MikePDNA51 Posted April 3, 2024 Posted April 3, 2024 Looking at ETFs to purchase today. Library provided free website: https://www.investor.gov/ and Fund Analyzer | Tools & Calculators TOOLS.FINRA.ORG I am supposed to buy low then sell high. VNQI is priced $41.56, when economy collapsed in 2020 it was $37.23, then was high at $60.52 (June 11, 2021). Looks like obvious way to make $20.00 in 1.5-2 years. BOTZ for artificial intelligence is $31.09 that is high compared to its peak $38.43. Why increase? 1. AI all over twitter and in NPR conversations 2. I actually purchased something AI related with my own money. I have a problem when a stock broker or anyone mentions an ETF, they want me to invest because my money goes in then ETF/ Stock/ Scam increases, and they take their money out. Rarely will a stock broker mention a stock besides a company that will never go bankrupt, Microsoft, Amazon, or Google. Plus finance people uggh. Any other recommendations for low ETFs that will go up?
sutherland Posted May 25, 2024 Posted May 25, 2024 For several years I've had a subscription to the AAII Journal. It is published monthly and provides great charts on the best-performing ETFs and Mutual Funds MikePDNA51 1
topunderachiever Posted May 25, 2024 Posted May 25, 2024 The SEC this week allowed creation of an Ethereum ETF and similar to Bitcoin ETFs in January, will enable investors to speculate without using wallets or coin based exchanges. It will be interesting to see how these perform.
Kevin Slater Posted May 25, 2024 Posted May 25, 2024 VOO Tracks the S&P 500. .03% expense ratio. VTI Tracks the total stock market. .03% expense ratio. VO Midcap stocks. .04% expense ratio. VB Smallcap stocks. .05% expense ratio. IDEV International large cap. .04% expense ratio. /investment-products/list//pkg/1.1.0/web/favicon.ico Vanguard Investment Products List INVESTOR.VANGUARD.COM Kevin Slater + nycman, matthatter, Bokomaru and 3 others 4 1 1
+ nycman Posted May 25, 2024 Posted May 25, 2024 2 hours ago, Kevin Slater said: VOO Tracks the S&P 500. .03% expense ratio. VTI Tracks the total stock market. .03% expense ratio. VO Midcap stocks. .04% expense ratio. VB Smallcap stocks. .05% expense ratio. IDEV International large cap. .04% expense ratio. /investment-products/list//pkg/1.1.0/web/favicon.ico Vanguard Investment Products List INVESTOR.VANGUARD.COM Kevin Slater Trust the whore with the graphs…… MikePDNA51 1
+ Notor Posted May 25, 2024 Posted May 25, 2024 4 hours ago, Kevin Slater said: VOO Tracks the S&P 500. .03% expense ratio. VTI Tracks the total stock market. .03% expense ratio. VO Midcap stocks. .04% expense ratio. VB Smallcap stocks. .05% expense ratio. IDEV International large cap. .04% expense ratio. /investment-products/list//pkg/1.1.0/web/favicon.ico Vanguard Investment Products List INVESTOR.VANGUARD.COM Kevin Slater This is exactly what I do!
sutherland Posted May 26, 2024 Posted May 26, 2024 (edited) The great Warren Buffett has recently recommended 2 ETFs - VOO and SPY. Coming from Warren Buffett, that means a lot Warren Buffett Really Likes 1 ETF. Here's an ETF That's Just as Good and Could Help You Retire as a Millionaire. FINANCE.YAHOO.COM Both of these exchange-traded funds are great picks for long-term investors. Edited May 26, 2024 by sutherland
Kevin Slater Posted May 26, 2024 Posted May 26, 2024 7 hours ago, sutherland said: The great Warren Buffett has recently recommended 2 ETFs - VOO and SPY. Coming from Warren Buffett, that means a lot VOO and SPY are virtually identical, except SPYs expense ratio is triple that of VOO. SPY is somewhat more liquid, so if you're looking to day trade or use complex derivatives it may be a reasonable choice, but if you're looking to buy and hold, VOO (or IVV) makes more sense. Kevin Slater MikePDNA51 and Frequentflier 2
MikePDNA51 Posted September 22, 2024 Author Posted September 22, 2024 On 5/26/2024 at 2:52 PM, Kevin Slater said: VOO and SPY are virtually identical, except SPYs expense ratio is triple that of VOO. SPY is somewhat more liquid, so if you're looking to day trade or use complex derivatives it may be a reasonable choice, but if you're looking to buy and hold, VOO (or IVV) makes more sense. Kevin Slater VOO, and many Vanguard products, are safe investments that will always go up in the long run. VOO takes largest 500 USA companies, putting them in a ETF. For VOO to fail Microsoft, Google, ExxonMobil, and Walmart, would somehow need to collapse which is never going to happen. Other good ETF's from Vanguard: VUG, VTI, VOTE, VT. Other random ETF's that have been doing well: NETZ Any other suggestions?
MikePDNA51 Posted September 22, 2024 Author Posted September 22, 2024 On 5/25/2024 at 7:13 AM, sutherland said: For several years I've had a subscription to the AAII Journal. It is published monthly and provides great charts on the best-performing ETFs and Mutual Funds I am going to get the journal or read at library.
SD_Exec Posted September 22, 2024 Posted September 22, 2024 iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) if you’re looking for international exposure, emerging markets. They can offer some degree of diversification
+ FrankR Posted September 22, 2024 Posted September 22, 2024 37 minutes ago, SD_Exec said: iShares MSCI Emerging Markets ETF (EEM) if you’re looking for international exposure, emerging markets. They can offer some degree of diversification If you prefer to stick with Vanguard, then VWO can give you emerging markets exposure.
SD_Exec Posted September 23, 2024 Posted September 23, 2024 On 9/22/2024 at 1:59 PM, FrankR said: If you prefer to stick with Vanguard, then VWO can give you emerging markets exposure. Have you checked out the app/site WeBull? They have great rates for uninvested money, I wonder if Vanguard offers something similar for uninvested cash
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