Comments by "Jerone Thomas" (@Je.rone_) on "Graham Stephan" channel.

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  8.  @BM-nk1pe  yeah you can do both Roth-ira is just a type of investment account specifically for retirement. Since there are some major tax benefits(e.i not having to pay taxes if you withdraw at the appropriate age) there are some rules one must adhere to. ETF and index funds are just a type of investment that does not require specifically said retirement account or any retirement account. All one must have is an investment account through a company (often called a brokerage), some brokerage examples are: robinhood(Comission free trading [meaning you don't have to pay a fee to the company with which you have the invesment account every time you buy or sell an etf, stock, index fund, mutual fund, etc]; and you get a free stock upon thoroughly signing up to robinhood https://share.robinhood.com/jeroneg1 ), Fidelity, E trade, vanguard, and many others are brokerages with invesment accounts Some of the aforementioned brokerages you can have both a roth ira(& other retirement accounts), and an investment account not for retirement. Best way to explicate that is how you can have both a checking and a saving account with your bank account. I personally have a roth ira retirement account (a type of investment account) through a brokerage(the company through which you get an investment account) with predominantly etfs(a type of invesment) and maybe two stocks( type of invesment), and i have a non-retirement account(an invesment account) with only stocks in it(type of investment)(which may prove to be an erroneous decision on my part).
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