DGRW
WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund
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AI (the usual), healthcare (JNJ, HIMS), BRK.B VUSD, EQQQ, R1GB, DGRW, JEPQ 33.33% going into dividend growth & BRK.B 66.66% going into broadmarket & growth, that way when shit hits the fan I won't really panic. Worked for me previously with dividends dripped into all my allocations as per their percentages.
What you’re doing right is being to learn. For not just buy a low cost s&p 500 index, QQQM which is the NASDAQ, and a low cost total market index to hedge large cap/blue chip stocks. Some IQM, and VGT. Learn about getting what you can out of any 401k match lean harder towards a Roth 401k is possible. Max out a Roth IRA, and look into an HSA. Fidelity’s HSA is 100% investable. Calling the way build a dividend growth portfolio alongside your growth portfolio. I like DGRO, FDVV, SCHD, and DGRW.
I sold 1 share today and will most likely use it to start a position in DGRW or something similar. I feel like Berk is doing nothing with all the money they are sitting on and that Kraft write down was terrible.
Agree 100%. For OP - some of the dividend funds I suggest for your Roth: VYM, VIG, SCHD, DGRW, DGRO, VNQ, QQQ. My favorite is SCHD. Great yield + growth balance, strong total returns. Its made me a ton of money.
Haha just like me . Now I'm just buying DGRW weekly now
If you’re asking Reddit what to do with a “spare” 100k or as the title says 1 million. You should probably invest into your self education. Asking Reddit is wild. Anything someone says weather phenomenal, risky, safe or a gable is really irrelevant information to you as you’d have no idea what it means. If you’re waiting for BTC to drop why are you not waiting for stocks to drop? Why not wait for housing to prices to drop? If your investment thesis is to wait for lower prices doesn’t that mean you’re making a bad investment at any point? It could just keep dropping? You need to figure out why you’re investing and for what purpose. You started investing in an insane bull market and most likely have unrealistic expectations on how investing actually works. That last few years should not be factored into any new investors “idea” of investing because it’s inflated and unrealistic. Talk to a finance advisor or educate tour self on what you want out of your money and future. Taking advice from random people is a cop out, it gives you a reason to blame in the chance of loss. In this uncertain time I would dollar cost average into a save index, possibly look into a dividend ETF such as SCHD or DGRW. This will at least offer a more “stable” income source that’s stronger in uncertainty but weaker with investor confidence. I hold a small % of dividend ETFs that focus on dividend growth just to diversify while offering cash flow that doesn’t require selling assets. It’s more a supplement. Waiting for BTC to drop in price is crazy thinking considering its valuation is primarily based off investor confidence. It doesn’t have any financial fundamentals. So what you’re saying is you’re waiting for people to lose confidence for you to purchase it but to make money you need people to have confidence in it? Once again, do your own research and take your own risks. Everyone has different risk levels and goals.
Ticker Portfolio Allocation VOO 13.53% DGRW 11.08% SCHD 10.64% JEPI 6.94% GOOGL 4.35% MSFT 3.79% AMZN 4.47% HD 2.81% COST 4.00% V 3.96% TXRH 2.91% O 2.57% FAT 1.69% PEP 1.47% TKO 3.60% ABBV 1.51% MCO 2.43% NEE 1.76% JNJ 1.24% LMT 1.26% AGNC 1.91% TGT 1.01% SBUX 1.75% TTWO 2.13% XOM 0.88% MO 1.61% TWNP 0.63% ASML 1.77% FDHY 0.34% ARRNF 0.66% CELH 0.52% FXNAX 0.19% FBTC 0.14% NTES 0.45% I currently DCA, 60% split three ways into VOO, SCHD, and DGRW. The other 40% I split up into individual stocks I like, haven't bought AGNC in a couple years, just riding to see what happens. Total account recently hit 30k, I put in 200 a week, or try to.
I make more money if it barely creeps over 105. I also get to keep my money so i can use it to but something else. If the stock goes down, I have a better entry point. Selling puts is better than buying the stock except for super volatile stocks where you could miss out on a 100% pump. Usually even if i miss the strike the premium makes my avg cost like 5 - 7% less than the price it was when i would have bought it. I always sell the put slightly ITM one to two weeks out because the premium is usually 4 - 10% depending on volatility. On a 10k stock that's 400 to 1k. Once you get more capital it scales up, at 50k you get back 2 to 5k. My plan is to get to 100k, set aside 20k in VOO, 5k in DGRW then keep doing risky high IV put sells. Every 100k made, set aside 25k. With good luck and planning I'll have a million dollars by 2050 which I think is both ambitious yet plausible. Some people have 0dte yoloed 100 dollars to 1m in 2 months but that's definitely not me
DGRW, SDY, QQQM, VTI, EMMF No 5 stocks will last my entire life. Every empire falls. Tell someone from 1989 that one day sears and most department stores will be defunct and no name startups named nvidia, Google, Microsoft, Fscebook, and Tesla would be among the biggest stocks and they'd laugh their heads off. Doesn't mean they will be defunct in 30 years but their days of 100x are over and it is unlikely they will outperform the market for the rest of my life
Overlap isn't bad, it might even increase gains. Naked qqq outperforms most diverse ports. That said i personally have QQA, SDY, DGRW QQA: aggressive, risky tech dividend SDY: defensive industrial dividend DGRW: diverse blend, sp500 type dividend With this setup you have a huge variety of sectors, from tech to finance to candy to steel and oil. For more gains allocate more to qqa
You can go 50/50 into share price appreciation and dividend growth, VTI and SCHD like you mentioned. As you invest longer and see how each fund behaves you can decide which investing style motivates you more. You're never too young for dividends, just make sure they're qualified and growing at a strong rate and you'll do great over the long term, SCHD/DGRW/DGRO are some solid dividend ETFs to start. Best of luck!
DGRW It's a dividend growth setup, but it's been outperforming this year insanely well (+33% for the year), and there aren't any signs of it downtrending in the near future. I've got money in this already, and if I had $2k extra right now, that's where it'd go.
There are LG Cap blend funds that have much lower volatility than the S&P500. Their historical returns may not be quite as high, but they're pretty close. You may feel more comfortable giving up some portion of your returns in exchange for lower volatility. Historically, DGRW has had very good risk adjusted returns and a much lower beta than the mkt. Investors often get the jitters when they closely watch their portfolios every day, agonizing over each days ups and downs. You're investing in etfs that usually hold many many stocks of large, well established companies. They're not going bankrupt. I think you'll feel better about it if you limit how often you check on their progress to maybe once a week or, even better, once a month.
If you want to have fun pick 5-10 companies you like and just hope they do well. If you want to be boring put it all in VTI and watch your money go up after watching everyone else try and single stock pick. If you want to have fun and be boring buy 3-5k of 5 companies you like, and put the rest into a mix of VTI/VOO/ 10% VXUS. Should be a good time to buy the next couple weeks. Or even more conservative DGRO or DGRW instead of VTI/VOO
Good on you starting so young. Eat any drawdown but don’t gamble Roth contributions on small caps etc unless you have the time and rigour for DD, IMO. 50% IVV, 50% DGRW, for example. Growth + value play.
lol, with 10k per month, you surely can retire at 55 if you are not crazy spender... For you age, I will suggest you to focus on dividend, but make sure to invest in safe ETF such as SCHD. Take a look at r/dividends/ Like 50% in grow like VTI/VOO and 50% in dividend focus ETF like SCHD/DGRO/DGRW/FDVV/VIG
I would consider some form of VOO or VTI, QQQ and SCHD or DGRW. Maybe 40/30/20.
Index funds hold a lot of crap. Basically, anything below the 1% holding is worthless. Look what every index fund holds in their top 10 holdings and look at the percentage that goes into them. Then look how quickly those percentages drop after that. However, I don’t think that they’re worthless. Maybe 10%-15% in a portfolio. Something like SCHG, QQQM, or XLG. Even DGRW, only because that fund has good protection in a bad market.
I’m okay with the 30% in bonds I suppose. Thinking about asking them to switch it to T-bills instead of commercial mortgage backed securities tho. My main problem is what the hell they’ve been doing with the 70% of my account that’s been in stocks. They don’t hold onto capital so it’s been invested this whole time. The sticks I see right now seem fairly standard tho. MSFT, IVV, PJGQX, WCIMX, OBSIX, SIGIX, DGRW, TCIVX, and Apple are the main equity holdings. I’ve talked to them and they have my investment procedure set as growth* and not conservative management style. But I’m not seeing the growth. Feel out of my depth confronting them about it when I’m fairly ignorant and they are professionals. What do you think of those allocations? I’m in over my head here.
You could look into FEPI. 0.65% fee but 25% yield. $13.80 dividend. So far, it has paid out as RoC. There’s also AIPI. They’re both new. Not much info on AIPI but it should be the same as FEPI. I hold FEPI in my taxable and ROTH. You could also check out VONG (growth and value) and/or DGRW (good growth, monthly dividends, good downside protection).
I assume investments that pay out dividends would be alright since it does not have anything to do with lending money, so probably something like VOO, SCHD, or DGRW for your non-school-tuition related funds. For your tuition related funds... Well, shucks idk, kind of SOL if you're looking for something that doesn't carry high risk outside of bonds which is lending money at an interest. Just let it sit in an account I suppose.
DGRW doesn’t I don’t think. The prospectus says the fund is strategically forward looking and invests based on other profitability metrics and ROE rather than X amount of years of dividend growth. I could be wrong though but I’m Pretty sure.
What's your opinion on DGRW? I recently started buying it in addition to SCHD to more diversify my dividend portfolio. Also thinking about adding Realty Income (O).
Here you go, enjoy your retirement: 1. VTI 2. SDY 3. DGRO 4. VIG 5. JEPQ 6. SCHD 7. VYM 8. SPYD 9. NOBL 10. DGRW
I’m in the same boat as you (going on 43). My goals aren’t the same as yours but, I chose riskier investments (high potential growth); TSLA, FBTC, SCHG, BITF, and MAIN (for some dividends & slow growth). You could try investing in SCHG (growth) and SGOV (short treasury bonds)? Or look into DGRW (could add SCHG with this, for extra growth)? Good growth with some monthly dividends and nice downside protection in a crappy market.
Depends on your age. Personally, I keep TSLA. I own TSLA and I’m in it for another 7-10 years regardless of what it does. I like and believe in the company. As for the other stuff, sell it or don’t. But I would put future money into SCHG and maybe even into DGRW (for some growth & defense).
Might be smart to open up a Roth Ira through webull and just fund it with 50 to 100$ every pay check and buy long term stocks in it as well but with a little more upside good etfs I target are SCHD, VGHS, and DGRW, all three pay dividens to the holders and SCHD and DGRW are both stock etfs while vghs is a safer but less upside bond etf.. I'm around your age age 25 but I've been trading stocks since I was 20 so I've picked up a few things the future is coming its great you're concerned with preparing for it
DGRW started paying monthly
That reminds me I also have a small position in QQQM that I could use for this. So QQQM, DGRW or something new.
SGOV and DGRW. DGRW has steady growth with great downside protection in a crappy market. It’s a nice combination of growth and protection.
Was going to suggest ADC but you own some. I feel like the current price is at a good entry point for long term returns plus the dividend pay out is good and definitely look into more ETFs that follow the sp500 like VTI, DGRW, VOO, ONEQ and many others.
Since you refuse to do it, I’ll do it for you. Ran a 5 factor regression. 94% of the variation in returns of VIG is explained by the 5 factors, 95% for DGRW, and 91% for NOBL.
I’m planning on 40-45% SCHD, 25% QQQM, 20% DGRW and 15-20% DGRO. This will provide a well rounded dividend portfolio with not too much overlapping stocks.
If you are in your 20's or 30's VIG, DGRW, DGRO Older than that maybe you want more yield as you have less time DLN, NOBL, VYM, SPYD
I feel like a pussy reading how Tech based most of the ports here are compared to mine. ​ DGRW - 6.7% - Large Cap Growth + Dividens FDRXX - 35.33% - money Market FENY - 4.98% - Energy QQQ - 18.49% - RSPD - 3.16% - Leisure and Travel XLI - 13.57% -Industrials XLV - 12.32% - Healthcare XMHQ - 5.44% - Mid Caps
1: Pay off debit, store up a few months of dry storage shelf stable emergency food and other comodedies. Buy a reliable well maintained used car if you need one. Take the rest of the money and DCA into the DGRW ETF, perfect combo of high tech growth and monthly dividends.
I’m thinking about selling everything and either going all in into PLTR or SCHD or DGRW. And just holding for 10+ years and quitting gambling, I managed to turn my 6k loss into 400 loss, thoughts?
I would add $DGRW to this list as well. It’s a good performing monthly payer that people don’t talk about enough when they talk about dividend ETFs (imo).
DGRW is pretty much the same thing and consistently beat it.
DGRW is consistently beating reddits favorite since inception SCHD. VIG and VIGI would be others I recommend.
DIVO, DGRO, DGRW, SCHD, VIG are all quality ETFs that have different rules and different profit curves. I recommend mixing the ones you like. I have DGRW, DIVO, and SCHD (in that order).
DGRW and I would start with Robinhood if being easy is your biggest concern or if it's not fidelity.
In 20s investing in a Roth IRA. How does this allocation look: 20% VT, 20% VTI, 15% VOO, 10% SCHD, 10% DGRW, 10% JEPI, 7.5% ICLN, 7.5% ESGV
Max out your TSP and reallocate into the C Fund. With your spare cash, I would recommend buying shares of SPY, SCHD or DGRW in an account like Fidelity that allows fractional shares. When I got out of the service, I had most of my money in VOO, and once I began selling options on my portfolio for income, I would have been better positioned if I had SPY for liquidity purposes. This isn't necessary but if you want to down the road it would make more sense to just start out with SPY than it would to use VOO and liquidate it or start a new position, realistically the expense ratio makes no difference if you have even one successful covered call a year. **If you do not plan to sell covered calls in the future, I would choose, VOO, VTI, or VT.** Eventually I decided that I wanted to pursue dividend investing instead, and I have the salary income to accomplish my goals in a short amount of time, and wish I had put my dividend payer allocation into DGRW. It's overall return is great, has good dividend growth, and has quality companies in its holdings. SCHD is great as well and I have that in my Roth IRA. Order of investment: TSP -> Roth IRA -> Brokerage
I started last yearish too, after going through a lot of lessons I currently hold 65% SPGL, 20% QQQ And 15% DGRW (can’t buy SCHD where I live). Currently 31. After I reach around 40-45, I’ll dump the QQQ and start buying small portion of bonds
A few ETFs come to mind. DHS and DGRW for starters. Or even a utility such as NEE.
There are a relative few ETFs that have outperformed the SP500 and with a higher Sharpe ratio over a number of years. Here are the ones I know of: XLV (Healthcare, since 1999) XLU (Utilities, since 1999) XLI (Industrials, since 1999) SCHD (since 2012) DGRW (since 2014) DGRO (since 2015) Basically, the more stable and "defensive" sectors have outperformed, and dividend indexes which tend to overweight these sectors also outperformed. But even in this case, they barely outperform SP500. Will this pattern continue? No one knows.
You guys need to throw all that money into shit like SCHD or DGRW. At least you'll get a dividend every month/quarter instead of pissing it all away.
Already have an RESP for em both. Maxed the yearly contributions already. I had been indecisive, to be honest. I ultimately settled on 2.5k in AMZN, 1k in ENB with the rest of the money split between JEPI and O. I threw any dividends into O. Was going to basically ride that out until the market volatility slowed or until anything notable changed in the world. I figured the plan was safe enough. Alternatively, I had considered keeping it relatively simple and just all in with DGRW or SCHD. Both of which I will likely be picking up in the distant future.
In brief: Leveraged etfs are for short term trading not long term investment. I would continue the DCA strategy long term. Possibly add a value component like DGRW, DVY or VUG etc. Bonds and preferreds (ETFs) will be lower risk intermediate plays once rate hikes cease. DYOR I’m insane…..
CDC, DGRW, DIVO. Pay a (albeit small monthly yield) but do not sacrifice capital growth. You will likely come out much better in the long run over chasing high yield junk which depreciates over the years.
I understand the recommendation, but I've got SCHD instead. I do agree DGRW is also a great DGI ETF.
If your time horizon is over 5 years you should like the dips regardless of investment strategy. DGI is a great method though. I’d recommend the etf $DGRW if you aren’t already aware of it. ETF that pays monthly and has performed well against the sp500 the past few years.
What did you have in mind? DGRW? SCHD? SPHD?
I'll tell you what I'm doing, assuming you paid off all your debts. I have two index funds I buy into. Total market fund and foreign fund through fidelity. For stocks I'm in GOOGL, AMZN and keep buying overtime. I want to dabble in DHS, DGRW, MSFT, CWH, INTL, V, and possibly KO. Long and strong and good growth/dividend over the next 30 years. I'll get into a few more potentially but I'm done WSB gambling. I don't want to look at my portfolio 9 times a minute to see what's going on. I would rather look every Friday to see what's going on. I'm mid to late 20s to for reference. Just remember not to go all out right now when buying. Say you buy 4 stocks, I'd invest \~250/month each over the next 18 months
It’s a long video but I think it’s helpful: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=y7iVTTH5tOA I would stick with ETFs or names you have heard off until you find what you like. It takes time and some emotional discipline to do well. If you are Adam or research Almost all the info you need is public so watch videos ,read books , google stuff, check dividend history, visit the company’s investor relations page if you want. But if you want too keep it simple VOO, VTI, SCHD, DGRW, are a few ETFs to check out
SCHD and DGRW, both are ETFs, which focus on quality and dividend growth.
Hah I've invested a little into SCHD, DGRO and DGRW... But... I think you can definitely beat it with the right pick.