I am wondering, you mentioned investing with a manager is the way to go, does that still apply if u want to invest in the Roth IRA? Since you said the Roth IRA is the best investment for college students, which I am, should I just invest in that or through the robo-advisor?
Thank you,
Wanna-Be- Rich College Girl
]]>Another way is to lend your technical expertise to market research, and invest the earnings. A lot of platforms offer flexible, fun, lucrative projects for $150-300/hour (especially for postgraduate individuals, who are recruited in harder to fill quotes) and can be done online. Forget the overcited survey sites offering low incentives for a lot of work; seek the established firms paying for technical expertise, particularly data science UX. Any doctoral student has experience with that, regardless of field, and those projects pay the most.
]]>Hi Orode – The only possibility may be going for citizenship once you graduate. Though some companies will accept US residents with a green card. You can work it out, but you’ll have to be patient.
]]>Hi Jeff,
I have the same issue with Oma. I am a Nigerian citizen studying in the US at the moment and I have tried signing up to a few of these investment platforms and they only cater to american citizens or permanent residents. Are there ways to work around this? it’s kind of strange studying and working part-time in the US but being unable to invest here.
Thank you.
]]>Hi Ken – Roth IRA contributions are not tax deductible when made (traditional IRA contributions generally are). The investment income in the Roth IRA is tax deferred (you’ll pay tax on it if you withdraw it early). But if yo hold it until age 59.5 it can be taken tax-free.
]]>Hi Oma – Since I’m US based I cover only investment platforms in the US. Please check the web to see if there are any available in Nigeria. I don’t have that information, nor do I have it for other countries.
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