SCHD
Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF
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Would it be a bad idea investing in the same investments in a Roth IRA and a regular brokerage account?
VIG and SCHD, which one should be in my retirement and which one should be in my regular brokerage?
Hypothetical Margin dividend investing (currency exchange + loan)
Anyone in the know about Mission Square retirement(MSQ)?
Late to the party and new to dividend investing. Let me know what you think of my mix. I know I have overlap and probably too many, so any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. JEPI, JEPQ, JEPY, QQQY, SPLG, DIVG, SCHD and YYMI.
Investment choices for Backdoor Roth IRA from broker
What are some funds that are good for the long term?
Roth IRA investment, 45 years old, VOO AVUV SCHD .. Suggest me please
30 year old. What's got the greatest possible potential for returns? TQQQ?
Now that 2023 is coming to an end. Let’s hear your biggest loss story…
Dump in large amount or slowly add into holdings?
When opening a Roth is there any difference or benefit to opening one with a more traditional more established company (Fidelity, Jp Morgan, etc) compared to one like Robinhood?
Investing brokerage accounts for my kids and nieces - best course of action?
Will shit hit the fan in 2024?
What fund would you add to my portfolio to start easing out of bonds?
What are your thoughts on this Roth IRA portfolio breakdown?
100% VOO vs 33.3% VOO, 33.3% VUG, and 33.3% SCHD?
Should I buy Take Two Interactive stock low (company that makes GTA VI) and sell upon its release?
First time maxing out Roth contribution. Give me a super basic, set it and forget it, distribution
Why not sell VOO/SCHD type of holdings when they’re up?
If the price of underlying assets rise, does the price of an ETF like VTI also rises?
What foreign stock should I invest in my IRA?
Thoughts on investment portfolio that I'm considering?
50/50 SCHG and SCHD a good plan for 30/yo DINK (kids soon)
Instead of purchasing a home - investing in a high dividend yield stock?
Got Stuck Holding 220 TSLA shares at $296
45 y/o way behind/ mistakes made/ ex screwed me/ catching up/ should i give up
Are you planning a strategy change for nearing retirement?
Down 11% on taxable account. Planning on buying a house in the next 2.5-3 years. Should I sell or change strategies?
33% SCHD, 33% FSKAX ( Fidelity US Market Index ) 33% FSPSX ( Fidelity International Market Index ) at 21 years old for standard brokerage account?
How can I tune my portfolio in the future or now to help keep up good growth?
Why not S&P all the way? Why split between total market and the S&P?
Portfolio Review and Strategy in Times of Uncertainty - Seeking Advice
Just transferred my workplace 401k to a brokerage 401k and trying to make the most of it
2 year portfolio in my mid 20s any advice is appreciated.
23 year old looking for advice on where to place short term savings
I need a recommendation for a fund for the long term
Vanguard roth won't let me set up auto investment to SCHD
Mentions
If you want to feel some immediate gains without liquidation there are a healthy number of CEFs, BCDs, dividend ETF and if you’re a bit more risk average covered call funds that can provide modest growth and income. This is of course a complement to your core investments that you’ll be compounding. Not investment advice but I’ve been keeping my eye on some of these: MAIN, ADX, TRIN, GPIX, IDVO, SCHD, FDVV and DGRW. This isn’t a portfolio, just a watchlist you can start researching on to see what you like. At least for me, having a portion of my investment payout in dividends allowed me to feel the immediate benefits without the long wait till retirement age.
Yeah then I would focus on low cost broad ETFs. But I would also suggest thinking about when you want to retire and how much you would need to have to be able to retire. This will help guide what ETFs you want to buy. But you can never go wrong with broad market or S&P500. It also might be worth it to start looking into DCA into some dividend paying ETFs like SCHD to help prep for retirement. As long as you understand the tax implications
If you don't care about investing, put it into a couple ETFs like VOO, SCHD, or VXUS. (There are plenty of others if you care to learn, but these are fine.) Then just let it sit and make money for you over the long term. If you are very wise you will start putting some money in there from every paycheck, up to 20% of your pay. You won't regret it.
There is FIRE. Retire early. But yes, its fine to do your due diligence and make “bets”. Plenty of stocks out there. Invest in etfs and have some small allocations to moonshot stocks. Not random biotechs, but companies with a future. If you want, theres also 2-3x leveraged etfs. 1.5-2x is ideal but this can help a lot. Instead of say, 100% in VT/VOO - you could do 50% on a 2x leveraged etf of it and 50% can be allocated to somewhere else(SCHD, moonshots, bonds etc). A lot of options. But like I said, research FIRE. Increase your savings rate and you dont have to wait 30-40 years.
Grandma did you right! But, rebalance it. Half the portfolio should not be in one security. While I don't adhere to best practices, a single holding should be limited to 5% of a portfolio. If you need time to figure it out but still want the money to be working. Reduce each stock holdings to 5%, and invest the cash in a distribution of SCHD, SCHX, and a bond ETF or find a decent 1-3 year CD. That should give you enough diversity to let it sit while you learn fundamentals of investing. At the end of the day, you're 21 and have plenty of time to see through any market volatility. You're starting in a really good position for the rest of your life. Don't stress too much about it.
Honestly I have TRIED to reduce my holding percentage of it several times and it keeps rising to the top. This Includes a portfolio that had even parts 20% of TSLA, SCHD, BST, and CII. Tesla continually reaches the 25% of holdings while the others stay in the 20% range.
Sell Tesla and put in an S&P ETF like SPY or VOO. Could also go with a dividend etf like SCHD. Whatever ETF you go for, make sure you turn on DRIP. Its a Dividend ReInvestment Program. Helps your money compound faster. You will have capital gains taxes to pay, but its worth doing imo. You should also open a ROTH IRA. You can contribute $7k towards 2025 until 4/15/26, and you can also contribute for 2026 as well. So maybe sell $15k worth, move it to a ROTH IRA, and buy the ETFs there. Roth IRA let's your money grow tax free, but the downside is that you can really use the money until you are much older. However, being 21, you can slowly move these funds into a Roth IRA, and hit Coast FIRE by the time your 25-30.
read r/Dividends SCHD is very popular there. Research dividend aristocrats Research dividend kings My first DRP(dividend reinvestment plan) was in AWK, America's largest water utility which is about to get even larger with the take under of WTRG.
same i have a lot of SCHD, VIG and VIGI as well
Buy ETF VOO about 80% and SCHD about 20%. This is more reliable portfolio.
SCHD's historical max drawdown is identical to S&P500
That’s why I been doing SCHD it’s safe and can absorb market crashes to some extent in events like these
SCHD is actually my highest returner YTD. Which is nice ig?
SCHD, VOO, QQQ and QQQI combo
Looking to invest recently inherited $380k. I want to protect money, have potential for growth with market, but want to hedge against AI bubble and valuation risks. Please rate my portfolio $110k Berkshire Hathaway $80k SCHD $50k VT $100k SGOV $40k XOM
SCHD has a PE of 18 which is kind of crazy for a "value" etf.
I've been adding to VTV & SCHD much heavier the last 12 mos.
Get rid of SCHD. Understand why you're weighted into tech. We can tell you just came from tiktok because every new investor who comes from tiktok has this exact portfolio distribution. First thing you should learn is to not take investing advice from tiktok. You can learn the mechanics, but not what to invest in. Sure, there are good advice on there, but they probably aren't at the top of the results since you all end up with this same portfolio.
I am 17, living in the US. I have around 30k and am deciding how to allocate it among ETFs and individual stocks. I should make around 17k this year, so I am going to max out my Roth IRA. This is how I currently plan to allocate my money, any thoughts or suggestions? |Brokerage|Cash|Roth IRA 2026|Individual Stocks| |:-|:-|:-|:-| |28,000|2,500|$7,500|250$ PLTR| |6,000 VXUS|||200$ Meta| |12,000 VTI|||50$ Lockheed Martin| |5,000 QQQ|||200$ NVIDIA| |4,000 SCHD|||| |1,000 Individual Stocks||
Nothing wrong per se with this portfolio. I'd recommend a little more international and no SCHD in a taxable account. But it's not a killer. Do you have a Roth IRA? That may make more sense for these assets if you intend to hold them for the long term.
I’m 25 living in the US. I have around 74k in my 401k, an emergency fund & around 15k in a brokerage account. Can someone give me feedback on my current brokerage portfolio please? I’m high risk tolerant & I have no purpose for these funds yet. This is an account I toss money towards each month from whatever is left over. $15,000 total 70% SCHB 15% SCHF 5% SCHD 5% Gold 5% Bitcoin
I got the perfect portfolio for you buy every single week. No matter if it’s $10 $20 $40 whatever you can afford buy the same amount every week and you will be fine also if you are trying to set it up for retirement just buy on a Roth IRA account pay for gold and get the extra 3% match VOO 24% QQQM 24% ARKK 15% ARKX 15% NUKZ 12% SCHD 10%
VOO,SPY,QQQ,SCHD,SPYI,QQQI,IDVO,SGOV,O, and CHPY. 10% in each. Growth with VOO,SPY,QQQ,SCHD and IDVO. Income with some growth with SPYI,QQQI and CHPY(as of now no NAV decay at all.)SGOV bond exposure plus it’s extremely safe and pays monthly. O gives you exposure to real estate. Yes there is some overlap but each one does it a bit differently. Something likes this is my ideal portfolio. If I was still in my 20’s and able to invest.
Do you own DD, buy since you asked. These have been the most stable for me. WMT - Walmart MDT - Medtronic SCHD - Schwab US Dividend Equity ETF
I would literally just do some mix of VOO, VTI, VXUS, SCHD and QQQM
SCHD could dump 10% and still be doing better than SPY the last 3 months.
It’s a Roth. There is no need to do it little by little, lol. You doing the right thing, Vug. If you want the SCHD to replace the bond portion, that would be cool. But that’s not what you said you were doing. In brokerage just buy weekly and auto. Don’t panic sell, and you are home free. You’re doing great though!!
Thank lol. I've actually been selling my position of SCHD in the Roth.
Why is ANYTHING in stable fund in 401k? There is no need for SCHD in a ROTH unless income is currently the goal (which it shouldnt be). You are doing great though! Spend less, invest more auto, sell only when there is an urgent expense to pay for. What will you be doing in your retirement? What will you be spending? That is what tells you if you can afford to retire or not. Male or female kind of matters also, women live much longer. Best of luck!
Dam then it costs me 10 shares, or it’s 3 shares of AMD the logic still stands, on the pre-requisite you are going to still get your salary, Microsoft was just an example. Let’s say SPY or SCHD lol.
A bleak life is awesome in my book. I need sone SCHD in my life.
To generate ~$500/month right away (without waiting or reinvesting), you’re looking at roughly $176,000 to $182,000 invested in SCHD, assuming the current ~3.3–3.5% yield holds steady and dividends aren’t cut. With leverage you need roughly $92,000.00
I knew when they banned me from SCHD chat it was probably time to buy. 😂
How’s everyone handling that if you just put your money in SCHD you’d be up 13.99% in 45 days?
Hey everyone, i've been really kicking around two different investment strategies for the next 20 years to build wealth and create passive income, and wanted some input on both- an initial $10k investment in high dividend stocks (either VZ or GAIN) and then DRIPing and a constant $500 a month investment vs a diversified ETF Strategy with the same initial investment and monty contribution. The strategy would be 60% VTI, 30% VOO, and 10% VUG. To offset the dividend income gap, i'd switch that over to 50% SCHD and 50% JEPI towards the last few years. I have a high risk tolerance, which is why I don't mind putting it all in a single stock vs diversification. All this to say: which have you seen be more successful- Dividend investing or ETFs for long term wealth?
Investing part of the cash will generate more future wealth, and you can always keep part in cash (SGOV, etc) for emergencies. If you put part into growth, like IVV, QQQ, SPY, IYM, etc, some into dividends like VIG, VYM, SCHD, or such, and then keep adding to it as you can. But you will earn 2000+ a year with any luck, and still have some cash for emergencies. But it will not ay the entire rent any time soon.
If you're saying that you only have 6 more years to invest and are needing to start withdrawing that money in that time, I would sell off some of your high risk holdings (at a profit) or at least have an exit strategy for these (stop loss or trailing stop loss limit orders). Start looking into investing into income and dividend positions instead of high risk growth. SCHD is a major part of my portfolio and although the returns don't look as sexy as SPY and QQQ (which I also hold because my risk tolerance is high and time horizon long), the plan is to buy hold forever, and live off the dividend income in about 20 years. The S&P 500 is overvalued and a correction is inevitable at some point. I think we're seeing the earl warning signs now \* this is not financial advice ;)
1 SCHD is for over 40you need growth 2 i like QQQM for long term hold QQQ is for trading 3 replace SCHD with international I like VXUS but other are good also
honestly you’re already doing a lot right. getting the full employer match and investing consistently at 20 is a huge advantage by itself, so you’re ahead of most people. the only thing i’d point out is overlap. VOO and QQQ already have a lot of the same big tech names, so you’re pretty concentrated in large-cap growth whether you realize it or not. SCHD adds some dividend exposure but it’s still mostly US large caps. not necessarily bad, just something to be aware of. also your 401k being a target date fund already gives you broad diversification and automatic rebalancing, so you don’t necessarily need to get too fancy in the Roth IRA unless you want a specific tilt. if your goal is simple long-term retirement investing, honestly the biggest factor is just keeping contributions high and sticking with it. allocation tweaks matter way less than consistency over the next 30–40 years.
Could you explain the investment strategy and goal? Especially if this is a multi-decade investment horizon, SCHD and SCHH in particular are strange choice. Dividends should not generally be a focal point of a long term buy and hold strategy. Further, you hold VT, SPYM, and IXUS. In this structure, it looks like you’ve just constructed VT with extra steps and a greater expense ratio than necessary. Now there is actual merit to AVUV. However, to explain this we need to examine something called the five factors. This is something I am not qualified to explain myself and I will link a good video to it below. HOWEVER, in your case and in the nicest way possible, I don’t think YOU even know why you are considering AVUV. https://youtu.be/jKWbW7Wgm0w?si=bEOUZaF8xeW0RF6k The crypto funds… Again, I have to ask why you want these. What are these achieving that you don’t get from stocks? Are these just an attempt at diversification or held for another reason? Also people are talking about bonds bad in reference to your SGOV allocation. They make little sense here considering the high risk profile of the rest of the portfolio. Typically, investments in cash or bonds are used to lower a portfolio’s risk profile. You’re trading returns for safety. Even at a 5% yield, this is not a great decision. This video gets into it here. https://youtu.be/KdzOlRRHOU8?si=XXViK6zbiFVz9pXb Lastly, could you please explain your investment goal and/or how you even got to this set of funds? I would like to know the story here.
Yes but in this case, SCHD has qualified dividends AND low expense ratio. I love that and it makes me want to buy more.
I agree with dividends at 26 years old being a no, but not even SCHD? I like the whole idea of accumulating enough to where the yield pays for the stock itself and buys more shares. Nonetheless, thank you for your advice! All advice is taken into consideration.
I obsessively study every SEC report line by line…. Just kidding, 50/50 SCHD and SMH and never look back.
SCHD will pay a qualified dividend...
That all sounds fine in general. I wouldn't have too much allocated to SCHD at age 20. If it's more than 30% of your Roth, I'd probably trim it down to 10% and split the proceeds between VOO and QQQ.
Source: 26 year old machine learning engineer My strategy is simply buying lots of AVGV with a 20 percent SCHD tilt in my Roth, and 50/50 VT/AVGE in my two taxable accounts for a business launch in 3 to 5 years and a retirement bridge in 20 years respectively. My reasoning for this is I am a big Fama-French believer, and my intuition about AI is lining up. Big tech was/is up as people try and get a piece of the pie, but long term AI gains will be locked in as it is horizontally integrated across industries and small companies' margins jump.
Since you're getting different perspectives here, let me add some practical context: The overlap between VOO/QQQ/SCHD is real - you're basically triple-weighting Apple, Microsoft, etc. For tax efficiency in your Roth, I'd lean toward gradually rebalancing rather than selling everything at once (though in tax-advantaged accounts, this matters less). On international: historically, having 20-30% international helps with risk-adjusted returns. The US has crushed it for 15+ years, but cycles change. Something like VTIAX or VTI+VXUS gives you that global diversification without the complexity. The "keep it simple" crowd has a point too - 100% VOO isn't terrible at your age. Your 401k target date fund already gives you some international exposure anyway. Bottom line: any of these approaches beats not investing at all. Pick something you understand and stick with it. You can always evolve your strategy as you learn more. The consistency matters more than perfect optimization.
Switch target date to sp500 fund. Put as much in there as early as you can. Don’t be afraid to do a little Roth 401k early on at your age. Ditch the SCHD. You can switch it later in that Roth when needed. Do at least 25/week VOO auto in a taxable in a place like Fidelity. It’s a good habit. Spend less, invest more auto. Don’t panic sell. That’s all anyone needs to know.
Thank you I appreciate the advice👍should I sell out of all my QQQ and SCHD and move the money into VOO? Or what if I did VOO and then an international fund?
A good number of SCHD is inside VOO as well. The 3 fund portfolio is a bit of a misnomer, the number of funds matters less than having 3 main areas covered (I can design a 3 fund portfolio concept using anywhere from 1 to about 7 funds with little to no overlap - your target date funds in the 401K is one example of the 1 fund setups). VOO could be used for the US role, but you'd have zero international (which can be beneficial to both returns and volatility compared to US only) and zero bonds or similar (which may be fine while young, if you can truly stomach the volatility of 100% stocks). One example (out of many possible) of a 3 fund portfolio using ETFs would be VTI (US stocks) + VXUS (international stocks) + BND (bonds).
Thank you I appreciate the advice👍should I sell out of all my QQQ and SCHD and move the money into 100% VOO or just leave it? And going forward put everything into VOO
You're doing great for 20! Getting that full match is priority #1, so good call there. Honestly, the advice about SCHD is worth considering. At your age, you've got 40+ years until retirement - that's massive compounding time. I backtested dividend strategies vs growth over long periods and the numbers don't lie: growth tends to win over decades, especially when you factor in dividend taxes (even in tax-advantaged accounts, you want maximum appreciation). That said, don't stress too much about "perfect" allocation. The most important thing is you're actually investing 15% total, which puts you way ahead of most people your age. If you want to simplify: 100% VOO in the Roth IRA isn't terrible. Yeah, it's US-heavy, but at 20 you can afford the volatility for potentially higher returns. You can always add international later as you learn more. The target date fund in your 401k gives you some diversification anyway, so you're not totally concentrated. Keep doing what you're doing - consistency beats perfection every time.
I wouldn't use a single one of those funds. VOO comes closest, but I tend to prefer total market style over S&P 500 only. On including QQQ(M): Remember this has heavy overlap (over 80% by count) with the S&P 500 or US total market. Look only at the inclusion criteria, not past returns (as they’re a terrible way to judge future returns, at least in the way most people tend to believe). Do they make sense to you? Does it make sense to over weight these stocks based on the inclusion criteria of the index? They don’t to me, I view it as complete nonsense. On QQQ(M) and/or SCHD: * My take: https://www.reddit.com/r/Bogleheads/comments/16qosmi/including_qqqm_and_schd_in_a_portfolio/ * As Kashmir79 put it: https://www.reddit.com/r/Bogleheads/comments/16qo9u8/comment/k1ynubb/ * As engineer-investor put it: https://www.reddit.com/r/Bogleheads/comments/16qk8i4/comment/k1y480k/ * As Sea-Promotion8870 and ImaginationGreen3873 put it (read their comments from the entire chain): https://www.reddit.com/r/ETFs/comments/16e6rkb/comment/jzttlzx/ Consider this: https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Three-fund_portfolio The bonds are the part that adjust volatility level (if you really can stomach 100% stock, they can even be set to 0%, however not everyone is actually able to tolerate 100% stock). More bonds should equal less volatility. Alternatively, a target date (index) fund or target allocation (index) fund are effectively the 3 fund concept in a single wrapper, managed for you. They are designed to be "one and done," the only thing you hold. They're fully diversified internally for you. These can be found with expense ratios as low as 0.08%-0.12% for the Fidelity, iShares, Schwab, and Vanguard index based ones. The target date and target allocation funds typically are not recommended for taxable accounts but are fine for tax advantaged. VT (2 letters)/VTWAX would cover both stock roles in one fund. Did you happen to get your portfolio from YouTube?
Unfortunately a target fund is all my employer offers that's why I only invest up to my match.can you expand on why I shouldn't invest in SCHD?
QQQ literally up less than SCHD on the day. QQQ down 2% for the last 3 months. SCHD up 16%.
I keep hearing Bears are cooked, but ya'll getting baited so hard. It's just more dumping tech and speculative stocks on retail while institution keeps buying bonds, oil, and staples as they're just waiting for the moment everyone finally figures it out. SCHD has twice the gains on the day as SPY. But do keep picking up those bags.
SCHD and JEPI are a vibe rn.
Ngl I watched SCHD slide at 25-26 for three months straight. I wouldn’t have seen this one coming.
First time seeing actual options on SCHD.
SGOV. SCHD. Some simple VOO. You will make more mistakes with that money than the cost of hiring a good pro. But first move is generally a Fidelity account and SGOV while you figure it out. That’s a panic sell, FYI. Best of luck.
I don't think the short term return is relevant, especially for SCHD which is meant to be a long term retirement vehicle. The performance figures over the last 12 months aren't really relevant to the issue of tax drag. Anyway, over time, SCHD will be dramatically eclipsed by growth. Dividends compound if reinvested, but in a taxable account, each dividend payment is immediately taxed. That tax reduces the amount that can be reinvested, slowing compounding. In contrast, growth stock gains that aren’t realized as dividends aren’t taxed until you sell, so the full appreciation stays invested and compounds faster over time. Over a long horizon, this compounding effect can be huge. Even if a high-dividend fund outperforms in a single year, a growth fund with the same pre-tax return will almost always end up with more wealth in the long run, exactly because you can avoid the repeated annual tax bill. Taxes on dividends are a real cost that compounds against you. In other words: all else equal, growth generally beats dividends over long periods purely because it sidesteps tax drag. Short-term outperformance of a dividend fund doesn’t negate that principle. The point is, OP is too young to be falling into the dividend trap.
SCHD hardly moves you probably want to try options on something more volatile
lol wtfff options on SCHD this has got to be the dumbest post I’ve ever seen.
He is paying taxes on the dividends, but not on the growth of the SCHD. It´s not like share price increases of growth stock would compound over time as his dividends do if he reinvests them, and they do so faster than the opportunity cost of the taxes. SCHD is up 13,35 % over the last year. Plus 3,62 % for the dividends he handsomely beats the 14,69 % the S&P made in the last 12 months - despite paying his taxes. Now this is a snapshot today, but he has found an asset that is less risky and currently better performing than owning the S&P. The comments demeaning him only show that some people are very quick to judge without checking the facts.
Long calls on SCHD was not on my 2026 bingo card
Idk why people are buying SCHD at this level. Even if you have 500k worth you aren't making near enough passive income to retire, eat, leisure and pay bills.
18 years old....oh man if I would have done it over it again (I am 40 now) dont finance a car, instead drop that into an index fund. Dont worry about the crashes and money loss. You have YEARRRRSS ahead of you. Get out of the get money fast scheme, its gambling. I would drop in VOO/SCHD/VXUS equally - fast forward 20 years you will thank me
How old are you? SCHD/ other dividends are for losers, unless you are over 50.
I don't understand how you think that protects you from tax drag. Sell the SCHD and put it all in SCHG, the dividends are costing you money.
Look at it this way, you have saved over $5,600! That's a milestone. Reinvesting the dividends will lead to compounding dividends. Also I tell people to look at their return based on their cost basis not the current value so if you bought when SCHD was lower priced then your yield is actually higher since what you paid to get that yield is lower.
3.5K in SPY 3.5k in SCHD, 3K in GLD. Wait for 5 years to see the outcome
I sold all my SCHD this year oops
SCHD up 15% YTD? Holy rotation
Hello OP, I'm a CFA/CFP/CIM managing a pretty large capital portfolio. I'm not a psychologist, but I can give you some insight behind the psychology of money after having dealt with thousands of people from various backgrounds. Although money can invoke strong emotions, it is ultimately a tool of comfort. Having it won't make you happy, and not having it will not make you sad (as long as your basic needs are being met). Some of the richest people I've ever met are the most miserable. Some of the happiest live paycheck to paycheck. It sounds like whatever is going on in your life will not be solved with money. But one thing I've always tried to remember for myself is that; there will always be someone with more than you. As is often quoted in this sub "comparison is the thief of joy". The fact you even know what SCHD is and are interested in getting dividends puts you ahead of a large portion of the population. Most people have no investments at all, and even less understand what an ETF is. There's probably billions of less fortunate people who would risk their life for a small chance of living yours. Don't take it for granted.
As I mentioned upthread, I also own 16 shares of SCHG, planning to accumulate even more of that. In addition to my SCHD, I understand the importance of growth stocks as well.
It might just be time to hang up the cleats and invest in SCHD
U mean SCHD and BRK B, correct?
Good work OP, I suggest reinvesting all dividends, as well as trying to get this into your Roth or traditional IRA. SCHD is a solid place to park money in those, you may not see risky growth but you won’t lose your head either.
My SCHD has overtaken my SPY lol
Research ETFs and Index investing , set it and forget it. You are are18 years old, Penny stocks are basically gambling for you!!! that 1845$ could go to zero if fully invested in penny stocks. Look into SCHD ,VTI, VOO, REIT, bonds (BND) and diversify with like international ETF. You can also buy some individual stocks like HOOD, BE, PLTR, RBLX, Apple, Amazon, or Microsoft. Pepsi, KO, Solid business. forget about the bubble , market will adjust and correct eventually..... You could also consider Joby or Archer if you’re interested in emerging technology, but only after doing proper research. They’re still speculative, but way better than whatever you’re doing with penny stocks. For the love of God or the universe, whatever you believe in , sell your penny stocks and invest accordingly. With your high-yield savings account already in place, you can focus this account on growth ETFs and index funds instead.
100k in JEPI / SCHD - and chill
Optimism? Any small or mid cap has been getting crushed and even extending to companies like Microsoft. SCHD is 10x VT lately
SCHD would be my best suggestion. 3.3% dividend but it's long term a good bet.
What’s funny is the SCHD has a higher PE now than MSFT or META.
ytd SCHD = +15.35% VTI = +1.85% Might be the first time i've seen SCHD lead VTI by this much.
SCHD and ASML are the only reasons im not drowning this year
Yeah it’s cooked chat SCHD boomer stock up 15% YTD pack it up
I have 2 holdings in my Fidelity account. 1/3 is 2 month T bills that I auto roll and 2/3rds is VT where I reinvest dividends. I do have a few other holdings (SCHG, SCHD, SCHY) in my IRA but that’s mostly VT as well. Am I missing out on anything? Not sure as the bogleheads and fire forums seem to promote this kind of investing.
I can see why a billionaire would think money can’t buy happiness. $2million would make me the happiest person in the world. I’d invest it all in SCHD, make $75k/year passively, and actually enjoy my life instead of slaving away 40 hours per week during the best years of my life
Long hold on a lot of LUMN at $5, expecting big things from SLS (been there since it was $1.5). Gambling a decent chunk on POET. Holding a few other things but also weighting heaving in SGOV and SCHD because things are feeling funky.
I get the appeal of SCHD for the dividend focus, but VTI already gives you broad exposure. Since you've got the S&P 500 in your 403B, I'd personally keep a mix so I'm not leaning too hard on just dividends or just growth. That way you've got balance between income and long term compounding.
SCHD is arguably a defensive position if you believe in turbulent roads ahead, so the last ten years isn't a great indicator while you have chuds like Navarro on Fox Business today saying that the jobs report coming out should have us "revise our expectations down significantly for what a monthly job number should look like."
Not one tech company had bad earnings. Essentially all beat. The capex threw people off and many think tech is at the top. People are cycling out of US and tech. Which is very much why SPY is flat while SCHD, IWM, DIA, Canada, Asia and etc are way up. Look around.