FDIS
Fidelity® MSCI Consumer Discretionary Index ETF
Mentions (24Hr)
-100.00% Today
Reddit Posts
I'm no financial advisor, but be measured in your "buy the dip" philosophy
Mentions
QMHNX/QSPNX/CTA/DBMF on the Long side. XRT/TNA/EDC/FDIS/XLT/XBI,/IYT...etc on the short side. All depends on SMA/EDA. 70ish avg CAGR last 8-9 yrs. 10-15% CAGR in 2022. Works like a charm.
If you're really fed up just buy some FDIS which is coincidentally doing quite well today.
I had a couple FDIS limit orders hit today
As a fidelity user, **FSKAX**, **FSPGX**, and **FXAIX** are all amazing, broad, medium risk, and the majority of my steady growth strategy portfolio. I have been looking into "riskier" options like **FDIS**, **FSTA**, **FTEC,** **ONEQ****,** and **FHLC** because I trust those markets will consistently grow. The ups and downs of those "riskier" funds will be more significant than the S&P 500 but less fluctuation than a single stock. In addition, those MSCI funds are not dependent on the US total economy, but focused on specific dominant sectors in the US economy. If you have a low risk tolerance, looking at bond funds like FXNAX would be perfect to lean into as you get closer to retirement! I hope this helped out!
You are doing good thou! Keep it up.. here’s a couple others worth looking at FTEC AND FDIS
I tend to do 40% in VOO, 10% in FTEC, 10% in FDIS, 5-10% in both Small and Mid-Cap ETFs (VOT and VB) and then everything else is technology because I know that the inside and out. I scrapped dividend stocks because I’m not sure where I’ll be able to write off long-term investment gains down the road in life (I’m 29) and don’t want to pay taxes on those dividends now. With that being said, a set of corporate bonds may be wise to make things more conservative (SPHY).
First thing’s first: Max out your 401K. I personally do 40% S&P ETF (VOO), 7.5% Mid-Cap ETF (VOT), 5% Small-Cap (VB), 10% Consumer Discretionary ETF (FDIS), 10% Technology ETF (FTEC), 10% Government Bond ETF (SPHY), and then 10% or so in single stocks, of which almost all are Mid-Caps. 10% FTEC is probably sketchy in some people’s eyes because that’s considered risky, but this is my personal account in addition to my 401K. I probably should have some international stock ETFs, but I don’t know enough about it and my 401K has plenty of them natively. I’m 29 for reference. Keep in mind, everyone’s situation is different. Biggest thing I would recommend is investing a small portion everyday, whether it’s $1 or $100. Of course, if the stock market tanks, then drop that theory and increase the antes haha.
These funds RTH IEDI FDIS have the retailers and might be a safer put. However they all have Amazon as well.
FHLC Healthcare FSTA Staples FDIS Discretionary FIDU Industrials Just a sample, those are Fidelity's.
Thanks for the response! Unfortunately the ESPP is quite a bit down so I'd be selling at a small loss, so I'm hesitant but I know that money would do a lot better elsewhere. Regarding the FDIS, I have no idea...I just wanted another fund to be "diversified" but honestly that hasn't performed well either. Maybe I should tighten things up and put most of the ESPP and FDIS all back into FXKAX and add some to the int too. When I set up these a number of years ago I had researched a lot more, but now I'd rather just "set it and forget it".
I think selling your espp makes sense...too much of your investments tied to the company also paying your livelihood. With FSKAX, FYIHX and FXNAX you have a functioning 3 fund portfolio. You could stick with that mix in whatever ratio if comfortable to you (I'm in your age range and like 75 US/20 Int/5 Bond...but yours could look different). I'm curious on the FDIS investment...is that a segment you have a particular reason for investing more in over total market?
38yo, employed ($100k/yr), 5-10 yr plan. Hoping to get some insight into how to reallocate and diversify my current investments. My portfolio is currently as follows (% of Account is noted) * FDIS (13%) * FSKAX (24%) * FTIHX (12%) * FXNAX (10%) * ESPP - Healthcare (40%) I'd like to sell about half of the ESPP (long term capital) and reinvest, either into one of my current investments or something new. FSKAX has been performing well, but I dont know if I should diversify more or if that would be ok. Thank you in advance
im just getting into playing the market and ive gotten into 8 different ETFs. My spread is FDIS -5% // FIDU -5% // FNCL - 5% // FSTA - 5% // FTEC - 5% // QQQM - 50% // VOO - 20% // XLV - 5% . i know its obviously tech heavy but i dont see tech going anywhere but up as the world ages. I do have some over lap but at my highest (Microsoft) im at 6% in weight. Should i equal out my tech ETFs? i want to be moderately aggressive with my portfolio cause im trying to make up for the last 10 years i missed when i tried to get into the market but my divorce kinda put a hamper on that.
Japan's economy has been stagnant for the last good 20 years. And, what would you invest in Switzerland? If I were you, I would split across 3-4 ETFs. VOO, some Tech funds in Fidelity like FTEC, FDIS.
No set of rules. Years ago when trading was expensive I told myself I will not leave until $1,000 on the table is for me. As internet became faster and commission became more affordable I lowered my expectation of gain. Today I sold all my remaining Sofi took a $125 profit while took a loss of -220 from FDIS getting into commerce stocks. Both were wrong investment into AI, eCommerce funds. PS: Yes one can lose money invest in AI and etf with heavy content in Tesla and Amazon at wrong time.
lol where have you been. consumer discretionary has been getting crushed. look at VCR or FDIS
You can do Higher risk ETFs as well, you don't need individual stocks. My high risk ETF is FTEC and FDIS, in my taxable account because of low amount of dividends.
Fun fact if you ditch ARKK and buy FHLC, FTEC, and FDIS instead you'll get the same exposure for much lower fee.
ONEQ. ​ Honestly, not just ONEQ, but DGRO, FDIS, FMAT, FIDU, FREL, ITOT and IXUS. Diversify, always, but if I were forced to pick one ETF, it would be DGRO.
That's embarrassing. Well, I hate seeing things that are wrong online so I'll take it upon myself spread the word and correct Google ([who lists it as an example when you search for 'consumer cyclical company'](https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/326210299621539840/1009241060616196127/Screenshot_20220816-192323_Chrome.jpg)), Yahoo finance ([which lists $AMZN in their list of consumer cyclical stocks](https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/326210299621539840/1009241060863647744/Screenshot_20220816-192249_Chrome.jpg)), Morningstar ([which lists it as well](https://media.discordapp.net/attachments/326210299621539840/1009244098600894575/Screenshot_20220816-193533_Chrome.jpg)), and even [various ETFs categorized as consuming cyclical ](https://money.usnews.com/funds/etfs/rankings/consumer-cyclical) like the first one there, Vanguard's $VCR which is [almost 25% Amazon](https://investor.vanguard.com/investment-products/etfs/profile/vcr#portfolio-composition) or number 2 which is [$FDIS managed by Fidelity](https://screener.fidelity.com/ftgw/etf/goto/snapshot/portfolioComposition.jhtml?symbols=FDIS) and also almost 25% Amazon. Oy! Scrolling further down that page of Google results is just... Nevermind, I'm gonna go get starting all the emails I gotta send out to clear this up.
I like Fidelity’s FENY. Covers big oil well overall with a big dividend and low expense ratio. I bought a bunch of it a few months back, and it’s basically the only thing holding up my portfolio at this point. I’ve got a lot a big tech that’s getting crushed recently, but I’ve been buying more of that as well as it’s going down. Another couple Fidelity funds that I really like and have invested heavily in recently are FDIS (consumer discretionary fund) and FNCL (banking fund). Been buying FDIS a bit at a time as it’s falling and every time I buy more of that I also add to my pile of FNCL and FENY. This is most certainly an accumulation year for me.
FDIS, the Fidelity consumer discretionary index ETF
I have some HD in my FDIS (HD, Lowes, Target etc). It's been doing pretty well sans this past few months.
Buy FDIS etf. Biggest holding is Amazon and Tesla
I’m too broke to gamble on amzn calls so I’m Buying FDIS calls instead 🤣
I get it. I saw later that you are in sector funds. I have some too - FDIS, FENY, FHLC, FIDU, FNCL, and FSTA.
Top 5 individual stocks are in order of allocation 1) CRWD 2) AMD 3) ROKU 4) PYPL 5) MSFT Top 5 ETFs 1) QQQ 2) VTI 3) ICLN 4) VDC 5) FDIS
Have you looked into sector etfs? One of my favorites is FDIS. Good consumer spending etf that has recently outperformed the market
Check out FDIS ETF It’s top holdings are Amazon 2.17% and Tesla 14.48%
These are some smaller name ETF that I like FDIS ( Consumer ETF for companies like Target, Home Depot, Lowes, McD's etc ) IFRA ( Infrastructure ETF ) XHE ( Healthcare Equipment ETF )
FDIS- Consumer ETF ( McDonalds, Home Depot, Lowes, Starbucks, Target etc) IFRA - U.S Infrastructure ETF TAN XHE - Healthcare equipment ETF. Huge billion dollar industry.
I have been slowly but surely putting money into FDIS. It is a consumer ETF. It has Amazon, Home Depot, Lowe's, Target etc...
Spy is indeed the safest but if you like FB $FCOM is solid. Once Tesla returns to earth I’ll be loading up on $FDIS
I sold my whole FDIS etf yesterday and bought MSFT at 319
My holding : AAPL , PFE , T , ETF : FDIS , SPYG, XLF, IHI Good luck
Go to morningstar.com click on five star rated ETFs. And it gives you a two page list. I am personally invested in SMH, FDIS, FDRR, as well as VOO, and SCHD. All extremely safe compared to individual stocks. But most of these are growth focused.
Sell all of them. Buy SMH FDIS VGT IAI SCDH and chill for a year
Hi folks. Quick retirement goal portfolio question: Is it wrong to **exclusively** put low cost ETFs/Mutual Funds into my retirement portolio? Here is an example of the ones I'd like (some already have): FIDU(, FHLC, FTEC, FSPGX, FDIS, FALN. ​ Details: 26y/o. Employed fulltime. Projected retirement Age 65. Plan on DCA my portfolio with certain percentages in each asset.
I pity the fool that takes a short position on this one but to showcase the availability on one specifically I felt that users with an Interactive Brokers Account can see the difference quite clearly in the availability when shorting a warrant is selected in your order window versus avail of commons [https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FDIS3qZXEAw7-tx?format=jpg&name=medium](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FDIS3qZXEAw7-tx?format=jpg&name=medium) Shorting Warrants in a bullish trend is a dangerous proposition that should not be entered into lightly and likely not on this symbol.. Example only to answer a widely asked question. Full Disclosure I own the CRHC warrants.
VTI is the backbone for mine too but I also have VXUS for the foreign exposure. My portfolio looks like this: 50% in VTI and 25% in VXUS. Now you can pretty much do whatever you want with the remaining 25%. I like to play the seasons with that remainder. Since winter is coming up along with the holiday seasons I reckon FDIS, VDE, and VPU will do quite well. Thinking about selling those in late winter and investing about 20% into FTEC and CARZ.
FDIS makes me happy, just because if you read it it sounds like "F this"
themed: MILN, ROKT sector: FTEC, FDIS
I just started investing myself a few months ago, few stocks (NKE,APPL,MSFT) and index funds (VTI,FDIS,FTEC). I’m glad I didn’t spend my entire budget at once because the prices have dropped several times since my initial investment. I started with 50% of my budget in the beginning and been using the other 50% to buy more when the prices drop which helps lower my cost basis. As mentioned by everyone, you cannot time the market. I bought some last Friday thinking it was already low and it dropped even more today which became another shopping day. Even though everything in my portfolio is red at the moment I’ve learned not to stress and just think positive of what my investment will look like a few years from now.
I have FDIS etf (consumer discretionary index). Amazon, Tesla, Nike, Home Depot, Lowe’s, Starbucks, TJ Max, McDonalds, Target are their top holdings
FDIS has indeed been kind to me.
UPRO - 53,5% (6 month hold period as of today) (+57,78%) FDIS - 20,07% (+30,3%) SEDG - 10,87% (+23,55%) PENN - 8,81% (-43,34%) AMD - 6,75% (just bought) (-1,22%)
Here are some ETFs with a heavy weighting to AMZN (20% or more): ETF Expense Ratio Weighting VCR Vanguard Consumer Discretionary 0.10% 22.74% ONLN ProShares Online Retail ETF 0.58% 22.49% XLY Cons Discret Select Sector SPDR Fund 0.12% 21.94% FDIS Fidelity MSCI Cons Discret Index ETF 0.08% 21.91%
FDIS is an ETF I like ($82), top holding is AMZN at almost 23%. But it really depends how long you plan to hold. Generally the advice I've seen is that if you think you'll need the money in less than a year (at a minimum) then you're probably better off in cash. Recently, the summer months haven't been great to stocks either but noone here knows if we're going up or down. A low beta etf (in theory low violitily) I like is GBLO. Good luck!
One option is low expense ratio ETFs that are heavily weighted in the stock you want. I own FDIS mostly because it's heavily weighted in AMZN, about 25%. The other 75% targets a sector of the economy that I think will do will during COVID recovery, so for me is serves too purposes as a solid midterm play.
>I've also been considering McDonalds, Home Depot, J&J, Coca Cola and Starbucks. Aside from J&J and maybe KO, you can get all of those in a consumer discretionary ETF like FDIS. Will give you some decently heavy AMZN and TSLA exposure too but there are other consumer disc ETFs without TSLA. One without AMZN will be harder to find. FDIS has been great for me but I plan on eventually trimming that and adding some combo of HD (or Lowe's) and SBUX because I'm already heavily weighted in AMZN and have a few TSLA shares.
>I've also been considering McDonalds, Home Depot, J&J, Coca Cola and Starbucks. Aside from J&J and maybe KO, you can get all of those in a consumer discretionary ETF like FDIS. Will give you some decently heavy AMZN and TSLA exposure too but there are other consumer disc ETFs without TSLA. One without AMZN will be harder to find. FDIS has been great for me but I plan on eventually trimming that and adding some combo of HD (or Lowe's) and SBUX because I'm already heavily weighted in AMZN and have a few TSLA shares.
>I've also been considering McDonalds, Home Depot, J&J, Coca Cola and Starbucks. Aside from J&J and maybe KO, you can get all of those in a consumer discretionary ETF like FDIS. Will give you some decently heavy AMZN and TSLA exposure too but there are other consumer disc ETFs without TSLA. One without AMZN will be harder to find. FDIS has been great for me but I plan on eventually trimming that and adding some combo of HD (or Lowe's) and SBUX because I'm already heavily weighted in AMZN and have a few TSLA shares.
>I've also been considering McDonalds, Home Depot, J&J, Coca Cola and Starbucks. Aside from J&J and maybe KO, you can get all of those in a consumer discretionary ETF like FDIS. Will give you some decently heavy AMZN and TSLA exposure too but there are other consumer disc ETFs without TSLA. One without AMZN will be harder to find. FDIS has been great for me but I plan on eventually trimming that and adding some combo of HD (or Lowe's) and SBUX because I'm already heavily weighted in AMZN and have a few TSLA shares.
>I've also been considering McDonalds, Home Depot, J&J, Coca Cola and Starbucks. Aside from J&J and maybe KO, you can get all of those in a consumer discretionary ETF like FDIS. Will give you some decently heavy AMZN and TSLA exposure too but there are other consumer disc ETFs without TSLA. One without AMZN will be harder to find. FDIS has been great for me but I plan on eventually trimming that and adding some combo of HD (or Lowe's) and SBUX because I'm already heavily weighted in AMZN and have a few TSLA shares.
I get my Amazon via FDIS ETF. it’s currently 23% of their holding. So I get an investment w plenty of Amazon and then a decent mix of other core consumer discretionary businesses. Don’t love Tesla is their #2 now but that’s indexing, it chipped Amz down from closer to 28%. Still like it.
FDIS up 110% since 3/25/20... I remember when I bought; I was seriously thinking Fuck - DIS -covid- shit...
Early 30s. Brand new Roth through Fidelity. Actively managing, primarily using ETFs and a few stock here and there. I plan to "rebalance"/ move in and out of positions as I see fit (I know, don't plan on beating the indices... I can try though). I'm probably too haphazard now (organized chaos). I'm sure over the next year or so I'll consolidate... or at least make "wiser" moves. Here goes. Be nice, please lol. [Roth holdings](http://Roth https://imgur.com/gallery/ywDdVZp) Biggest holdings: - A lot of overlap. IVSG and SPQQ are somewhat illiquid (price doesn't seem to update as frequently as most tickers). I really like IVSG though (big on Amazon and Qualcomm). Yield focused: - STAG (warehouse reit) - VYM - VIG - ATT -Verizon - PSEC (lending/finance company) --- I am not directly reinvesting dividends, but will pool them together and play them where I think is best at the time. - I have some sector plays (XLF, XLV, FIVG, FDIS) but these are more for minimal exposure and just to keep an eye on the market. Learning curve, of sorts. - I can give more details if ppl have questions about some of the tickets. The biggest flaw I see is expense ratios (most are hovering between .40% and .75%) and a lacking international exposure. I think I'd like to be primarily large/mega cap blend with some exposure to med/small/international for hedging/diversification and some choice bets on shortterm/longterm winners. Dissect! [Sector/Cap allocations ](http://imgur.com/gallery/MzVuMMv)
You are pretty well diversified as you are. **PBW** \- if you want to broaden your exposure to green/renewable energy. There may be some crossover with LIT **FDIS** \- Consumer discretionary; a large portion of this fund is [Amazon.com](https://Amazon.com), with Home Depot, Tesla, Nike, and McDonald's rounding out the top 5 **IWM** \- Is a Russell 2000 index fund that invests in small-cap companies that are likely to experience growth **SOXX** \- Semiconductors **THNQ** \- This ETF invests in companies involved in Robotics and artificial intelligence.
There's loads of them but ONEQ is the NASDAQ one Then FTEC FDIS FHLC FENY FREL The list goes on
Stimmy hitting the FDIS and IBUY
> I was looking into TQQQ or FDIS Those are two totally different ETFs, so make sure you aren't viewing them as similar. > do I keep cash until the inevitable correction in Sept How much higher does the market run, and then how far does it fall in this "inevitable correction" ? AMZN is more than double it's pre-covid value, but it isn't coming down anytime soon. They are gonna keep crushing it
I was looking into TQQQ or FDIS but many of these large companies are valued more than double pre covid. Granted, these major corps thrived during covid but it seems like covid recovery is fully prices in. Lets say by May/June we have the vaccine fully available and the numbers are down with covid. The only thing I see bringing down the market is Sept when rent, unemployment end,student loans and morgages start. My question is this, do I keep cash until the inevitable correction in Sept or keep trickling $ into the market while it is riding high?
If you're trying to avoid Tesla in FDIS, I personally like IYC
I've been looking at putting a possible portfolio together with a similar thought. I haven't made it as far as percentages but overall I'm thinking (Fidelity based) Roth IRA + employer 401k VFIAX - S&P 500 index from 401k FZROX: total market index etf FDIS: consumer discretionary sector etf FTEC: technology sector etf FHLC: health care sector etf (then my fingers crossed long term growth portion) ARKF: fintech etf ARKG: genomics etf ARKQ: autonomous driving/robotics / AI
I have 5% in ARKK 1% in FDIS consumer discretionary 7% FSKAX TOTAL market 3% FSPTX select tech managed fund 1% VTWG small cap growth
I think both of those are fine choices but you should have a better reason than people on the internet say so, thats a good start but you need to develop your own theory on why the company will thrive in the near or long term future. Whats your exit plan do you want to hold it for a mont, year, 20 years? Starting with a solid "gold standard" company is a good start though because worst case scenario is that probably wont go down much if you are wrong. I like disney for the corona vaccine reopen play. I like apple because of the 5g phone sales and potentially upcoming apple car. If you want to play it even safer you can look at etfs that bet on sectors instead of specific companies, XLC or FDIS is a good start.
Target funds are too conservative in my opinion. They put too much in bonds and other investments that dont give you your money’s worth. You can get better gains and still be conservative if you put most of it on voo/spy and qqq mix. A couple more ideas: FDIS is a good low cost blue chip etf from fidelity. Icln is good for renewable energy, which will be big this decade.
If you want to compare the funds, it is best to look into the holdings of each and see how they overlap and combine. For example VGT holds 21% in AAPL, 15% in MSFT and QQQM is 12.15% in AAPL, and 9.5% in MSFT. The rest of the funds differ quite a bit, but OP should understand that AAPL and MSFT are driving a lot in both of these funds and they may be over-allocated to these two companies by buying both QQQM and VGT. If you want to add AMZN position, for instance you might be better off buying FDIS with a 22.44% allocation to AMZN rather than buying QQQM with a 9% allocation and doubling up on AAPL and MSFT that are already included in your VGT funds. FDIS also holds 10% in TSLA and a bunch of other consumer stocks not included in VGT or any of the funds OP specified (which further diversify your holdings) and has an expense ratio of only 0.08%. One of the major selling points of ETFs is that they help diversify your portfolio but if you aren't careful you end up concentrating too much onto the same overlapping positions by buying very similar funds. In addition, the expense ratio of QQQM is 0.15% and VGT is 0.10%. So, if VGT can do what you want you can reduce expenses and make more money in the long run buying VGT only. Buying multiple EFTs don't always add any diversity to your portfolio and can actually over concentrate it. In general, though buying QQQM, VGT, and QQQJ is heavily concentrated in tech stocks. So, if that's what OP wants, then that is what they got. VGT is about 80% tech, QQQM is 54% tech, and QQQJ is 32% tech. Without knowing the reason OP chose these, we can't say whether they are good or not. My personal allocation is very different obviously from OP and I would never tell anyone what to buy because I am just as stupid as anyone. So take all this with a grain of salt.
started my roth as soon as i turned 18. 23 now and have positions mostly in Fidelity sector ETFs. FHLC, FTEC, and FDIS have preformed well for me