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Your at a point were you need torethink how you invest. You can keep in vin sting in growth index fund (all the fund you listed ar growth index funds. I would suggest investing you money in the taxable account into dividned ETF. Dividends are cash profit sharing payments to you. For example you could put money in your taxable brokerage account into CLOZ with a 8% dividend yield. 100K invested in that fund will generate all the money you need for your roth deposits. Or you could use the money to pay bills and other expense. You can get yield from 1% to 10% with about as much risk as your growth index funds. CLOZ actually has less risk than growth index funds, I have fund these dividend funds in my taxable account EIC 11%, PFLT 12%, ARDC 9%, EMO 9%. PBDC 9%, PFFA 8%, CLOZ 8%, UTF 7%, UTG 6.3%, JAAA 6%

I did that and I am now retired at 55 and living off of my dividneds. Currently at 5K a month of income. Enough to cover my living expenses. I would like 100K in retirment and I estimated my tax for regular dividends with no other income and found my tax owould be 15K or 85K of income after taxes. It will be a few years before I get there. So it is possible to do it with just high tax regular dividends. Qualified dividends have a lower tax. But they are other low tax operations municiable bonds and ROC dividends. ROC means return of capital ( a tax classification) and freaks an out a lot people but A good fund can have ROC dividends by doing tax loss harvesting while earning a profit from your investments. This creates the ROC classification without returning any of your investment. The advantage Of ROC dividends is that you pay no taxes on the dividend. But when the cost basis of your shares reaches zero (which takes years you pay long term captial gains taxes which is the same as qualified dividend. Neos has some ver good covered call funds (see their website for a full list. But two of my favorit are SPYI 11% yield and QQQI 13% yield. You won't find qualified stock or ETF with this yield. And with these yields you can build up passive income faster than you can with qualified dividends of Note some other funds I hare (most are regular dividends) are : EIC 11% yield,, PFLT 11%,EMO 9%, PBDC 9%, ARDC 9%CLO 8%, UTF 7%, UTG 6.3, and JAAA 6%.

The highest utility from investments comes from cash dividends. you can spend the cash on enacting you need or reinvest it. Growth is nice but it isn't real until you sell it and cover the income to cash. My roth is invested in BTCI 25%, QQQI 13% yield, PFLT 12%, ARDC9%, EMO 9, PBDC, PFFA 8%, ClOZ 8%, UTG 6.3%, JAAA 6%. These investment in my roth generate about 30K a year in the roth. Which I reinvest. IF you use a taxable account the money could be used to cover living expense ore reinvested.

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You could invest the money in JAAA 6% yield and JBBB 8% yield and PFFA 8% UTF 7% and UTG 6%.Thes all invest in different assets and provide a much better yield. These are dividend funds that pay out quarterly or monthly. Some higher yielding options are PBDC 9%, ARDC 10%,EIC 11%, and SPYI 11% the lower yielding funds are safest while the higher yielding funds have slightly higher risk. YOU will have to use a taxable brokerage acount for these funds. Set dividend investment to off. Cash will show up in the account and from there you can move that to your bank account. The higher yield of these funds will probably double your income. Any money you don't spend reinvest it for more income. Your taxes will go up due to the higher income. So you probably will have to make some adjustments to your tax withholding. I strongly suggest you read the book The Income Factory. and look at Armchair income on youtube.

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I am really interested in your post, but also a little confused on the details. If you wouldn't mind adding some clarification. >QQQI 13% Yield, ARDC 12%, SPAYI 11%, EIC 11%, PBDC 9%, UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, UTG 6.3%, PFFD 6% FAGIX 5%. * The above is only 50% of your portfolio, and the other 50% is in growth ETF not part of the list above? * Most important question: The 5K in monthly income you receive is based on what dollar amount invested in the above portfolio? * Those numbers add up to 87%. Where is the other 13%?

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The solution to this cash reserve problem is not to use cash or growth index funds as a reserve for a market down turn. Instead consider investing your cash and taxa able brokerage holdings into dividend funds. For example if we take your 150K of cash and reinvested that for dividned. Now with 150K we cannot get enough cash to provide 9K a month. but with BTCI 25% yield you could get 3K a month of income Now normally I would recemond QQQI with its 13% yield due to my risk tolerance. BTCI is the maximum yield I would be comfortable with. But with your cash and taxable brokerage invested in BTCI you would bet very close to 9K a month. If you just use the cash in BTCI and reinvested all the money back into BTCI you will have 300K in BTCI and would have an income of 6K a month. If you don't need the money reinvest it in other funds to reduce single fund risk. or you could use the money to pay off a home loan or any debt you have. Reducing your living expenses. The key things to remember about dividneds is that the money is from the companies profits. And ever in 2008 and the dot. crash most companes were still profitable and still payed their dividends. I retired at 55 and I invested in QQQI 13% Yield, ARDC 12%, SPAYI 11%, EIC 11%, PBDC 9%, UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, UTG 6.3%, PFFD 6% FAGIX 5%. A mix high yield and lowe less risky yields And I still have 50% of my portfolio in growth index funds. My living expenses are about 4K and I currently get 5k from dividends so 80% of my income covers my living expenses with the remaining 20% being reinvested for more income. Now if there is a correction in the market most of my dividend income will continue. But if not I can sells some growth for additional income. A good book to read is the income factory. And armchair income on you tube invests the same way but does good reviews of funds that can be used for income.

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I would recomend diversifying into high quality dividend funds That way when the market falls the dividends will help contract some of the decline. I am using dividend funds like QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11% EIC 11%, PBDC 9%, UTF 7%, UTG 6.3%, PFFD 6%.

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right now you have two choices, open a a roth or a taxable account. I don't know if you have access to a 401K. I am assuming right now you don't. with 800 a month you and the roth depoist limit of 7000 you will have enough to open a roth and taxable account. Max out your roth every year. Most just invest in growth index funds Like S&P500 index funds. but with he deposit limit in 20 yours you would longly have about 500K available for retirment and it would not generate any meaningful income. In my opinion The best Roth investment is a high yield dividend fund like BTCI 25% yield. In 20 years you will have about 3.9 million in the acount producing 900K of dividned income a year. Yes there are some risks with a yield at 25% but it is the highest reasonable safe yield I know of. Realistically in 10 years i would start diversifying your investments in the roth. I am currently investing in QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 11%, PBDC 9%, UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, UTG 6.3%, PFFD 6%. All would would make good additions to your roth when you start diversifying away from BTCI. And all are good choices for a taxable account. Once you reach the 7000 limit in the roth open a taxable account and start investing for dividends. The purpose of the taxable account is to give you a backup source of income. having a lot of dividend income is great backup in case your are unemployed or cannot work for medical reasons. I am following an investment stratagy similar to the book The Income Factory. Armchair income on youtube also follows this stratagy. Both list the funds they use or have used and that that is 100 in total. Armchair income also does detailed reviews of his investment choices. Which give you a good look at why he picks the funds he insists in.

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your could sell it off slowly and reinvest the funds for dividends. Dependinding on the yield the reinvestment you could get yearly cash income generation of 50k up to about 100K of income from your investments. Cash generated in the 401K will have to stay in the 401K until you reach age 60. But you can reinvest this cash to grow your earnings. IF the stock is in a taxable acount you could replace a immergeny fund with a passive income fund. I would read the book the income factory. It is about investing for dividend income. and list 68m funds the author has used plus several example portfolios. There ia also Armchair income on youtube. he list 38 funds has has in his dividend portfolio. and does detailed reviews of some of them and other funds that may be of interest. He also interviews fund managers and did interview the author of The Income Factory. That should give you enough ideas to on how to invest the money. I am currently using QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%, UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, UTG 6.3%, PFFD 6%. 5

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There is a lot of risk in yieldmax funds. That doesn't mean they will fail tomorrow or next year. We simply don't know how long they can keep paying these very high yields. There are a growing number of people that put in only the ammount they are willing to loose and then use the dividend income to buy less risky stocks. That is what i am thinking doing and and I suggest to do the same. Lower risk investements I use are PFFD 6% Yield, UTF,7%, UTG 7%, Scab 7%, PBDC 9%, EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, and QQQI 13%.

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This is really a personal question you need to answer. If you feel the will never perform well stop investing in it. If you think it will do well in the future then keep buying it. In my case the company stock didn't pay a dividend it did almost go bankrupt at one point. At the time other than my saving account I had no significant savings. So I invested the stock. It wasn't a well thought out plan but I didn't know what else to do at the time. So I did it with the goal of getting 100K that I could sell if I lost my job or had to take a medical leave of absance. The company did eventually turn corner but most of the market had written off the company. So our gradual climb to be one of the largest companes in the sector went largely unknowtised. And I reached my 100K goal. Then the unexpected happed The company started paying a dividend. Quickly me emergency fund turned in to 20K a year passive income fund. Which really changed my outlook on life. Now instead of your ESPP you could put the money in funds like QQQI 13% dividend yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, ECI 10% and PBDC 9% in a taxable account and build up a passive income fund which could be used to cover bills or pay for vacations or anytingyou want.

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Most economist are expecting higher inflation due to the tariffs and with growing world economic instability I would now focus more in on passive income investments. Such as these dividend ETFs: QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%, UTG / UTF / SCYB all with7% yield, A.nd PFF 6%. These funds in a roth or 401K will compensate for the potential lower earning of index fund so your retriemtn account will do better than one without dividends. In a taxable account then income would help protect your from unemployment.

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There are many types of ETF, Most here are referring to index ETF. But there are also dividend ETF, covered call ETF, Collateral Loan obligation ETF, and credit ETFs. And then for most of these your would also find CEF (Closed End funds). CEF are more like investment businesses instead. ETF are more like mutual funds but listed on the stock exchanges like. CEFs are listed on exchanges like common stocks. Mutual funds are generally not listed on exchanges. Each has different uses and performance. So you can use a combination to suit any need. CEFs I like are ARDC 12% dividend yield, EIC 10%. UTF 7%, UTF7%. Some very good covered call ETFare QQQI 13% dividend yield, and SPYI 11%. These also take steps to reduce the tax you pay on the dividend you receive. They are great for generating income in a taxable acount.

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There are some stock that literally pay you cash to hold them. These are dividend stocks. Dividned funds tend to pay higher returns. You might want to try holding QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%. SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%.

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If you invest for income you could get 30 to 40K of income per year from good paying dividend funds like QQQI 13% dividend yield, ARDC 12% SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9% . Thes funds pay you cash for simply holding the [stock.you](http://stock.you) never sell shares of the stock. Read the book The Income Factory.

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Put whatever money he has in these funds. QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%.These funds pay a dividend which is much higher than what you can get from government bonds. Dividends are cash payment to you. These can supplement his work income. and pote4ntally exceed his work income. 5

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For your hom you are going to need to maximize income. Frequently medical expenses for the old greatly increase living expenses. I am currently retired and am invest in these funds QQQI 13% yield ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC9%. These are add dividend funds Monthly or quarterly the fund will depoist your portion of he funds earnings into the brokerage account. The cash can then be used to cover living expenses ore reinvested. If you invest equally in these funds the dividend yield will age about 10%. Meaning 300K would produce about 30K a year of income (2,500 a month ). The bank would only give you about 1/10th of that ammount. In short this is a self assembled pension plan. Pension plans invest for income like dividends or bond interest to generate income for the pension holders. You can do the same. To good sources of aditional information is the book The Income Factory and Armchair income on youtube. both together list about 100 funds that they have used For income. Armchair income also does detailed reviews of some of the funds he has in his portfolio.

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You are doing well and have made progress. At this point I would attack the central problem you have Income. I would start investing in dividend funds like QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12% EIC, 10% PBDC 9%,UTG 7% these funds share the ir profit with investors. so quarterly or monthly you get a cash payment to you You could over time build up passive income to slowly to handle your monthly bills. Eventually you could retire and simply live off of the income.

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by picking individual stocks, YES. Consistantly, No. But many people tiny of stack as companes like Apple vision and Chevron. And it is hard to find the companies that will score big each year. Many don't think of ETF and CEFs as stock But they do sell stock. And these investment companies are in many ways they are similar to companies They don't often grow like companies but they do often pay a higher dividend. So you don't need to consistently make 14% or more to retire. 8% works just fine if it is consistent and you consistently by more shares of the ETF or CEF every year. These funds pay cash dividends directly to you. So $100,000 at 8%Will pay you $8000 a year. So 1 million will earn you 80k a year of income at 8%. And right now there are funds that pay reliable 10% dividend I am currently investing in funds like QQQI 13% ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9% which all yield more than 8% and I am getting significant intcome from these funds. So the key to a comfortable retirement is to invest for income. Growth can give you very large returns but it is not consistent. And when you need income you have to sell it off with lowers your future long term future earnings. Dividend give your income now without sacrificing your long term earnings. I have a mix of dividend funds and growth funds. I use the dividend funds for income. The growth is used to maintain my income and serves as an emergency fund.

For the american policy makers - this is $300m in lost revenue potential due to cancellations down to uncertainty. This is NOT $300m that would go to revenue for tariffs - it is lost on top of the sales tax of around 7.2% (over a billion in tax revenue), as a reduction in sales targets of up to 25% that the company is planning for, and nearly $2b lost in R&D jobs in north america with their ARDC.

Mentions:#ARDC
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This is why I switched from growth index fund to dividend ETF and CEF fund. I am currently invited in QQQi 113% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC, 10%, PBDC 9%, SCYB 7% UTF 7%, UTG7%, PFFD 6%. Overall these funds produce 5K a month of income. Most goes to living expenses including healthcare I retired at 55). But 1K a month is reinvested which will help minimize inflation. When the dividends come in they go straight into a money market. fund. So I always have cash on hand. But I plan on keep a sizable amount in growth index for emergency needs, Unexpected large bills, and if needed I can harvest some growth and use that to increase my income as an inflation adjustment. The funds can also be used to replace any fund if it starts having issues.

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I am invested in PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13% and am considering adding EIC 10%, ACRE 12%.OXLC 25% BITC 24%. SPYI and QQQI do best when the market is uncertain. And the other have some interest rate risk but overall I think you will find the risk is lower than what you imagine it to be. But if yours a wide variety of fund that invest their money differently you have a very good chance of getting a stable predictable income. Even if one has some problems. I also keep some money in growth index funds as an emergency backup and reinvest about 20% of my income to hopefully keep up with inflation. The rest is used to cover living expenses. I am retired. JEPQ and QQQI invest in the same index and and used covered calls to generate income. But QQQI takes an extra step to lower the tax you pay on the dividend and you get a slightly higher dividend. So I sold off JEPQ.

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Personally I find I like cash dividends for income. I have minimal ammount. in government bonds because the yields are so low. Right now some my favorite investments are QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9% RLTY 8%, UTF 7%, UTG 7%, SCYB 7%. PFFD 6%. I am getting about 5K of income a month from these sources.

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SPYG is apparently a S&P500 index fund derivative. it has a lower dividned than other S&P500 funds which leads me to believe it is more heavily invest in the tech portion of the index. Bot this and VTI are good. But I would also suggest QQQI13%, ARDC 12%,SPYI, EIC 10%, PBDC 9% These are dividend funds and will over time greatly increase the flow of money into your Roth while you still deposit 7000 a year into the Roth. which will greatly increase the growth of your portfolio. If you don't reinvest the dividends and then spread the money equally over all of your r investments your entire Roth portfolio will benefit.

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With CD the maximum yield you are likely going to find is about 6%. However with a und like QQQI you can get a yield of 13%. And there are lot of choices in the 6 to 9% ranks for dividend ETF or CEF funds. And it is also possible to find yields win the 20% range or higher. I am investing in QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%, RLTY 8%, UTF / UTG / scab 7%, and PFFD 6%. And unlike CD they don't expire. meaning once you have built the portfolio the dividneds will continue to come in indefinitely. I currently get 5K a month of dividend income and I am retired.

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I would not useChat AI for invesment advise. i would rather read the book The Income Factory. And youtube ArmChair income is an excellent resource. I am investing in these fund with the following yields; QQQI13% yield, ARDC 12% , SpYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%, RLTY 8%, SCYB 7%, UTF 7%, UTG 7%, PFFD6% That work out to an average yeild of about 9%.

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Just an example of what you could do with 300K. invest it in QQQI 13% yeild and put the dividneds into a money market fund. I April when you do your taxes the you will have to pay a tax on the dividneds. So use a portion of the cash to pay the tax, and then use money left over to pay off your home loan and any other debt you have. After the first year you will have an idea as to how much the dividend should be kept as cash for taxes and how much your can use immediently to pay off debt. Overall QQQI will generate about $39,000 a year pf Income before taxes. And as a further benefit QQQI takes steps to reduce the taxes you pay on the dividend. But keep in mind you will have to pay taxes on inherited money so in the end you might has about 200K instead of Also while the potential with QQQI it is just one fund and history has show you are better off using multiple funds, That way in the rare event that one goes bad the rest of your money will still be in god funds. So I have spread my money out over fund like PFFD 6% yield, UTF / UTG / scab 7%, RLTY 8%, PBDC 9%, EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12% and QQQI 13%. For my portfolio it generates enough to cover more than my monthly living expenses.

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Most investors seek investments that earn around 10% to maximize ether growth of there protfolio Gold right now can be sold at a decent price but most of the time it isn't worth a lot and it doesn't pay a dividend. In may case I invest in dividend fund which earn me about 5K a month of income. 80% covers all of my living expenses. The rest is reinvested to grow my income Hopefully enough to keep up with inflation.I am invested in QQQI 13% yield, ARDC 12%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10%, PBDC 9%, RLTY 8% SCYB / UTF, UTG 7%, PFFD 6%

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I would not expect your taxes to be zero but I don't know anything about taxes in puerto Rico. After you cover any taxes you will need to invest it. I would look at dividend investing. Over the last few years I started using growth I had to build a dividned portfolio. I retired earlier than expected and now I have 5K a month of dividend income. I have money invested in these funds PFFD 6% yield, UTG / UTF / SCYB 7%yield, PBDC 9%, EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%.

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Keep in mind VOO doesn't grow when the market does badly. And the same applies to the NASDAQ 100 index QQQI uses. But covered calls do very well when the market is dropping or the market is mainly flat with minimal gains and losses. So o er a long period QQQI or its sister fund SPYI (same index as VOO) have a good chance of doing better in the long term. For example take the stock ARCC. by law it has to return most of its earning to shareholders. So its dividned is a high 9% and it has been paying for 20years. IF you compare VOO with ARDC, easily done at [totalrealreturn.com](http://totalrealreturn.com), with all dividends reinvested over the last 20 years ARDC comes out ahead. ARDC performed better than VOO. Why? from 2000 to2002 there loses every years. Then the for next 4 the market was basically flat and then the 2008 crash. The current bull market didn't start until about 2014. But all the goth since 2014 has not been enough for VOO to catch up with ARCC.

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I would open a taxable brokerage account. and move your mo money into it. put the money into into a money market fund. Then slowly move money into QQQI which has a dividned yield of 13%. Do not automatically reinvests the dividneds. The dividend payments should go directly into your money market fund.Eventually you will have a cash account that is bing fead by the dividends from QQQI. You could over time graually add other dividned funds. I have PFFD 6% yield, UTG / UTF / SCYB 7%, PBDC 9% EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%. Any extra cash gets reinvested. Eventually you could build up the account to get enough income to cover all of your living expenses, utility bills, bills, food, clothing, car cost, insurance. and housing.

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with your uneven limited income for now I would put put money in QQQI. this is a income fund with a dividend of 13%. IF you build up the money in QQQI to 100K that one fund will generate 10K a year of income that goes directly into your rothand you still can contribute 7000 per year of your taxable income. Once QQQI is at 100K you roth is basically self funded. So it will continue to grow even if you don't have money to depoist into the account. Once you have 100k in the fund you can divert the dividend from QQQI and use it to buy VTI VXUS in the end you want 50% of your portfolio in index funds like V%I VXUS. with the other 50% in dividend funds. That way the dividend funds can supply you with income while the index funds can be used for unexpected emergency cash needs, or periodically harvest the growth in the invest funds and use the money to adjust your dividned income. For the dividend portion of my retirment I am using funds like PFF 6%,UTG 7%, SCYB 7%, PBDC9%, EIC 10% ARDC 12%, SPYI 11% and QQQI. you basically want enough dividend income to cover all of your living expenses with some extra cash left over every month. And reinvest any extra money.

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If you invite in a combination of dividend assets with a yeild close to 10% you would have about 50k of income per year after selling the condo. Which is probably enough to cover most of your living expense or all of the rent for the appartment. Some funds you could use are PFFA 8% yield, PBDC 9% EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%.

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I didn't see the yield of T-bills attractive especially since they were likely going to trend down. So I instead piracies a preferred stock ETF with 6% yield and then purchases a BDC fund yielding 9%. I now have about 5 funds with yield near 10% or a little higher, PBDC 9% EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%. And I hav several funds yielding about 7%

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You need to invest for pasive income. For example. you could open a taxable brokerage account and inis a dividned fund. QQQI is nice one. it has 13% yield and takes steps to reduce the taxes you pay.. IF you put the roth depoist limit in this account yearly ns ewincwar raw siciswnsa,. IN 10 years you will have $100,000 in the fund and the yearly earnings willl be 13,000 or about 1K month. IN about 20 years you will have 600K with a yearly income 75K a year6 K a month of in come. This is a simple example of what is possible. But you don't generally want just one fund generating income. IF one goes bad you could loose a lot of money and time. If you spread your money equally over 10 funds then the impact of one bad investment is only 10% of your income. It is not unusual for people to have 20 funds in a portfolio. I didn't realize this until I was in my 50s. But I have did built up investments in index funds and other growth stocks in a taxable account over the years. So I started converting that to dividned investments. suing ufund like PFFD 6% yield, UTF / UTG, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9% EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13% I now have 5K of income a month. 4K Covers my living expenses including health insurance while 1K a month is reinvested for inflation protection. It still will be several years before I can use my well funded retirment accounts. And I still have more assets still available in my taxable account to fix any issues with what I have and increase my income. I wish I had done this at your age! Now this extra income does does come with additional tax. So I make quarterly estimated tax payments to the IRS. But that issues comes with the benefit that I have retired early and don't have to work. Some good resource es to guid you on this is the book "The Income fFactory. And ARmChair income on your tube. Both invest this way and the book list 68 funds the author has used, and Armchair income list 38 funds. Armshair income also does detailed review of some of the funds he uses. Don't ever withdrawal money from your regiment funds and pay the penalty. It is notworkth it. But you can pause investing new money into them and use that money to build your passive inc ome. Now many people will say dividends are very risky or not worth it. But most of these comments are from people that have never invested for dividends. My dividend portfolio has had no issues other than the taxe. I am also reworking my Roth for dividend income that will not be taxed when I can use it. And moving money from my 401K into the Roth.

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I am not relying on government bonds or HYSA for pasive income. Instead I am relying on dividends from funds like PFFS 6%, UTG / SCYB all with a yields of 7%, pbdc 9%, EIC 11%SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%/ QQQI 13%. All with yields higher than government bonds or HYSA. So I need a lot less money to get the passive income I need to cover all of my living expense in retirement.

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I use dividend funds in my roth I don't automatically reinvest the dividend back into the then that generated it. Instead it all gets sent into a cash moneyn market fund. And then once a month the money is split up equally into all funds into my roth I am currently using funds like UTF 7% , PBDC 9%, EIC 10%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%.

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Short selling may only provide occasional income. For cash you want regular earnings. I would put some of your cash in a fund like QQQI with a 13% yield. Or you could use UTF 7%, PFFA 8% PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, EIC 10% or ARDC 12%, or BTCI 24% But keep in mind you loose some liquidity when investing in these funds. Meaning if you need to withdrawal all the money you would have to sell shares, which takes a few days, and pay taxes on any capital gains. There is the possibility that you might sell at a loss. But with dividends you can build a contininous stream of income. Using funds like this I have drevolped an income protfolio and gernates 5K a month. Most is used for living expense and any excess is reinvested. I retired at 55.

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you could invest in in funds like PFF 6% yieldUTG 6.7%, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%, EIC 10%,SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13% All of tese funds produce dividends. Cash payments to you. Dsividens ar a form of profit chasing mnayestablied companes do. These fund invest in these companies or bond issued by theese compnaies or use trading activity to improve the yield. If you invest in these thees funds in a taxable account you cinould build up enough income over time to cover all of your monthly bills. higher income is also possible. You could also do this in a roth for retirement. I am currently retired and make 5,000 a month from dividends. This stratagy is outlined in the book The Income Factory. Armature chair income on you also invest in this way. And each lists funds they have used. The only problem with this is in come contras tax or don't tax dividend and Other my or may not tax capital gains. If you plan to move to another country you need to know the tax laws for that country.

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I invest in dividend stocks and have been buying PFFD 6% yield, UTG 6.7%, UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%. SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%

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The problem iwht bogleheads investing is you have to liquidate stock to generate income. Which means you could eventually run out of money. The solution to the problem that preserves captial is outlined in the Book The income factory. And Armchair income on youtube also discusses this. There are funds and company stocks that pay out a portion of their profits to you quarterly or monthly as cash to you. Say you invested 100K in a fund with 10% dividend yield of 10% and it pays monthly. Every month you will,$833. Dollars a month. while you are working you invest the money back into the fund. The fund will grow. in 7 years the fund will have about 200K deposited and will pay a dividend of 1,666 every moth. Over 30 years you should also have about 1 million in ht account producing about 10K a month of incomce. If you invest for dividends in addition to your growth index funds you should have substantial income when you retire. So you live off of the dividned income . IF you don't spend all of the income you reinvest the excess money. Hopefully you can reinvest enough to keep up with inflation. IF you have a bit unexpected expense in retirement you can sell the growth funds to generate the additionally income needed. Or you could periodically harvest 4% of the growth and reinvest the money for more dividend income to adjust for inflation. I retired and now get 5K a monty of income from dividends 4K covers my living expenses. and 1K a moat is reinvested. I also have growth funds I can tap if needed. It is working out very well. Some of the funds I am investing in for income are FAGIX 5% yield, PFFD 6%, UTG 6.7%, UTF 7%, SCYB7%, PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI 13%.

r/investingSee Comment

I like dividends. I would put it in QQQI. it has a yield of 13% yield and would produce about 1000 in cash a month. If you reinvested all of the dividend the funds would double in size in about 5 year. If you don't reinvest the dividend you can buy other funds. In addition to the yield the fund also takes steps to reduce the tax you payoff the dividend. So in a taxable account it can be an alternative source of income I am retired with an income of 5K a month from dividends. Enough to cover all or my living expenses. I have the following funds UTG 6.7% yield, PFFD 6% UTF 7%, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%.

r/investingSee Comment

I think paying off your dept is probably your best option. But there are fund that return 6% per year. For example UTG 7% yield, UTF 7%, SCYb 7%, PFFA 8%, PBDC 9%, SPYI%, ARDC 12% QQQI 13%. THESE FUNDS ARE Different Than VOO. VOO earning come from the price per share increasings. They funds I have listed don't have much price appreciation, Instead they make quarterly or monthly cash payments to you. The money will go directly into your brokerage account Now you can set your account to automatically reinvest the money into the account that generated the money or you just leave it as cash and spend it. As long as you don't sell shares you will continue to receive the money. You could move your emergency find into a prokerage account and use a brokerage money market fund to earn interest on your funds (My fidelity money market account yield 4.5%. Then you could use one or several of the funds above to continuously add cash to your emergency funds. If you have more cash than you want you can invest the money for more dividends. I am retired and I get enough money a month to cover all of my living expenses this way without selling shares.

r/investingSee Comment

For a good distribution yield you want a company that makes more in profit than it pays out as a diviedend. A bad distribution yield is one that pays out more than it makes. Or one that uses a loan to pay the dividend. Also don't use the yield as guid to a good or bad dividned stock. Many do this and they generally assume that if the yield is higher than the government b and rate it is unsafe. And yet you have compass OXLC that have payed a dividend it dividned for 14 years at a yield of 23% AR% And it is not hard to find companes that are struggling financially and pay a yield of 1% Basically you hav not look at the companies earning report and look at there profit and compare that to there expenses. The yield number honest tall you anythng about the stability of the company. Many buy individual stock but I like to buy ETFs that pay a dividend such as UTG6.7% yield, UTF7%, SCYB 7%, pFFA 8%, PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, QQQI 13% ARDC 12%. I have a small ammount in individual stocks. My current income is about 60K a year. I don't automatically reinvest my dividneds. They go into a Cash account. 4K a month goes to living expenses. Mush of the rest in automatically spit up and use to buy a little bit of each fund I own. Generally I only sell shares when I don't wan the fund or stock any more.But am also moving funds from a 401k into a roth so I do pay capital gains on that. Since retiring I estimate my tax based on 401K roth convrsion ammount, may expected income, andanthing else I plan to sell. Make quarterly payments to the IRS and then in April I either get a refund or pay a little pit more.

r/investingSee Comment

Everyone assumes saving for retirment is the only reason to invest. A 22 year old may be more interest ed on a secure source of income she wouldn't loose if she loses a job bra has to take care of a child alone. After the maxing out a Roth I would recommend investing for passive income. in regular taxable brokerage account. Strt investing in a high yield dividned fund. My recommendation is QQQI . This fund has a 13% yield so 100K invested in this account will produce 13K of income. With dividends set to automatic reinvestment build this up. As long as she is working keep adding to the account. Keep building this up until the dividend is about 4K a year. At this point if she looses her job she can stop reinvesting the dividends and live off of the income. At this point she can stop automatic reinvestment of the dividend and divert the income for other uses. * Build up a cash reserve. * Invest in a low dividned index [fund.You](http://fund.You) same more than a million dollars this way and pay very little in taxes due to the very low dividend these funds have. * Use the cash to contribute to a roth acount. * Continue to increase the dividend income so the can retire early. * Deversify the sources of dividned income by adding funds like UTG 6.7% yield. UTF 7%. SCYB 7%, PFFA 8%, PBDC 9% ARDC 12%. Now taxes is an issue that must be addressed. QQQI not only produces income but it also taks extra steps to reduce the tax you pay in the dividend income. For the first few years you can just cover the expenses from work income because The dividend income will be small. Or you could set some of the dividends asside to as cash and then in april you will have enough to cover the additional tax. You could also estimate your tax and make quarterly payments directly to the IRS like you employer does when they give you a pay check. You might want to read the book The Income Factory. And look at the youtube channel Armchair Income. Both discuss this investment style

r/investingSee Comment

I think your best corse of action is to invest for dividends and grow that every year. Eventually it will produce enough income to eliminate most of your monthly bills. That would free up work money for a home and the dividends could be used to pay off a home loan you will need. And it could be used to pay for travel. I live in the US and I am assuming you can purchase US stocks or funds. If you put the $350K in QQQI which has a dividend yield of 13% and get 45,000 a year in monthly payments. But you done't want to put all your eggs in one basket which I understand. You could invest in UTF 7%, PFFA 8% PVDC 9%, QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%. IF the money is spread out equally over these funds you would get a yield of about 9% and get 31K a year of income if all is reinvested for about 7 years you would have about 700K invested yielding about 60K a year of income. Enough for travel. In about 14 year with reinvesting you could have 1.4 million with income of about 140K a year of income. But a couple of notes. the fund mostly grows by reinvesting the dividends. so you want to continue to do that as much as possible. Also if you have any excess money from work invest that as much as possible to accelerate the growth. Now you could automatically reinvest dividends from each fund back into the same fund. I this case I think it is better, to disable automatic reinvestment. This will cause the dividends to build up as cash in the account. set a series of 5 automatic investments into each fund. You could add more dividend funds if you want using a list of funds Armchair income on you tube. He has a list of 35 funds he uses. Also the book The Income Factory has a list of 68 fund you could use.

r/investingSee Comment

you can get the book The Income Factory. And has several incomes producing portfolios that could generate income from 60K up to about 90K fro the 1 Million you have to work with. The Author has invested his own money this way and managed the fund of some friends. He has a lis too 68 funds listed in th the book. Mostly from ETF and CEF (Closed End funds) There is also Armchair investor on you tube. similar investing style and he has a a fund list of about 38 funds he likes. You can do quite well on the income side with funds like PFFA6% yield, PBDC 8%, SsPYI 11%, ARDC 12%, QQQI at 13%. I am not a fan of gold so I don't have any recomendations there. And the low yields of bonds is not attractive to me.

r/investingSee Comment

MY head is spinning 20 years old and 500K net worth? At that age I was in college and my work income was barely enough to pay for rent and food. any way i would start putting you money in funds like PFFA 8% Yield, PBDC 9%, qqqI 13%, ARDC 12%. All these funds generate income you could get 65K a year from QQQI, or 40k a year from PFFA. So by buying these investements and siimply holding them would cover most or all of your living expenses. But Ideally you would spread out your income over many funds so that if one fund runs into issues you won't loose all of your income. You might also want to look at armchair income on yoututube, and read the book The Income Factory.

r/investingSee Comment

many people that invest for dividned s find they are less likely to sell because the income keeps coming in. Ehilr the young are often willing to take risks with investing those nearing retirment find they are no longer willing to take the risk. So you need to get in but don't imvet like you did in the past. Focus on good dividend funds like PFFA8% yield. pbde 9% SPYI 11%, SCYB 7% and ARDC 12%. I spent most of my life basically following wheat we now call the boglehead style of investing. Never gabe dividends a thought. until one of my minor investments started paying a dividend. That opened by eyes and I started investing for dividends. iI now find dividend much more interesting than I didd and I am not as worried about market crashes.

r/investingSee Comment

VOO and SPY are basically the same. Many use VOO in a 401K. For a Roth there are no taxes on withdrawals So my preference is in the Roth isto invest for dividend income. That way at 60 you ca live off of the dividend income it produces which would all be tax free. I would start with QQQI 13% yield in the Roth and then gradually add other high yield funds such as PBDC 9%, ARDC 12%, Scyb 7%, UTF 7% GLU 6.7%

r/investingSee Comment

For active ETF I would go with PBDC 9% yield, SPYI 11%, QQQI 13% these either pick the best investments or manage trading activity trading activity to generate income. Other than ETF there are CEF (very similar) like ARDC 12% yield, UTF 7%, GLU7%.

r/investingSee Comment

There are two parts to your problem: 1. You re buying ETF without understanding what they are invested in. So you have multiples funds that are basically identical. 2. You are letting your fear of taxes to stop you from taking action. As to taxes the solution to the problem is to estimate your taxes. The IRS has instructions on how to do that on their web site. Basically you decide what you want to sell then start calculating what the tax bill will be. Once you know what the bill will be You can sell the asset and set some of the money asside in a savings account. Or you can pay the money now to the IRS. Then in april when you know what all of prior years numbers are you calbulcate the final bill.. If your estimate was right you owe no additional money. iF you estimate is low you pay a little more, If you payed too much you get a refund You might want to work with a tax professional to fluid you through the process. Then all you have to do is sell the asset, set money aside for the tax, and then reinvest the excess money or spend the money to cover living expenses. As to ETF they have assets they hold for you. So you need to know what it is holding before you buy. What you want is each ETF being invested in different assets. That way if an economic shift occurs some business may have problems were others will not. So you might have one or two that won't be performing well. For example in my Roth I have SCHG, QQQI, PBDC, ARDC, SCHD, SCHY, fagix. One is a bond fund one is aa growth fund, one generates cash from trading activity know as covered calls, on invest in companies that pay a high yield, one yield growth fund and one international fund. and one fund that invests in loan obligations. The dividends from these investments are currently generating 20K of cash a year. Which is all reinvested. Since it is a roth I can buy and sell without paying tax. hopefully when I reach age 60 it will generate enough cash to pay all of my bills.

r/investingSee Comment

There are two basic options depending on it you want to avoid taxes or not. INvest în an index fund with a low yield. About 1% or less. (VOO, VTI are popular). The only tax you pay with these funds is the dividned you receive yearly. A 1% dividend is trivial and works out to a rounding error for many people. You could save a million in assets this way and it would only generate 13K of insomnia that would be taxesd. compared to your work income this is a trivial amount of tax. These investment also generate impressive capital gains averaging about 11% per year. But in some years it can be a lot lower or a lot higher. As long as you don't sell the asset there is no capital gains taxes due. Invest in funds with a higher yield. You will pay a tax on the yield every year but it will only be a small portion of the income you get from the investment. But that said not all dividends are taxed at teh same rate depending on how the money was earned by the fund.. My favorite right now are SPYI 11% yields and QQQI 13%. This dividend is very close to captial gains of option 1 but in dividends. High dividneds often mean lower captial gains. >Honestly I’d like some higher potential returns and would like to pick some stocks individually for some fun.  Based on that statement I sould expect option 2 is your preference. Additionally you didn't mention an emergency fund. but your 100K in HYS account could be that. But the problem with an all cash savings account is the once the money runs out your emergency fund is dead. A better emergency fund is a high dividned fund. As long as you don't sell the shares of the fund the dividends will keep coming in. So I would recommend slowly start building funds in QQQI and reinvest all dividneds. Keep building until the dividneds it generates is enough to cover all of your living expenses. That way when your cash runs out you could simply stop reinvesting the dividends to collect the cash. QQQI pays out a 1/13th of the yearly dividned each month. So you only need to wait a month for cash to start building in the account. Once you have enough dividned income to cover living expenses you can use the money to start other investments. Some will be like option 1 would be low dividend growth funds you can use for long term savings. Or you can deversify your dividned income with other dividned funds like PFF 6% yield, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%, ARDC 12 %. There are many options between the 5 to 20% yield range. Look at ArmChair income on YouTube. He has a similar investing style and lists all the funds he uses.

r/investingSee Comment

Hisotrically investing for dividneds has done better than investing for growth in the stock market. I have been i retired a couple of years ago and have been loading up on funds like UTF 7% GLU 7%, PFF 6%, PBDC 9%, SpyI 11%, ARDC 9%. With funds like this you can easily build up enough dividend income to cover your living expenses. This would make following the 4% rule optional and help insure your retirment income will last longer.

r/investingSee Comment

government bonds, CD, and money market funds all have low yields. given the limited funds most people have in there retiement account it would be best to get the highest safe yield you can get. Preferably you want enough income from your investments to cover all of your living expenses. With enough passive income you would not be required to liquidate your saving using the 4% rule and your retirment fund will last longer. If you invest for dividends you can easily get a higher yield with little to no additional risk. If you invest your money in funds like FAGIX 5%yeild, PFF 6%, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, ARDC 12% you can easily get a higher yield. I you put an equal ammount of money in each fund I listed you could get combined yield of 8%. For every 100K invest you would get 8K a year of income. I have been doing this for the last few years and currently have a projected income of 60K a year. Enough to cover al of my living expense. And the thing that yould surmise a lot of people is that all of the bad news hitting the market this year has not had any impact on my income. Yes the value of my portfolio is down a lot but the income is continuing to come in. My income has not dropped. Investing for dividends significantly reduces my concerns about the lower share prices. I am now paying more attention to my income. This invetemtn strategy is listed in the book the Income Factory. And the book list 68 funds the author has used for his personal account and accounts he has managed forfriends. The you tube channel Armchair investor also does this and he post his list and discusses how choses the funds he he invests in for his personal retirment acount. These have a lot of information you can use to develop your own regiment portfolio.

r/investingSee Comment

There is one option you dividend list. Invest in dividend stocks that will sit you ld in loud sighing ghd 5 to 7 years. For example Let say you invested money in SPYI quirk its 11% yield. According to the law of 72 the value of the fund will double in 6.5 year. While we won't know what the sales price of the fund will be in 7 years. But we know based on its predictable dividned is 2 times its original size ini about 6 years.. Some funds I have in my portfolio with a high enough yield to double in a reasonable 7 years or less are SPYYI, 11% yield, QQQI 13%, ARDC 12%. I also have PBDC with 9% yield A little outside the 7 year window. I know there are fund that pay 20% but I don't have them and am note sure of the ticker. Now some will say that if you invest VOO your money will double in 6 years or less, in bull market. With the taariff and other political issues We likely won't have any growth for probably 2 years, maybe longer.

r/investingSee Comment

PFF invest in preferred shares which typically pay a higher yield. They have been in exstiance since before I was born( I am 53) Very stable. SCYB invest in high yield corporate bonds. There is a risk that the company issuing the bond default on the bond. But the average default rate is 4%. per year. So iit a fund manager buys bonds in 100 different companies the yield may fluctuate +/-2% per years. So despite the term "junk bonds" they have been a common investment for decades. PBDC were created by a law passed 40 years ago. These companes are required to pay out 90% of the earning So the yield is always high. Yet these companies often pay rather stable high yields. PBDC invests in the best of these copies. ARDC is a closed end fund which helps explain its high yield CEF unlike ETF have fixed number of shares, while ETFs issue new shares as the fund grows. ARDChas been paying a dividned for about 12 years. SPYI and QQQI are covered call funds while covered call funds are new covered calls have been in use for about 40years. Covered call funds have yields from about 5% unto (are you stilling down?) 100%. They yield can go up or down with the market. SPYI and QQQI are the ones I like the best. You have to look for high yield funds. If you don't look for them you won't see them. And there are a lot of people out there that just automatically list anything with a yield higher than government bonds as risky and just ignore them. If you go to R/ dividned you will see them more often than you do here. A good book is The Income Factory. The author lists about68 CEF that can be used for dividned investing. The Armchair income. Youtubechannel also focusses on this investment strategy. In my opinion the irskiest funds are those that pay very high yields (100%)or those that don't pay a dividend. The least risky investments are somewhere between these two extremes. To make a fund you need a lot of money to get it started. The means to start a fund you need a loan. Bank and other institutions will not loan money it they don't believe the fund will not last. give all the fund out there. I would say to stable yield range is about 1% to 20%.

r/investingSee Comment

One thing to keep in mind on investing is that the price of an ETF can go up and down a lot for no apparent reason at any time. Some stocks produce a dividend yield (similar to interest). The yield may go up or down a little bit. But most of the time it is very stable. So far this your the prices of stocks has been down between 15 6o 20%. However my dividend income has not changed. You probably have a low risk tolerance for change in share price. People like you typically do better with dividned investing. .Basically when I retired I started sell blocks growth of stock and reinvesting the money for dividends. For example I sold some growth stock and purchase AT&T I purchased enough to generate enough dividend income to cover myAT&T cellular bill. The share price of the stock has dropped some since the tariffs has been announced but my dividned income has not changed. So I see No reason to sell it. Overall I have buildt up enough dividned stock to cover my basic living expeneses which is an about $4000 a month. And so fare this year my income is stable. Some funds I am currently using are: PFF 6% yield, scab 7% yield, PBDC 9%, SPYI 11%, QQQI 13%, and ARDC 12%. In my fidelity account all of the dividends ae placed a money market account (similar to high yield savings (Currently earning about 4.5%) I have a fidelity debit card and checks. So I spend money to cover living expenses and then reinvest any unspent money back into my dividend funds. I have sold only one dividend stock because it didn't live up to my expectations. I have not sold any other dividend investments. In fact I am slowly aqumulating more. You can do the same with a high yield savings account. But your would need a million or more in the account. To get enough income to cover living expenses with the current interest rates. You should read the book The Income Factory. The Armshare investor on YouTube has a ver similar investing strategy.

r/investingSee Comment

Right now most of my pasive income comes from some individual stocks but most comes from ETF PFF 6%yield, SCYB 7%, PBDC 9%, and SPYI 11%. These are all in a taxable account. I won't be able to access my retirment accounts for about 5 years. There is another type of fund called Closed End Fund (CEF) In my Roth I just added my first CEF, ARDC 12% yield. ARDC invests in Collateral loan obligations. and other types of loan obligations. CEF are similar to ETF except in ETF the number of shares grows as more people invest in the fund. In CEFs the number of shares are fixed so that can cause teh yeild per star to be higher than many ETFs. .

r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

anyone have ARDC

Mentions:#ARDC
r/wallstreetbetsSee Comment

ARDC just smashed earnings 🚀

Mentions:#ARDC