ONEQ
Fidelity® Nasdaq Composite Index® ETF
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Thoughts on SQQQ - the inverse NASDAQ
Now until the middle of June: bullish on $ONEQ and bearish on $NSC, then turn the following 4 weeks, then turn again, and so on...
Now until the middle of June: bullish on $ONEQ and bearish on $NSC, then turn the following 4 weeks, then turn again, and so on...
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QQQM (NASDAQ 100 ETF) : $70.13B net assets ONEQ (NASDAQ Composite ETF) : $9.33B net assets
ONEQ is a great Nasdaq option. ONEQ has over 1000 holdings vs 500 for VOO or 101 for QQQ. Yes, Nasdaq is tech heavy with over 50%. ONEQ has outperformed VOO eight of the last 11 years including this year. ONEQ has an annualized gain of 17% the last 15 years vs 14.24% for VOO.
About 90% of my port is currently in VOO/ONEQ/GLD and cash. Will buy individual stocks again after this nonsense. Thank you for your attention to this matter.
We are not close to a bubble top yet. The ONEQ and QQQ have not had a crazy year yet. Look at 1998 and 1999. QQQ ytd return is a measly 15%. Also we may be at the start of an easing cycle for interest rates. Lower rates will inflate the bubble as all the degenerate gambles will start investing on margin.
NVDA is a very, very good stock. That being said, a single stock can be risky in that it is susceptible to changes in management and things that can directly affect the company. I prefer an index fund ETF like VOOG that's an exchange traded fund that follows the S&P 500 or ONEQ that follows the NASDAQ. A problem affecting one company won't affect the entire Index. Just my personal preference after investing for 50 years.
It's all relative to the fundamentals (which change quarterly) for me and historical and comparable valuations and my conviction in the company. Check out ONEQ or QQQ as an index fund that's tech heavy
Pardon the silly question, I am pretty good at my stock/ETFs investing, but rusty on options. I have the following stocks/ETFs in my portfolio: - ONEQ - QBTS - RGTI - TSM - MSFT - PLTR - BYDDY - ASML - AMD - CRWD - others.... These are all long term positions, I don't intent to sell any time soon, I am actually continuing to buy regularly. QUESTION: I can easily sell out-of-the money calls on these, collect the premium if they expire worthless, and my only *"risk"* is that there's a BIG surge in price and the calls are exercised, in which case I must sell the shares and the strike priceand lose on the increase in price above the strike price. I just need to select the strike price and option maturity date. Did I get this right?
You are using the wrong comparisons though. Anyone can make things look good by picking and choosing using wrong correlations. The correlations between FAGAX and QQQ are only .87. But if you look FAGAX has beaten QQQ the last 3 years and is up over it YTD also. But that’s not even the right comparisons. You should be comparing FAGAX to like SWLGX (.94 correlation) or VIGAX (.93 correlation). For a comparison of NASDAQ and tech of QQQ, you need to use ONEQ (.99 correlation).
Dude Check out **ONEQ** ,it’s Fidelity’s ETF that tracks the Nasdaq Composite. Expense ratio is around **0.21%**, not zero like FXAIX (S&P 500), but still reasonable. No transaction fee if you're using Fidelity. It's probably the cheapest Nasdaq exposure they offer directly.
The answer is that you don't have the intelligence to invest in individual stocks. Not actual IQ, rather information. Those boards are closed to the public, the CEOs lie and obfuscate, or are truly ignorant about what happens in their company. Do I have individual equities in my portfolio? Yes. But most of what I have are in indexes: SPY, OEF, DIA, ONEQ QQQM, DAX. The top three performers for me in individual equities are: COST, AAPL, BRK.B, I also have some JPM, and a bunch of shit stocks that are play stocks. I use AAPL and COST all the time, so I know they will delight their customers and keep them for the long haul. JPM is historical, and the shit stocks, like MDRX were bets that I just can't let go of. MDRX, for 14 years they screwed up their company, for a good portion of that time they didn't know what their financials were, but continued reporting. They finally got caught and got delisted. They have been 2.5 years? since delisting and still can't provide audited guidance on their quarterlies. That is what I mean but you don't have the intelligence of what is going on in the company.
I have found that investing in Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) tied to the NASDAQ (ONEQ) and S&P500 (IVV) work very well as the market generally goes up over time, especially a 5-year period like you mentioned. Also, use a good brokerage like Charles Schwab. Good luck!
You can slowly walk down your ask price to see if you get a bite. The bids should adjust when you start lowering your ask. You have to figure out what you think the fair value is and decide how much under fair value you're willing to take. There is some slippage in just about every trade, but yeah, the ONEQ options are not liquid so you should expect more slippage.
I guess maybe I caused some confusion in my post. I did not spend 25K to buy these contracts. What I spend to buy these contracts are close to 1.5k. 25K is the total amount of assets in my brokerage account. And I’m trying to figure out how to exercise the call option given that I don’t have enough funds to buy 20 ×100 stocks of ONEQ.
who pays to buy the 2000 stocks of ONEQ?
I keep selling at 100%. Left at least a thousand on the table up from four XX positions on SPLG and ONEQ. Up 150% on one I bought this morning, gonna hold, fuck it.
I sold my staples like MSFT and APPLE near the end of 2024. I set some low buy order “good til cancel” at 190 on Apple and I woke up and it filled same with my MSFT orders at $375. I promptly sold those, and canceled all my remaining “good til cancel orders”. I had some ONEQ orders at 50% of highs so around 40 and I have so little faith I cancelled all those order. I have it tiered like 60, 55, 50, 45, 40, 35, 30 etc.
Just bought up some ONEQ at the lowest cost basis in a long time. I just look at these slides in the market as flash sales.
You're not late at 20 years old! You're at a great age to get started! So congratulations on taking steps toward wealth building. QQQ is okay. It tends to be more volatile and less diverse than VOO. QQQ may grow faster but when the market is down it also tends to fall harder. Nothing wrong with having some exposure to it in your portfolio if you like. I hold a bit of ONEQ with Fidelity, which is basically the same thing. This is my personal opinion, not advice. I'm not a financial professional of any sort.
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!
IVV and ONEQ. It's changed a little over the years but it's always been a mix of a S&P 500 ETF, NASDAQ ETF, and a small amount in bonds/money market.
Fuck yo face nvda. What sideways bullshit is this?? Back to 0dte puts on ONEQ
Diamonds, Spies, and Q... That is the advice I give to people who ask. DIA, SPY, and ONEQ. Worked really well for me as market index funds. I also have DAX and JPXN for the German and Japanese markets but you do you.
I have about $1k/month to invest. This will be a part of my retirement plan. I am 42 and in the US, so I’ve got about 25 years to work with. I plan in investing in the below funds/etf’s. I’m looking at a growth strategy, and have high tolerance for risk for the time being. Buy and hold is the current plan, and I will reevaluate annually. Is there one/more I should take off the list, or any I should put on? What proportion of each would you put in the portfolio? I invest with Fidelity, hence the Fidelity funds. FXAIX ONEQ FSPGX FBGRX FSELX
QQQM hasn’t existed for five years, it was established in October 2020. The comparison must not be picking up on that. They’re run by the same company and track the same index so they should perform almost identically; the differences are: * Expense ratio (0.15% for QQQM vs. 0.20% for QQQ), and * QQQ is better known and more heavily traded, which makes it more amenable to trading or options. [Tangent, I like ONEQ because it captures the rest of the Nasdaq.]
MRNA, if you are negative, lose it. It will not go back up unless they come up with a cure for the common cold or universal influenza. Bought in March of '20, sold a bit to cover my investment, and will let it float to zero as it is all gravy. But, I don't see them reaching their previous highs in this decade. Put it in something that will grow (AAPL, COST, GOOG, VOO, DIA, ONEQ) I wouldn't touch F with a thirty foot pole, or a mile of extra wiring (the EV Truck). If you do go in on F go in at $8 and sell at $10. Sold MRK not long ago at a profit, but I held it forever so it wasn't making the grade. I think I held it for 12-14 years and got under 100% so it was out. SPYD is a dividend S&P index fund that has decent dividends if that is your goal
As one poster pointed out, you are heavy in S&P index stocks. You are young so I would look at these 5 stocks, evenly: AAPL COST ONEQ DIA VOO All three index's will do fine over the next 20 years. AAPL and COST will do fine for the next 20 years -- until they change what they are doing. Split your inputs between them and they will grow -- make sure you do dividend reinvest BTW. Your five year clock has just started. Meaning that in 5 years you can pull what you have put in out without penalty. Don't, but you can if you need to. You can't pull out the earnings but after five years you can pull out your contributions without penalty. So, if you put 6k a year in for 5 years you will have 30k invested, that 30k will have made 10kish, you could pull out the 30k but you have to leave the 10kish in. Again, leave it but if you absolutely must, you can
You can't, or you can but you will pay a fine until you get it in line. Open a second brokerage and buy the VOO you want there. You will pay income tax on the dividends but hey, that is small change. And as far as VOO -- sure, good METF, or you could look at DIA and ONEQ and split evenly between them. Watch which one ends up higher after a year, rebalance the long term investments or just let it ride. For Market ETFs I own: VOO, DIA, ONEQ, OEF, QQQM, and SPY. DIA has monthly dividends but otherwise they are same same. If you want to go into international markets: DAX and JPXN
I worked for GE, before the breakup but still... My only answer is no -- don't do it -- I no longer own a single share of any GE, almost as bad as owning BA from a corporate culture perspective. If you ARE going to do one stock, then do a market ETF like ONEQ, VOO, DIA so you are at least diversified in a market. Double in 5 years isn't that impressive, good but not impressive. COST in that same period has tripled.
Not a Meta fan, but more so now that Musk has destroyed Twitter. I wouldn't throw all my money at one stock, that is a recipe for disaster. It will cost you nothing to back out of it except what Meta has dropped. If you want to go with growth stocks and you want individual equities then I would suggest the following equities: COST, AAPL, JPM, NVDA, GOOG in equal portions, if you want to add META into the equation that is fine. My portfolio input is 20ish% individual equities, and almost 50% of value -- meaning they have done much better than the market index funds that my 75ish% inputs have. My stay aways are for EVs, including TSLA, Pharma, oil, REITs and most banks If I were going to go with one stock, it would be an Market Index ETF like ONEQ, DIA, SPY, VOO -- good growth but not as much risk. Remember, there is a miracle called compounding interest, you will either benefit or suffer from it... Rule of 72 is divide your 72 by your interest rate and that is how long it will take to double. 7.2% 10 years, 10% 7.2 years. Market index funds over the past decade have been going up double digit (12-20%) but check out the individual equities I have included above, over the past 10-15 years (hell go back to before the Great Recession) in one account my AAPL has gone up over 700% since I purchased, same account my COST is up almost 500%.
I would only add that I would swap out AMZN and MSFT with COST and AAPL. Or, you could move that 90k from VOO to ONEQ and DIA (Nasdaq and Dow) to further diversify your holdings across the three markets.
The ETF suggestions are smart and I’m a good example. I’m with Fidelity and utilize a free large cap fund in several accounts. A few other funds include Pharma, Semis, and a small cap. I’m also in a Nasdaq ETF (ONEQ) and an SP500 fund (SPLG.) I have some big winners in individual stocks, but my laggards keep me in check. End result is I could be doing the same if I was just in all ETFs.
5-6 months, 3 months -- cash, either in HYSA or T-Bills. Make sure they are short term (4 weeks) so that the money is out but if things go south then you can get it back relatively quickly. This isn't your emergency fund, that should be a couple thousand for things that "pop up". Your best bet on stocks is not to go with stocks but with Market Index ETFs. Remember, while individual stocks may collapse, the market generally won't, and when they do take a dump, they generally come back in short order. MIETS mean that you can pull them out in a couple months if you need to, with or without profits. You can look at the year over year growth of the below MIETFs and see how they have performed historically. Why not individual stocks... Because you don't know what the boards are going to do, or not do. You don't have the insider intelligence to figure out if they are run right. If you do go with individual equities my suggestions are: AAPL, GOOG/GOOGL, COST, JPM S&P, NASDAQ, DOW: SPY ONEQ DIA 50k would double in 3-5 years... Also, consider a RothIRA just to begin the clock
You are more than welcome. Same advice I give my kids and the advice that put them through school. If you are going into indexes in general then consider ONEQ or QQQM (NASDAQ), they don't dividend as much but they are growth indexes for the long term. If you are thinking about individual equities, then I would shy away except maybe 10-15% of your portfolio. And, when you do, do things that you use, know, and think highly of. While I have NVDA I would suggest COST and AAPL. COST pays dividends, grows nicely over time, and occasionally pays out "special" dividends. I believe COST is about to split (I have no evidence, just a belief). I shop there and the same employees are always there. Our house is an Apple house, except for work -- it just works. [https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/030916/buffetts-bet-hedge-funds-year-eight-brka-brkb.asp](https://www.investopedia.com/articles/investing/030916/buffetts-bet-hedge-funds-year-eight-brka-brkb.asp) Indexes are the way to go for the majority of your stock investment -- since you have decades you have the tools to grow transformational wealth.
Standard advice: DIA, SPY, ONEQ 70-80% equally COST, AAPL evenly split between the 20-30 remaining After you have paid off any high interest bills of course. Anything below 5% and go with the above
VOO, SPY, OEF... For S&P VOO and SPY are S&P 500 indexes while OEF is an S&P 100 index. My largest S&P Index holdings are in SPY and OEF. For Dow I go with DIA For NASDAQ I go with ONEQ and QQQM (NASDAQ 500 and 100). For Germany I go with DAX and for Japan I go with JPXN Right now I am overloaded in NASDAQ by about 50% (of index funds), meaning that I should treat each market equally and have the residual in foreign markets (30, 30, 30, 5, 5)%. Not ready to rebalance but will consider rebalancing the tax free accounts.
Yea just do QQQ or ONEQ for the composite
Aren't we all just doing some educated guesses? Most of my portfolio is on FDVV and ONEQ cause I don't think I'm smart enough to beat the market. My plan is to just rely on Uncle Sam going brrr with the printing machine and just riding that
I added more NVDA, GOOGL, FDVV, ONEQ. I expect prices to drop more so will load up once that happens
VTI, VOO, ONEQ and QQQM are all quite similar if you look at their top holdings. VGT is a little different, but less diverse so it will go up and down more than the others. As far as equity goes, VTI and VXUS are probably enough on their own. If you want to diversify from there, bonds, REITs, or gold can be useful.
Hey, I'm pretty new to investing, l'm only 21 so l'm just now starting to put money into it and was wondering what you guys thought of this potential portfolio. Not exactly sure how much l'll be able to invest right away but here's what l've been looking at: • 40% split between either VTI or VOO or both depending on feedback • 20% ONEQ -20% QQQM -20% VXUS I was also thinking of VGT but thought that would maybe be too much overlap with already having VTI/ VOO Let me know what you guys think, open to any and all opinions.
Hey, I'm pretty new to investing, l'm only 21 so l'm just now starting to put money into it and was wondering what you guys thought of this potential portfolio. Not exactly sure how much l'll be able to invest right away but here's what l've been looking at: • 40% split between either VTI or VOO or both depending on feedback • 20% ONEQ -20% QQQM -20% VXUS I was also thinking of VGT but thought that would maybe be too much overlap with already having VTI/ VOO Let me know what you guys think, open to any and all opinions.
> qqq If you want smaller company exposure there’s also ONEQ, which is basically the whole NASDAQ. Funds like XLK and IXN offer more targeted tech exposure, but it’s important to know what that means. Many things we colloquially call tech aren’t though, for example META is considered Communication Services because they make money from ads and AMZN is Consumer Discretionary because of their retail operations.
If you want to do a NASDAQ ETF, Fidelity’s ONEQ has a lower price point than QQQ ($67.56 vs $463.58) with a comparable expense ratio (.21% vs .20%). S&P has the best return long run, but as tech has taken off, the NASDAQ has been a better performing index since 2000 (up 783% vs 316%).
An ETF will sell, usually quarterly, as the stock loses market cap. You will instead play yourself on an almost daily basis trying to predict the top. Buy QQQ and be done with it. Add SMH if you have strong NVDA/semiconductors conviction. You can buy ONEQ instead if you like QQQ but don't want so much concentration. There's also VOO/SPY. There are a lot of ways to get significant NVDA exposure without buying shares directly and having to read news about them every morning.
>Hope It isn't a mistake in the long run but I sold VTI, ONEQ, SPY, and VGT. >Put it in VOO What made you decide to keep VOO or off all of those? >and I bought a new index fun SCHD which I heard is good in the long run. Why? Where did you hear that?
>You could do 100% VOO. You'd be less diversified (higher risk for same expected returns) than 100% VT or 100% VTI. But you could certainly do it. Hope It isn't a mistake in the long run but I sold VTI, ONEQ, SPY, and VGT. I kept the some of the similars for now. Put it in VOO and I bought a new index fun SCHD which I heard is good in the long run.
> I have SPY, VOO and FXAIX that all seem to be similar. Should I just sell my SPY and put it into VOO? I might keep FXAIX. These aren't just "similar" - they are all the exact same thing. > FTEC, FELC, VIG, ONEQ, VGT, VTI These will all be similar because they all contain stocks that at already contained by VOO, SPY and FXAIX. This portfolio is a bit of a of a hot mess. A portfolio of 100% VTI would actually be more diverse than what you current have. Might want to start with that until you get the hang of this.
Legal consequences? Only if the investment is inconsistent with a fund’s stated objectives or demonstrates recklessness on the part of the manager. > NASDAQ Composite Index Fund 17.14k This, for example, I’m pretty sure is [ONEQ](https://www.marketwatch.com/investing/fund/oneq). Its job is to hold essentially all the non-financial stocks on the NASDAQ exchange. [According to Schwab](https://www.schwab.wallst.com/schwab/Prospect/research/etfs/schwabETF/index.asp?YYY101_z5K6INmijHlJfnlzwDHOvi/hjoBQ5b+ErYp/aqnyBRYiTfShd1c0rrwETv9fCprKS+r3H87zO8p5JdnCWfU0VRy7jAid2Lgusiq7cootanh4gaem/oUfDwSSWg14+tZR&type=holdings&symbol=ONEQ), DJT is ONEQ’s 354th largest holding. As the others have said though, for all we know these shares belong to individual retail investors and they’re being held in street name.
For NASDAQ 100 there is QQQ and QQQM. For NASDAQ Composite is there any alternative to ONEQ?
FXAIX is one of the best Also look into ONEQ , FTEC , and FSKAX. All low expense ratio and follow big companies.
Hi Everyone, My wife and I have an additional 50k or so and want to invest this soon, however, I'm not sure what to choose. I'm definitely a novice when it comes to this. I'm not sure if I should just invest to what I already have below, or choose a different fund like ONEQ or something. Or if my investments need to be diversified better. Main goal would be long term growth, but I could also be persuaded to choose something more volatile with possible quicker growth, looking at all options. We are 30 with a newborn and have no debts outside of a low interest mortgage and car payment. Current household income is 110k to 150k depending on if the wife works or not. I have an additional 50k set aside in HYSA for emergencies, future IVF costs and a nest egg for bills while the wife stays home from work for a bit. Any suggestions are appreciated. Current Investments Roth IRA FZROX 20K FXAIX 10K 401K FZROX 20K Thank you,
TL;DR: Reached $100k invested within 3-4 years Here’s the breakdown: 2014: - started new job when I only had $1k in a 401k from my previous job. - started off with low % contributions into my new job’s 401k (vested immediately), - company stock ESPP (purchased quarterly with discount) - also got annual stock awards starting with a hiring bonus - fyi, each year’s award would vest over 5 years - ended 2014 with just over $10k total invested 2015: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2015 - ended 2014 with just over $32k invested 2016: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2016 - ended 2016 with just over $76k invested 2017: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2017 PLUS also started investing in some index funds and sector ETFs too - ended 2017 with just over $147k invested Summary So I had surpassed $100k invested from early 2014 to some time in 2017. Additional Info: 2017 was also the first year that I had started to increase my % contributions until I had slowly maxed out EVERYTHING by end of 2019. And then 2020 was the first full year that I had it all maxed out. Things I maxed out: - 401k pretax - 401k after tax, with in plan Roth conversions - IRA (started with Roth but recharacterized to Traditional after surpassing income limit) - HSA - ESPP I also continued to receive annual stock awards of company shares each year + additional shares from special stock awards as well. … a few more answers: - How old were you? 40 years old - Did you start from $0? Almost. I had $1k from my previous job that I rolled over into my new 401k. - Did you get any help from family / inheritance? No help from family, no inheritance. My wife and I actually are the ones who’ve helped family over decades, including siblings and still help our parents financially. - How much did you save each year? See above breakdown. - What did you invest in? The 401k was just in a target date fund at the time. Later in 2021-2022, I redirected new 401k contributions into a more aggressive fund. The company stock was just my employer’s shares obviously. The index funds and sector ETFs I started with were: - total stock market (FZROX) - healthcare (FHLC) - tech (ONEQ)
TL;DR: Reached $100k invested within 3-4 years Here’s the breakdown: ### 2014: - started new job with only $1k in a 401k from my previous job. - low % contributions into my new job’s 401k (vested immediately), - company stock ESPP (purchased quarterly with discount) - also got annual stock awards starting with a hiring bonus - each year’s award would vest over 5 years) - ended 2014 with just over $10k total invested ### 2015: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2015 - ended 2014 with just over $32k invested ### 2016: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2016 - ended 2016 with just over $76k invested ### 2017: - continued ESPP and 401k in 2017 PLUS also started investing in some index funds and sector ETFs too - ended 2017 with just over $147k invested ### Summary So I had surpassed $100k invested from early 2014 to some time in 2017. ### Additional Info; 2017 was also the first year that I had started to increase my % contributions until I had slowly maxed out EVERYTHING by end of 2019. And then 2020 was the first full year that I had it all maxed out. Things I maxed out: - 401k pretax - 401k after tax, with in plan Roth conversions - IRA (started with Roth but recharacterized to Traditional after surpassing income limit) - HSA - ESPP I also continued to receive annual stock awards of company shares each year + additional shares from special stock awards as well. … a few more answers: - How old were you? 40 years old - Did you start from $0? Almost. I had $1k from my previous job that I rolled over into my new 401k. - Did you get any help from family / inheritance? No help from family, no inheritance. My wife and I actually are the ones who’ve helped family over decades, including siblings and still help our parents financially. - How much did you save each year? See above breakdown. - What did you invest in? The 401k was just in a target date fund at the time. Later in 2021-2022, I redirected new 401k contributions into a more aggressive fund. The company stock was just my employer’s shares obviously. The index funds and sector ETFs I started with were: - total stock market (FZROX) - healthcare (FHLC) - tech (ONEQ)
FXAIX , FTEC , ONEQ, AND FSKAX. Invest and chill 😎
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.
FXAIX ONEQ FTEC FSKAX. you're welcome
AOA sucks, if you want actual fast growth then jump into ONEQ or QQQ. More stability? Then jump into VOO or VTI. You're young, you don't need to only make a 40% gain in five years so that you're "safe"
i have an account where i funnel credit card cash back into ONEQ and it was up around 47% last year. i demand jail time too (i should not be above the law)
I would choose ONEQ over QQQ
I kept my day job for the healthcare and became self employed on the side. Tripled my income just working 20 extra hours a week on my own. Put all my money in SPLG, ONEQ and forgot about it
I have VTI VOO and some ONEQ. It’s only been a little while relatively speaking but I like
FSKAX , FSPSX , FTEC , FXAIX, ONEQ Each one follows a different sector. I would say 130,000/5 30k in each.
Hello everyone, I have recently decided that I need to start taking investing seriously. I have listed my investment diversification below, which does not include my ROTH, 401K, and Emergency fund. If any of you could please give me some advice I am 24 years old, I think I make good money for my age and would be more aggressive if I had guidance. IBA: AAPL: 20.5% AMZN: 44.2% KO: 11% O: 17% Cash: 7.2% I want to invest more just unsure where (I will add more once I gain a better knowledge of where to put it) Savings/ETF (I want to have 70-80% of my savings in ETFs for long-term investments I do not need the ETFs to be readily liquid) ETFs: FSELX: 1.6% ONEQ: 3.4% PSI: 0.5% QQQ: 3.6% VT: 9.47% Cash: 81.25 Respectfully please rip my investments apart lol Thank you to everyone that has given me advice, it is greatly appreciated.
Rather just QQQM, it has the lowest expensive ratio. If you are holding long term, those can add up. ONEQ is 0.21% QQQ is .20% QQQM is .15% There is also stuff like QQQJ which tracks Nasdaq 101 - 200 or could look at like a Rusell index for some smaller cap exposure.
ONEQ vs QQQ: which do you prefer? ONEQ seems to have better weighting but includes a higher number of lower quality stocks (but at very low percentages)
I know you didn't ask me, but I use my IRA for ETFs and Robinhood for playing with individual stocks like RKLB. My IRA is investing with ONEQ but I'm thinking of adding VOO or SPY with my next paycheck
Will ONEQ be rebalanced too? And therefore reducing its position in the tech giants
Curious about people’s thoughts on mutual funds versus etfs. From what I’ve read, I like etfs more. That said, the brokerage I use, Schwab, doesn’t allow purchase of fractional shares of etfs. So if I’m looking to invest in the S&P or NADAQ, my options are mutual funds, like SWPPX and ONEQ, or letting it sit in cash until I have multiples of $350-$400 to get into VOO or QQQ. Am I overthinking this? Should I just jump in with the mutual funds as I DCA my investing? Or is it worth waiting to accumulate for ETFs? And does the answer change if I’m investing in an IRA or Roth IRA versus a regular brokerage account? The difference in return between VOO and SWPPX seems pretty minimal. The difference between ONEQ and QQQ seems more significant.
Index investing basically means your account will just follow something like the S&P500 or the NASDAQ. I.e if you own "ONEQ" (Fidelity's NASDAQ tracking ETF) if the NASDAQ goes up 2% then "ONEQ" will go up 2%. Basically the "index fund tracks the entire index so rather than worrying about individual companies and being high risk you can be extremely diversified and low risk since your account will follow the entire index which in theory never goes to zero and in theory always goes up over a long time scale. Bring up Google finance and look at NASDAQ and set your timeframe to max and you'll understand.
I'm probably going to make a few hundred bucks when the government says something scary - then, if the fear is strong enough, I'm going to go back in bull mode on whatever I feel is safe to buy the dip on. VOO, MSFT, APPL, ONEQ, V, maybe some healthcare - whatever. Really depends on how the PCE comes out, what long-term stocks are in the best position, and, most importantly, how people respond.
better question. VTI vs ONEQ
What is your rationale for QQQ vs. a broader nasdaq index like ONEQ? You just want the lower volatility? Curious
I would start with FXAIX, DJIA, and ONEQ, these three funds try to replicate the SNP500, Dow Jones industrial Average, and the NASDAQ respectively. All three of these portfolios have a expense ratio of 0.015% (FXAOX), 0.21% (ONEQ), and 0.60% (DJIA).
I'm being greedy. Bought some ONEQ, INTC, and RKLB today. Thinking I pick up more F soon. I don't see autos rallying immediately. Waiting for GOOGL to drop a bit more before grabbing some more.
this is wallstreetbets, a short term gambling community, hence the “bets” part. but I’ll answer your question before the mods take down your post. just so you’re aware NDAQ is nasdaq the company. single stocks of one company do not make a great long term portfolio. to invest in the nasdaq composite index if that’s what you meant you’d need ONEQ. but most prefer the top 100 nasdaq stocks which is QQQ. whether that’s a good long term investment or not is debatable. the nasdaq is mostly made up of tech stocks which did great after the dot com bubble and Great Recession when interest rates were super low. but that saying “don’t fight the fed” means these tech companies aren’t looking very attractive anymore now that the fed is raising rates. that being said it might be an opportunity to buy them low after they’ve been beaten down all year but it also might be too early. All that being said, you may want to just go with SPY as a long term investment. most investors and even gamblers can’t beat its returns over the long run.
If you don't know, your core should be around large index funds. A mixture of QQQM and IVV should be good for most. Personally, I have holdings in C, ALLY, PARA, HPQ, BRK.B, META, and CRL. I hold ETFs in VNQ, VNQI, ONEQ (Nasdaq Composite rather than Nasdaq 100).
For some reason i started buying ONEQ instead of QQQ. I don’t remember why
In my view, bonds are relatively more attractive vs. stocks than usual. I’d recommend this. 10% TLT 20% MBB 10% TIP 10% LTPZ 35% SPY 15% ONEQ The first four invest in government or government agency bonds. SPY is an S&P 500 ETF and ONEQ is a NASDAQ ETF. If real yields drop below 1%, cut the bond ETFs by 25% and allocate to SPY. If they go negative, sell 50% and allocate to SPY. If ONEQ doubles, sell 25% and allocate to SPY or bonds if real yields remain above 1%. Some people recommended corporate bond funds. They are attractive options, but there is credit risk, so if you do that, I might allocate a little more to bonds (lower risk) and a little less to stocks (higher risk).
So most people will buy similar but not identical indexes . The IRS hasn't offered a lot of clarity in this case if you can swap SPY for VOO/IVV so right now I do not believe it counts as a wash sale but I am not a CPA. Most people go with a safer route and swap similar but not identical index funds. For example swap SPY for something like VV or SCHX, these two ETFs do not follow the S&P500 but other "large cap" indexes that differ slightly but the returns should be almost identical . I am not sure a good index to swap for QQQ, probably ONEQ although it tracks the entire nasdaq index not just the nasdaq 100, or perhaps a growth or tech ETF Basically if you get audited you might have an easier time arguing wash sale rules shouldn't apply to SPY for VV/SCHX vs SPY for VOO.
If qqq is too concentrated for you look into qqqe or ONEQ. qqq is oneqs top 100 and oneq is 1000+ companies
Index funds and ETFs are different. I also use Fidelity so my brokerage and cash management accounts has a few ETFs between the two of them for stability: FUTY, HDV, DGRO, FTEC, IVV (S&P 500 ETF), and ONEQ. My rollover IRA has FZROX and FNILX with some FSPSX for international exposure. As far as tax liability is concerned, i believe its with what type of account the holdings are in. A lot of my research came from reading investorplace.com. There are a lot of resources online for all levels of trading. One thing i dont do yet are options. I don't understand how they work and until I do its just blind gambling to me.
Since inception ONEQ has done 502%, QQQ has done ~760% in that time.
You could look into ONEQ. qqq is the top 10% of ONEQ
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.
With such a long time horizon, maybe add more growth, and do 80% fxaix, and 20% QQQ (or ONEQ if you want to stay with fidelity funds).
QQQ is more than just tech, it is the Nasdaq top 100 - financials. Currently that turns out to be Nasdaq with a tech lean. Historically it is correlated to the tech sector ETFs, but it is technically more diversified. You bet on QQQ not necessarily for the tech aspect, but because you believe that the top 100 companies in the Nasdaq exchange will be the market winners. For comparison [QQQ = 40/60 ONEQ/FTEC](https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio?s=y&timePeriod=4&startYear=1985&firstMonth=1&endYear=2022&lastMonth=12&calendarAligned=true&includeYTD=false&initialAmount=10000&annualOperation=0&annualAdjustment=0&inflationAdjusted=true&annualPercentage=0.0&frequency=4&rebalanceType=1&absoluteDeviation=5.0&relativeDeviation=25.0&leverageType=0&leverageRatio=0.0&debtAmount=0&debtInterest=0.0&maintenanceMargin=25.0&leveragedBenchmark=false&reinvestDividends=true&showYield=false&showFactors=false&factorModel=3&portfolioNames=false&portfolioName1=Portfolio+1&portfolioName2=Portfolio+2&portfolioName3=Portfolio+3&symbol1=QQQ&allocation1_1=100&symbol2=ONEQ&allocation2_2=40&symbol3=FTEC&allocation3_2=60)
QQQ is more than just tech, it is the Nasdaq top 100 - financials. Currently that turns out to be Nasdaq with a tech lean. Historically it is correlated to the tech sector ETFs, but it is technically more diversified. You bet on QQQ not necessarily for the tech aspect, but because you believe that the top 100 companies in the Nasdaq exchange will be the market winners. For comparison [QQQ = 40/60 ONEQ/FTEC](https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio?s=y&timePeriod=4&startYear=1985&firstMonth=1&endYear=2022&lastMonth=12&calendarAligned=true&includeYTD=false&initialAmount=10000&annualOperation=0&annualAdjustment=0&inflationAdjusted=true&annualPercentage=0.0&frequency=4&rebalanceType=1&absoluteDeviation=5.0&relativeDeviation=25.0&leverageType=0&leverageRatio=0.0&debtAmount=0&debtInterest=0.0&maintenanceMargin=25.0&leveragedBenchmark=false&reinvestDividends=true&showYield=false&showFactors=false&factorModel=3&portfolioNames=false&portfolioName1=Portfolio+1&portfolioName2=Portfolio+2&portfolioName3=Portfolio+3&symbol1=QQQ&allocation1_1=100&symbol2=ONEQ&allocation2_2=40&symbol3=FTEC&allocation3_2=60)
Bought some ONEQ ready to ride it back up sure the market will drop more but I'll ride back past this at some point
Look _CLOSELY_ at wht robos like Wealthfront do, they do not use the same index with the same methodology when swapping. They will go between S&P500 and Russel 1000. There is no objective rule that makes one fund "different" than another and the IRS has refused to clarify the rule. I think the subjective "rule of thumb" is that the methodology of the funds should be different and there should be only, at most, 70% overlap in the major holdings. VTI - SCHB SPY - IWB QQQ - ONEQ Many funds do not have a tax-loss harvesting partner because they have not found a suitable alternative that has the same risk characteristics and a different enough holding strategy.
I'm trying to get some diversified ETF to add to me portfolio and I'm picking between QQQ or ONEQ. QQQ has had much higher growth over it's lifetime yet is down roughly the same amount as ONEQ YTD. Would QQQ also have higher growth going forward? What's the risk of investing in Nasdaq-100 vs the entire Nasdaq index?
I found a good THL combo for QQQ/QQQM if you follow down your comment thread. Use: * 60 % FTEC /VGT * 40 % ONEQ or equivalent Results are almost identical (https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio?s=y&timePeriod=4&startYear=1985&firstMonth=1&endYear=2022&lastMonth=12&calendarAligned=true&includeYTD=false&initialAmount=10000&annualOperation=0&annualAdjustment=0&inflationAdjusted=true&annualPercentage=0.0&frequency=4&rebalanceType=1&absoluteDeviation=5.0&relativeDeviation=25.0&leverageType=0&leverageRatio=0.0&debtAmount=0&debtInterest=0.0&maintenanceMargin=25.0&leveragedBenchmark=false&reinvestDividends=true&showYield=false&showFactors=false&factorModel=3&benchmark=-1&benchmarkSymbol=QQQ&portfolioNames=false&portfolioName1=Portfolio+1&portfolioName2=Portfolio+2&portfolioName3=Portfolio+3&symbol1=FTEC&allocation1_1=100&allocation1_3=60&symbol2=ONEQ&allocation2_2=100&allocation2_3=40), yet each individual fund is hard to match as too similar to QQQ.
Um that actually gave me an idea that works a little too well. Explanation: ONEQ (Nasdaq) and FTEC both follow QQQ with similar but opposite standard deviations to QQQ. So what if you combine them? Well you can indeed swap QQQ by 60/40 FTEC/ONEQ and get about the same perform as seen in [portfolio visualizer] (https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio). Smaller ER too!!!! Damn I'm so going to use this.
ONEQ down 21% YTD and 13% in April that's a good dip. I'm DCA every paycheck