      Next month I will be able to open up an investment account through my bank with an initial $500 payment and $50 monthly payment into the account, which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



      I'm looking for growth in my investment, but I'm not looking to take such a big risk that I could stand to lose all $1100.



      What type of investment should I make for this type of savings goal?



      Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)







      investing savings starting-out-investing






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 6 hours ago







      Zibbobz

















      asked 6 hours ago









      ZibbobzZibbobz

      1,91321932




      1,91321932






















          4 Answers
          4






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          7














          Generally speaking you want to layer your financial life.



          First you want to have an emergency fund with enough money set aside to comfortably absorb emergency expenses and give you a financial buffer if you find yourself unemployed. Your emergency fund should be stored in a guaranteed account.



          Above that you have some sort of longer term specific goal savings accounts. Depending on your investment horizon you may want to apply some risk here but really, you probably just want to keep it somewhere safe. A 10% market gain in this account might be nice, but a 30% decline would be horrible.



          Once you have these layers established you may want to start investing some amount in to more risky assets. This is something you do when time is on your side.



          If you have a one year investment horizon, the stock market is really not the place for this money. If I were you I'd keep this money in a safe high-yield savings account. Don't be lured by the high long-term average returns of the stock market, because this is not a long term investment for you.






          share|improve this answer



















          • 1





            Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

            – Hart CO
            5 hours ago











          • I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

            – Zibbobz
            4 hours ago











          • @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

            – Hart CO
            4 hours ago











          • @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

            – RonJohn
            2 hours ago



















          2















          What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?




          Do not invest the money you need in 12 months. That is because investments involve risk, and risk is what you should avoid at all costs.



          If you are in the US (and probably Canada), open a savings account with an online bank such as (alphabetically) Ally; Capital One 360; Synchrony and many others.




          which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



          Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)




          Even $1100 is way, way, way short of what you'd need for a decent DP (down payment).



          For example, 5% of US$200,000 is $10,000 and just about every regular on this site would recommend a 20% DP






          share|improve this answer































            1














            There are internet bank accounts that link to a local checking account that pay about the same rate as a three-month Treasury Bill.



            There are 6-month duration corporate bond ETF's that pay more than the three-month Treasury rate.



            And there are Treasury Direct accounts that allow Treasury security investments with no fees or expenses. Non-hedge-fund investors are presently going as long as two-year durations but shorter durations are available.



            But buying a house in the future might involve a worry about interest rates going up while waiting. An interest rate rise can be hedged with a sell-side 10-year Treasury future. The contract size is $100,000 and the minimum margin deposit is about $1300 per contract.






            share|improve this answer































              0














              First of all congratulations on starting to save!



              If you are not willing to lose the money and you want to withdraw it a certain amount of time, then I would recommend a high interest savings account. If you commit to one year you can get a better rate, but you lose the flexibility to withdraw it early. Best 1 Year offers



              If you want to take more risk I would go with one of the free investment brokers such as Robinhood. There you can start investing in stocks and ETF's commission free. But there is a certain risk to lose all you money. I you choose to invest e.g. in the S&P500 which represents the biggest 500 companies listed on the stock marked in the US, the chances that you lose all your money are pretty low, but the chances that your money will be worth less than today are rather high.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.




















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                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

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                4 Answers
                4






                active

                oldest

                votes









                active

                oldest

                votes






                active

                oldest

                votes









                7














                Generally speaking you want to layer your financial life.



                First you want to have an emergency fund with enough money set aside to comfortably absorb emergency expenses and give you a financial buffer if you find yourself unemployed. Your emergency fund should be stored in a guaranteed account.



                Above that you have some sort of longer term specific goal savings accounts. Depending on your investment horizon you may want to apply some risk here but really, you probably just want to keep it somewhere safe. A 10% market gain in this account might be nice, but a 30% decline would be horrible.



                Once you have these layers established you may want to start investing some amount in to more risky assets. This is something you do when time is on your side.



                If you have a one year investment horizon, the stock market is really not the place for this money. If I were you I'd keep this money in a safe high-yield savings account. Don't be lured by the high long-term average returns of the stock market, because this is not a long term investment for you.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1





                  Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                  – Hart CO
                  5 hours ago











                • I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                  – Zibbobz
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                  – Hart CO
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                  – RonJohn
                  2 hours ago
















                7














                Generally speaking you want to layer your financial life.



                First you want to have an emergency fund with enough money set aside to comfortably absorb emergency expenses and give you a financial buffer if you find yourself unemployed. Your emergency fund should be stored in a guaranteed account.



                Above that you have some sort of longer term specific goal savings accounts. Depending on your investment horizon you may want to apply some risk here but really, you probably just want to keep it somewhere safe. A 10% market gain in this account might be nice, but a 30% decline would be horrible.



                Once you have these layers established you may want to start investing some amount in to more risky assets. This is something you do when time is on your side.



                If you have a one year investment horizon, the stock market is really not the place for this money. If I were you I'd keep this money in a safe high-yield savings account. Don't be lured by the high long-term average returns of the stock market, because this is not a long term investment for you.






                share|improve this answer



















                • 1





                  Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                  – Hart CO
                  5 hours ago











                • I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                  – Zibbobz
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                  – Hart CO
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                  – RonJohn
                  2 hours ago














                7












                7








                7







                Generally speaking you want to layer your financial life.



                First you want to have an emergency fund with enough money set aside to comfortably absorb emergency expenses and give you a financial buffer if you find yourself unemployed. Your emergency fund should be stored in a guaranteed account.



                Above that you have some sort of longer term specific goal savings accounts. Depending on your investment horizon you may want to apply some risk here but really, you probably just want to keep it somewhere safe. A 10% market gain in this account might be nice, but a 30% decline would be horrible.



                Once you have these layers established you may want to start investing some amount in to more risky assets. This is something you do when time is on your side.



                If you have a one year investment horizon, the stock market is really not the place for this money. If I were you I'd keep this money in a safe high-yield savings account. Don't be lured by the high long-term average returns of the stock market, because this is not a long term investment for you.






                share|improve this answer













                Generally speaking you want to layer your financial life.



                First you want to have an emergency fund with enough money set aside to comfortably absorb emergency expenses and give you a financial buffer if you find yourself unemployed. Your emergency fund should be stored in a guaranteed account.



                Above that you have some sort of longer term specific goal savings accounts. Depending on your investment horizon you may want to apply some risk here but really, you probably just want to keep it somewhere safe. A 10% market gain in this account might be nice, but a 30% decline would be horrible.



                Once you have these layers established you may want to start investing some amount in to more risky assets. This is something you do when time is on your side.



                If you have a one year investment horizon, the stock market is really not the place for this money. If I were you I'd keep this money in a safe high-yield savings account. Don't be lured by the high long-term average returns of the stock market, because this is not a long term investment for you.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered 6 hours ago









                quidquid

                36.8k866121




                36.8k866121








                • 1





                  Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                  – Hart CO
                  5 hours ago











                • I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                  – Zibbobz
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                  – Hart CO
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                  – RonJohn
                  2 hours ago














                • 1





                  Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                  – Hart CO
                  5 hours ago











                • I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                  – Zibbobz
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                  – Hart CO
                  4 hours ago











                • @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                  – RonJohn
                  2 hours ago








                1




                1





                Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                – Hart CO
                5 hours ago





                Was going to answer but would be too similar, only thing I'd add is that any of the layers you don't want to expose to market risk are good candidates for a mix of savings accounts and CD's. Based on your projected monthly saving, you'll likely want a longer timeline before you consider buying, a little buffer can go very quickly with a house ($5k hvac, $15k roof, $2k burst pipe, $10k sewer line, etc).

                – Hart CO
                5 hours ago













                I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                – Zibbobz
                4 hours ago





                I was going to say "So like a CD" too - though I'm worried about the liquidity of CDs due to my timeframe, especially regarding my lease. My landlord has already made it clear that they wouldn't be willing to budge on a move-out date, and my goal is for this year to be our last year living in our apartment. We don't have any major complaints about it, but we want to start having children soon, and we want to own our own property when we do.

                – Zibbobz
                4 hours ago













                @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                – Hart CO
                4 hours ago





                @Zibbobz CD's often have a penalty of 'x' months interest for early withdrawal, so you can withdraw at any time but at a cost. For example, on my 5-year CD's there's a 6-month's interest early withdrawal penalty, so if I withdrew immediately I'd come out behind my initial deposit, if I withdrew at 6-months I'd get my initial deposit back, etc. With a 1-year timeline CD's aren't worth considering but a CD ladder that comprises a portion of your savings can make a lot of sense.

                – Hart CO
                4 hours ago













                @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                – RonJohn
                2 hours ago





                @Zibbobz CDs are for when you have a chunk of money now that you won't need for a "long" (12+ months) time. For starting small and accumulating, a savings account is the way to go.

                – RonJohn
                2 hours ago













                2















                What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?




                Do not invest the money you need in 12 months. That is because investments involve risk, and risk is what you should avoid at all costs.



                If you are in the US (and probably Canada), open a savings account with an online bank such as (alphabetically) Ally; Capital One 360; Synchrony and many others.




                which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



                Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)




                Even $1100 is way, way, way short of what you'd need for a decent DP (down payment).



                For example, 5% of US$200,000 is $10,000 and just about every regular on this site would recommend a 20% DP






                share|improve this answer




























                  2















                  What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?




                  Do not invest the money you need in 12 months. That is because investments involve risk, and risk is what you should avoid at all costs.



                  If you are in the US (and probably Canada), open a savings account with an online bank such as (alphabetically) Ally; Capital One 360; Synchrony and many others.




                  which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



                  Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)




                  Even $1100 is way, way, way short of what you'd need for a decent DP (down payment).



                  For example, 5% of US$200,000 is $10,000 and just about every regular on this site would recommend a 20% DP






                  share|improve this answer


























                    2












                    2








                    2








                    What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?




                    Do not invest the money you need in 12 months. That is because investments involve risk, and risk is what you should avoid at all costs.



                    If you are in the US (and probably Canada), open a savings account with an online bank such as (alphabetically) Ally; Capital One 360; Synchrony and many others.




                    which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



                    Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)




                    Even $1100 is way, way, way short of what you'd need for a decent DP (down payment).



                    For example, 5% of US$200,000 is $10,000 and just about every regular on this site would recommend a 20% DP






                    share|improve this answer














                    What type of investment is best suited for a 1-year investment on a down payment?




                    Do not invest the money you need in 12 months. That is because investments involve risk, and risk is what you should avoid at all costs.



                    If you are in the US (and probably Canada), open a savings account with an online bank such as (alphabetically) Ally; Capital One 360; Synchrony and many others.




                    which will build up $1100 from my savings alone.



                    Note: $50 a month would be coming out of our current savings total, leaving $300 aside to build up regular savings (which we need - our current savings are only at $500!)




                    Even $1100 is way, way, way short of what you'd need for a decent DP (down payment).



                    For example, 5% of US$200,000 is $10,000 and just about every regular on this site would recommend a 20% DP







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered 2 hours ago









                    RonJohnRonJohn

                    11.8k42050




                    11.8k42050























                        1














                        There are internet bank accounts that link to a local checking account that pay about the same rate as a three-month Treasury Bill.



                        There are 6-month duration corporate bond ETF's that pay more than the three-month Treasury rate.



                        And there are Treasury Direct accounts that allow Treasury security investments with no fees or expenses. Non-hedge-fund investors are presently going as long as two-year durations but shorter durations are available.



                        But buying a house in the future might involve a worry about interest rates going up while waiting. An interest rate rise can be hedged with a sell-side 10-year Treasury future. The contract size is $100,000 and the minimum margin deposit is about $1300 per contract.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          1














                          There are internet bank accounts that link to a local checking account that pay about the same rate as a three-month Treasury Bill.



                          There are 6-month duration corporate bond ETF's that pay more than the three-month Treasury rate.



                          And there are Treasury Direct accounts that allow Treasury security investments with no fees or expenses. Non-hedge-fund investors are presently going as long as two-year durations but shorter durations are available.



                          But buying a house in the future might involve a worry about interest rates going up while waiting. An interest rate rise can be hedged with a sell-side 10-year Treasury future. The contract size is $100,000 and the minimum margin deposit is about $1300 per contract.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            1












                            1








                            1







                            There are internet bank accounts that link to a local checking account that pay about the same rate as a three-month Treasury Bill.



                            There are 6-month duration corporate bond ETF's that pay more than the three-month Treasury rate.



                            And there are Treasury Direct accounts that allow Treasury security investments with no fees or expenses. Non-hedge-fund investors are presently going as long as two-year durations but shorter durations are available.



                            But buying a house in the future might involve a worry about interest rates going up while waiting. An interest rate rise can be hedged with a sell-side 10-year Treasury future. The contract size is $100,000 and the minimum margin deposit is about $1300 per contract.






                            share|improve this answer













                            There are internet bank accounts that link to a local checking account that pay about the same rate as a three-month Treasury Bill.



                            There are 6-month duration corporate bond ETF's that pay more than the three-month Treasury rate.



                            And there are Treasury Direct accounts that allow Treasury security investments with no fees or expenses. Non-hedge-fund investors are presently going as long as two-year durations but shorter durations are available.



                            But buying a house in the future might involve a worry about interest rates going up while waiting. An interest rate rise can be hedged with a sell-side 10-year Treasury future. The contract size is $100,000 and the minimum margin deposit is about $1300 per contract.







                            share|improve this answer












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                            share|improve this answer










                            answered 4 hours ago









                            S SpringS Spring

                            64013




                            64013























                                0














                                First of all congratulations on starting to save!



                                If you are not willing to lose the money and you want to withdraw it a certain amount of time, then I would recommend a high interest savings account. If you commit to one year you can get a better rate, but you lose the flexibility to withdraw it early. Best 1 Year offers



                                If you want to take more risk I would go with one of the free investment brokers such as Robinhood. There you can start investing in stocks and ETF's commission free. But there is a certain risk to lose all you money. I you choose to invest e.g. in the S&P500 which represents the biggest 500 companies listed on the stock marked in the US, the chances that you lose all your money are pretty low, but the chances that your money will be worth less than today are rather high.






                                share|improve this answer








                                New contributor




                                Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                                  0














                                  First of all congratulations on starting to save!



                                  If you are not willing to lose the money and you want to withdraw it a certain amount of time, then I would recommend a high interest savings account. If you commit to one year you can get a better rate, but you lose the flexibility to withdraw it early. Best 1 Year offers



                                  If you want to take more risk I would go with one of the free investment brokers such as Robinhood. There you can start investing in stocks and ETF's commission free. But there is a certain risk to lose all you money. I you choose to invest e.g. in the S&P500 which represents the biggest 500 companies listed on the stock marked in the US, the chances that you lose all your money are pretty low, but the chances that your money will be worth less than today are rather high.






                                  share|improve this answer








                                  New contributor




                                  Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                  Check out our Code of Conduct.























                                    0












                                    0








                                    0







                                    First of all congratulations on starting to save!



                                    If you are not willing to lose the money and you want to withdraw it a certain amount of time, then I would recommend a high interest savings account. If you commit to one year you can get a better rate, but you lose the flexibility to withdraw it early. Best 1 Year offers



                                    If you want to take more risk I would go with one of the free investment brokers such as Robinhood. There you can start investing in stocks and ETF's commission free. But there is a certain risk to lose all you money. I you choose to invest e.g. in the S&P500 which represents the biggest 500 companies listed on the stock marked in the US, the chances that you lose all your money are pretty low, but the chances that your money will be worth less than today are rather high.






                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.










                                    First of all congratulations on starting to save!



                                    If you are not willing to lose the money and you want to withdraw it a certain amount of time, then I would recommend a high interest savings account. If you commit to one year you can get a better rate, but you lose the flexibility to withdraw it early. Best 1 Year offers



                                    If you want to take more risk I would go with one of the free investment brokers such as Robinhood. There you can start investing in stocks and ETF's commission free. But there is a certain risk to lose all you money. I you choose to invest e.g. in the S&P500 which represents the biggest 500 companies listed on the stock marked in the US, the chances that you lose all your money are pretty low, but the chances that your money will be worth less than today are rather high.







                                    share|improve this answer








                                    New contributor




                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                    share|improve this answer



                                    share|improve this answer






                                    New contributor




                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.









                                    answered 1 hour ago









                                    Julian EilerJulian Eiler

                                    1




                                    1




                                    New contributor




                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.





                                    New contributor





                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






                                    Julian Eiler is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                                    Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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