VGI
Virtus Global Multi Sector Income Closed Fund
Mentions (24Hr)
0.00% Today
Reddit Posts
BSEM - BioStem Technologies Reports Third Quarter 2023 Operating and Financial Results
NVVE: Nuvve and Spirii Announce Collaboration to Deploy Vehicle-Grid Integration (VGI) Technology in Scandinavia
Mentions
What about VGI? Has shown smaller swings which may be good in bad markets? Im worried myself that VTI has heavy tech exposure so aren’t you just exposing yourself to the same risk as AMZN? I’m also afraid VTI hasn’t seen bottom yet. VGI stays more stable so for me this drop is making me think about stability a bit more while trying to nibble away at what appear to be good opportunities to get a discount on more expensive tech stocks. Also, I can’t imagine having half my portfolio in a single stock but I’m pretty risk adverse honestly.
I’ve been putting it against ETFs like VGI, SCHD, etc, and you just can’t come close to the CAGR of BRK. The company is so much more than just Buffet. What else am I missing? I don’t like the cash pile just sitting there but I have to imagine they know what they’re doing.
>Digital Advisor charges brokerage accounts an annual gross advisory fee in the amount of 0.20% for an index portfolio option or 0.25% for an active portfolio option.That gross advisory fee is reduced by a credit of the actual revenue The Vanguard Group, Inc. ("VGI"), or its affiliates retain from investments in each enrolled account, resulting in a net advisory fee. The net advisory fee is the actual fee collected from your account(s) and will vary based on your unique asset allocation, portfolio option, account type, and specific holdings in each enrolled account. Note that this fee doesn't include investment expense ratios charged by a fund, such as fees paid to the funds' third-party managers which are not credited. \--Vanguard
It’s a tfsa (tax free savings account) I think it’s the same as like what a Roth ira is to Americans. Would VOO/VGI be similar to QQQ/VTV. And what would lead you to choose one over the other
Overall $BRK.B seems like the best bet, has constantly confirmed the broader market. No maintenance fees. And $VGI. But to contradict this, a lot of the growth is due to foreign invests and trade. And the USAs rise to dominance caused the growth in the investment markets. What could happen when the global share drops below China? Or 2 countries. The GDP and holdings are so massive it feels like this country itself is a bubble.
What happened to your || || |[u/BalerionSanders ](https://click.redditmail.com/CL0/https:%2F%2Fwww.reddit.com%2Fuser%2FBalerionSanders%2F%3F$deep_link=true%26correlation_id=e7817523-d952-42bc-88f2-f59f717cfbea%26ref=email_post_reply%26ref_campaign=email_post_reply%26ref_source=email/3/01000194c698e68f-d950c277-4360-45b3-a71b-568fb43451a1-000000/XRU0Fd0xHIjwB4jFF0H8dx22EFIXVotY4R27GeY_VGI=390) \-1[ votes](https://click.redditmail.com/CL0/https:%2F%2Fwww.reddit.com%2Fr%2FOhio%2Fcomments%2F1ifu2ln%2Fmuch_as_ohio_is_currently_a_hellhole_for_politics%2Fmajjogq%2F%3F$deep_link=true%26correlation_id=e7817523-d952-42bc-88f2-f59f717cfbea%26ref=email_post_reply%26ref_campaign=email_post_reply%26ref_source=email/1/01000194c698e68f-d950c277-4360-45b3-a71b-568fb43451a1-000000/CbRk6HszMpv4oHHEB0HiaIwL1GaXY2GfVVhZd0zQeyk=390)· | |[You say that, but when the ocean floods over the coast into the St. Lawrence and from there into the lakes, and utterly fucks the coast of every Great Lake state, you won’t feel that way ](https://click.redditmail.com/CL0/https:%2F%2Fwww.reddit.com%2Fr%2FOhio%2Fcomments%2F1ifu2ln%2Fmuch_as_ohio_is_currently_a_hellhole_for_politics%2Fmajjogq%2F%3F$deep_link=true%26correlation_id=e7817523-d952-42bc-88f2-f59f717cfbea%26ref=email_post_reply%26ref_campaign=email_post_reply%26ref_source=email/2/01000194c698e68f-d950c277-4360-45b3-a71b-568fb43451a1-000000/HoBalXKUlqmNKgYyPxHG1tmZIk5-Dwts8sISh6yNfXU=390) | comment on my post in the Ohio reddit? I wanted to respond as to how silly that is. If all the ice on the planet melted, we still wouldn't even be close to the ocean reaching Ohio, which, where I live, is around 1100 ft above sea level. If all of the Earth's ice melted, sea levels would rise by approximately 210–230 feet.
Roth IRA, what are or your op I’m 19 and Recently opened a Roth IRA on M1, my etfs(only) are HDV, SCHD,DGRO, JEPI,VGI and VOO. I’m only a year into value investing and these seem to be somewhat beneficial for long term growth. Any advice is appreciated. I currently only invest my taxed brokerage on M1 and do $50 a week to DCA it.
I think the way this works at BLK and VGI is that you get to pick a proxy voting policy for your proportional share of stock to be voted pursuant to. I don’t think we are at the point where you get to cite for, against, abstain any individual proposals at any particular company held by the fund. I think building that out would be a massive waste of resources. People will quickly determine that proxy voting is complicated, boring, and largely pointless and just stop participating altogether. Personally, I pay for the fund manager to handle some things for me. This is one of those things.
So "ownyourfuture" is Vanguard. You can tell by the full website being "[ownyourfuture.**vanguard**.com](https://ownyourfuture.vanguard.com)". I had never heard of "ownyourfuture" before but when you search it that's what you get. On the other hand, "my.vanguardplan" is a third party record keeper called Ascensus. Note the difference: my.**vanguard*****plan***.com Here's the fine print on their page page: >The Vanguard Group, Inc. ("VGI"). VGI has entered into an agreement with **Ascensus, LLC. to provide certain plan recordkeeping** and administrative services on VGI’s behalf.
SPHD, SDIV, VTI, BND, VYM, VIG, RDVY, also VGI income fund
Vanguard Marketing Corporation, a broker, is the only VGI-owned SIPC member. https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/217448/000021744822000002/vmcpubsofc2021sec.pdf It’s audited by PwC and supervised by the SEC. As others have explained funds are separate legal entities and are also audited. Funds generally are not allowed to incur loans and therefore not prone to failing, even though asset values obviously may decline.
> Also, something else I was wondering is what would happen to my investments if the company which offers the fund goes down? Am I safe in that scenario? As far as I understand it, with a typical financial service corp (the fund issuer), in the highly unlikely event they go bust, your funds will usually either be transferred to a different company (more likely), or returned to you the investor as cash (less likely). Your funds are not actually held by the fund issuer themselves but by an intermediary custodian (typically a well protected big bank). In addition to the above and specifically in the case of Vanguard, going bust is short of impossible due to the unique ownership structure of the company. [I'll quote from the Bogleheads wiki for this one](https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Vanguard_safety): >First, The Vanguard Group Inc. (VGI) is actually a subsidiary of the various mutual funds, each of which is a separate legal entity. The best way to describe Vanguard's unique structure would be to think of General Motors turned upside down, with Chevrolet, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, etc. as the corporate parents, and General Motors as a subsidiary. If you think of Chevrolet, Cadillac, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, and the other GM divisions as mutual funds, and General Motors (the subsidiary, in this situation) as Vanguard Group Inc., you'll get the picture. > >Since VGI is actually owned and funded by the various mutual funds, for all practical purposes, it won't go bankrupt unless all of the various mutual funds that support it went bankrupt. The only way that could happen would be for the value of all of the stocks and/or bonds held by each and every individual Vanguard mutual fund to go to zero. So, forget about Vanguard going bankrupt -- it just isn't going to happen.
Yes sir. Gobbling up VTI, VGI, and VYM
I'm so confused lmao. VIG doesn't pay monthly and VGI Is just a 10% div stock that tries to not lose money.
I'm buying up VGI. Cheaper and still pays out the monthly dividend.
Saving for our next house we probably wont be buying for another 5+ years, wondering what to do with the funds in the mean time. Doing my own DD in to CDs/Bonds/the Big Index Funds but curious if anyone had any insight I might miss. Already fairly invested in a lot of the more run of the mill stocks and funds (VGI/SPY/FANG/Tech Industry/Energy). Was maybe looking towards commodities or if I should go really conservative instead. Wife and I work full time and make low six figures after taxes. Thinking of starting a family as well toward the end of the year/start of next year. Currently it's just parked in our normal savings account which is a measly .01%. Already have 10k for an emergency fund which will stay there, just wonder where to go from here. Thanks!
LOL Well done sir. Yes he has a proven track record with SPCE, and taking ME public via VGI which was trading the other day in the 7s I believe. I'm a bit familiar as I'm underwater SPCE currently by about $70,000 but managed to get out of VGI and ME before losing much. I hadn't paid too much to the fact I had a few of these warrants left for this. But as I type this at 3:46 pm EST they are down %15.57 percent ...Run away.
VTI, VOO, VGI, and VYM are my personal favorite Vanguard funds
But hey, at least I can throw $25 dollars a week towards TMUS and VGI. I'll get some profit soon.tm ;'(
>What if the brokerage (etrade) goes bankrupt? Is it all gone? No. Another brokerage firm will likely come along and scoop up the assets of the insolvent firm, and deposit them into accounts with that institution. >What about firm that runs VOO? https://www.mymoneyblog.com/what-if-vanguard-or-fidelity-went-bankrupt.html#:~:text=If%20the%20fund%20company%20goes,set%20up%20as%20client-owned.&text=(VGI)%20is%20actually%20a%20subsidiary,is%20a%20separate%20legal%20entity.