first of all, congrats to the OP who started this first step at 18.
here is 2 cents from someone who has invested for the past decade:
1. read Jack Bogle's The Little Book of Common Sense Investing. you will realize that mutual fund investing is a a loser's game for the investor. I assume you are getting 3% company match on the 6% you contribute, so even though there is limited options in the 401k plan, 50% instant return on your money cannot be beat.
Choose a strategy that mostly mimics a stock market index, and stick with it.... later on when you switch jobs, you will have the chance to roll the 401k funds into an IRA account, where you can just buy an index fund, or index ETF.
2. read
What Works on Wall Street by James P. O'Shaughnessy
you will realize that in the long run, the so called 'aggressive growth' strategy actually perform poorly compared to value investing.
Therefore do your homework, and find out what the 'aggressive growth' allocation really is. Again, follow point 1 above, you will do better in the long run, just by indexing while keeping the cost down.
here is 2 cents from someone who has invested for the past decade:
1. read Jack Bogle's The Little Book of Common Sense Investing. you will realize that mutual fund investing is a a loser's game for the investor. I assume you are getting 3% company match on the 6% you contribute, so even though there is limited options in the 401k plan, 50% instant return on your money cannot be beat.
Choose a strategy that mostly mimics a stock market index, and stick with it.... later on when you switch jobs, you will have the chance to roll the 401k funds into an IRA account, where you can just buy an index fund, or index ETF.
2. read
What Works on Wall Street by James P. O'Shaughnessy
you will realize that in the long run, the so called 'aggressive growth' strategy actually perform poorly compared to value investing.
Therefore do your homework, and find out what the 'aggressive growth' allocation really is. Again, follow point 1 above, you will do better in the long run, just by indexing while keeping the cost down.