FDRR
Fidelity® Dividend ETF for Rising Rates
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$ARDX trading below cash - upgrade from CITI - hot sector!
$ARDX trading below cash - upgrade from CITI - hot sector!
$ARDX trading below cash - upgrade from CITI - hot sector!
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FDVV, FDRR, VYM, VYMI, SCHD, DGRO...any can be used. Pick what you want. The "general consensus" is to keep it simple. Why have multiple funds when 1 is fine.
A lot of LCV is going to be heavy in FAANGS, NVIDIA, and so on. For example, I just looked at FDRR and the top 3 holdings are NVIDIA, Microsoft, and Apple. But others will be less so -- VTV has no tech stocks in its top 10 holdings. You should be able to see holdings on Morningstar. Ways to avoid: sector funds (industrials and energy seem to be doing well, check on FIDU and FUTY). International value is having a bang up year and has very little technology and certainly no FAANGS etc. You could look at FIVA, JIVE, DFIV, VYMI, or even small/mid cap international value such as AVDV or DISV,
FXAIX is a great choice. If you want to replace SCHD with a value ETF, look at CGDV or FDRR.
I really like FDRR. It's tailored to a rising rate environment, which we clearly are in...
FDRR is another good one. Specifically designed to take advantage of a rising rate environment.
For anyone looking for an ETF that would really take advantage of a lot of the companies who are down right now, check out FDRR... it's a Fidelity fund, but it checks all the boxes.
FDRR is a good buy right now. Solid ETF
Официальный запрос на разрешение споров (FDRR) это серьёзный шаг, который говорит о надежности компании! Молодцы!
Some small DD here but possibly a catalyst (good or bad). [https://www.biospace.com/article/ardelyx-prepares-to-go-to-the-mat-with-the-fda-over-rejected-ckd-drug-tenapanor/](https://www.biospace.com/article/ardelyx-prepares-to-go-to-the-mat-with-the-fda-over-rejected-ckd-drug-tenapanor/) Ardelyx dropped in July due to the FDA's rejection of the tenapanor drug. Cfr the link, Ardelyx submitted an FDRR (dispute) in the beginning of November where the article also states that the FDA typically react within one month, which would then be by the end of this week. The question now is if it's going to be good or bad news. :)
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.
I love FDRR and have been slowly putting money into it. Their Top 10 holdings is pretty much everything you could want in a portfolio.
I have a portion of my IRA in FDRR (Fidelity Dividend ETF for Rising Rates). Its holdings are primarily higher-dividend S&P stocks, and is "designed to reflect the performance of stocks of large and mid-capitalization dividend-paying companies that are expected to continue to pay and grow their dividends and have a positive correlation of returns to increasing 10-year U.S. Treasury yields," to quote Fidelity's summary of it. It seems to me like a good hedge against growth stocks potentially falling in the event of rising treasury yields. As with basically every large-cap ETF, it's super heavy in AAPL and MSFT, but the rest of the top 10 is mostly healthcare and financial (and Home Depot lol).
if you are going to do a $10K contribution, set and forget, walk away and check back in 10 or 20 years you 100% should put it into an ETF or index fund. Make absolutely sure to set distributions to reinvest. I would priorities one of the follow two base strategies for the majority of your money, either or, your choice I think they are fairly equal in pros and cons. 1. broad market dividend yield ETF names such as SCHD, VYM, DDV, FDRR are all going to pay out well quarterly. be sure it is a broad based fund, holding dozens of companies. SCHD (the one I hold) has over 100 companies and it's highest exposure to any one company is about 4.9% It has a very uniform distribution ranging from 3% to that 4.8% 2. S&P tracker. Really, the S&P just performs solidly. that is all there is to it. VOO, is the big dog here, IVV, and SPY are other big names. These also have strong distributions. I'd have like, 75% of your money in something from the above. I would take the rest and do a growth ETF of some kind. Little more risky, but you are looking for something to pop you huge gains, that is where you are going to have to roll the dice a bit, so to speak. Just be sure you take a broad market growth, and not a sector growth. This is long term, and sectors wax and wane over time quite frequently. you don't want to open up your portfolio to in the middle of a major valley. As a second reminder. reinvest the distributions!!!! and a third time. REINVEST THE DISTRIBUTIONS.
on dedicated long term investments, I am always a fan of a high dividend distribution ETFs. If you are investing in the near term, dividend are not your focus, and can maybe even hinder short term gains. but over the long haul? get your free money and reinvest! only thing better than an ETF increasing in value is one that is buying more shares of itself while doing it. Some generally well regarded high dividend ETFs from a range of managers: VYM, DGRO, HDV, SPHD, FDRR, SCHD. I personally own SCHD and it has done well. All the major Vanguard equities focused ones are also really good, VOO, VIG, VTI anything that starts with V has been a money printer these days...
There is also FDRR to throw into the mix. Fidelity Dividende ETF for Rising Rates, I think is the name.