VIS
Vanguard Industrials Index Fund ETF Shares
Mentions (24Hr)
0.00% Today
Reddit Posts
NEVIS A Uniquely Profitable Consumer Brands Company Operating In The Cannabis Space (CSE: NEVI)
VOO + VTI vs. QQQM + QQQJ + VTI... 20+ year long term portfolio (DD)
VOO + VTI vs. QQQM + QQQJ + VTI... 20+ year long term portfolio (DD)
VO (midcap) with QQQJ (nasdaq 100-200) too much midcap.
U.S. 10 Year Treasury Yield vs Vanguard ETFs - Most Recent 1 Year Period Growth Chart
Mentions
My SPYS telling me nooo, but my VIX IS, my VIS is telling me yesss
I bought just under 50 shares of $VIS
US, early 30s. Individual brokerage account aimed at long term horizon (have separate 401k heavy on s&p500). Please rate my ETF portfolio which currently has an even spread of the following. What can I do better? Any other market sectors I should look into? Thanks! XME XAR VIS VDE VDC VB VOO SMH IAUM SIVR
LiDAR is a crutch to compensate for poor vision based AI. For truly automated driving, the AI needs to be able to identify and navigate irregularities based on vision, not LiDAR. For my biomedical engineering work, we use ToF because it's easier and we have a controlled environment, but the quality of data from a ToF array is nowhere near that of VIS. Humanoid robots are cool, but precursor technology in batteries is insufficient for economical application. Also, as much reddit hates Tesla, hardcore leftists aren't as big of a demographic as people assume. Most people don't give a shit about politics, and the Model Y was like 4th in overall sales last year despite the controversy. Logically, I feel that BYD and Chinese auto groups are bound to dominate internationally, but at the same time there are a lot of geopolitical limitations on the automotive industry. Every country has heavy protectionism of their domestic auto groups. With the US moving towards protectionism, it's likely that Tesla will remain the largest EV company in the US, which is by far the most lucrative consumer market.
Hvor er de EKTE eurorich folk? VIS DERE SELV
I've been buying $VIS like crazy. They're little talked about, but lots of heavy hitting industrial companies that will benefit from deregulation
I have 5 core holdings in my long term account, ITA, VIS, XLK, XLF, BRK.B. I don’t actively trade them, just buy and hold. In my small brokerage account I mainly buy puts or calls on stocks I think overbought or oversold. I use Finviz to screen and find them, or just scroll through tickers I’m already very familiar with. I try to stay up to date with news and data but not obsessively.
Time to but VNQ and VIS. Lets get to rebuilding
Oh no, sorry. I meant U.S. stocks only. The interesting thing is TBIX and the CEO of the other Canadian company I really like, VIS, actually know each other (unknown to me until I brought it up). I think they can work together as TBIX has the agriscience and one of VIS' subsidiaries makes greenhouses and both have a passion for food security and independence for our native population in Canada. Which is a big issue here because of where they live they have bad growing conditions and produce is far away. So usually what they have access to is expensive and of poor quality. I think this could be a spectacular business model both $ wise and how these companies are perceived in the market.
My man JSmith! I commented a thank you for NISN on your first LODE post. I now post a thank you for LODE and VIS.X…3/3 right now. Here is my record right now on JSmith posts: NISN - took a 2500 share position @ $9 on fundamentals. Margin of safety here is unreal. With a P/E ratio of 2 Ben Graham himself would approve. I perceive this play as deep value in the Buffet sense. That’s why a higher conviction play for me. Results - up 25% and holding until $25+ will sell in tranches of 500 shares LODE - took a more conservative 33,000 share position @ $0.17. I felt the margin of safety not there…with the potential that if they do not fulfill one of the requirements of the financing milestones stock price could crater. Results - up a whopping 61% since purchasing after your LODE to MAXN share to share post. VIS.X - at least that’s how I buy it on the TSX but I’m Canadian. Did very little DD and said: well this worked twice before and bought a 15,000 share position at $0.36 when it was down this morning. Results - up 25%….today Keep the great posts and DD coming JSmith Appreciate it and kind of wish I was a crazier investor…especially with LODE…but if you keep the long shot bets smaller and the sure thing bets bigger: in my opinion NISN and also SIRI right now…I feel Buffet bought 96M shares Q2 not for a squeeze but after the arbitrage play then SIRI will hit fair market value of $5 within perhaps 2-3 months. In any case: appreciate you JSmith. Big gains so far. NISN going to $25+ though.
Leveraged short ETFs is the way to go right now with VIX as high as it is. Your options get super IV fucked when VIS is above 20
Anyone invested in VIS? It’s the Vanguard Industrials ETF. Any thoughts on it?
If you want to take broader strokes rather than targeting just single companies: * VDC - Consumer staples * VIS - Industrials * VDE - Energy * Treasuries
VIS rising. Get out now
Tips and critique welcome- where is the overlap Hello! I’m new to investing and am still playing with my strategy. I’m interested in a set and forget approach and contribute equally to each position held. Initially I had planned on having a position in each sector of market; industrial, commodity, consumer, financial and utilities. I think I might be overthinking my spread a bit and have developed some overlap. I’d appreciate any critique or tips to help tighten my portfolio. CALM 2.51 CWCO 5.11 DXJ 0.11 RIO 2.41 SCHD 2.07 VFH .25 VIS .44 VOO .76 VST 2.05
I am looking to add exposure to US industrials, given that pursuing industrial policy (reshoring, beefing up our clearly failing infra etc) are going to be priorities supported by Ds and Rs. What are some good ETF plays? Just go with XLI/VIS/IYJ? Any subsector specific ETFs (eg electricals, aerospace) that would be highly recommended?
I would not do this if I were in your position. You're already over leveraged in tech. Sure, it might go up, but look at things like SNOW or Intuit, who had good prior earnings quarters but projected lower guidance and instantly fell -20%. The market around things directly tied to semiconductors is just too hot rn for that level of risk - a 20-40% rapid AF pullback on basically half your retirement savings is not worth the stress. The semiconductor boom cannot occur in a silo. It requires energy, metals, etc. I'm not recommending it specifically, but something like VIS allows you to take advantage of the AI craze whilst not being as directly exposed - the NYT wrote in October something to the effect of AI chips are projected to consume enough power as some countries. In nvda's last earnings call, they referenced how their chips were being used in cars, healthcare, sales, etc. AI is being adapted by industries all over. You don't need the sexiest new growth stock - diversification will still get you gains as the tech catches on and is utilized by companies all down the s&p 500 to cut costs and raise profits.
VIS MOD is about to call you a poor idiot............
Condolences 💐 I am a big fan of VIS and VCR. Best of luck brother!
Roth IRA: APPL - 18.76% KO - 8.63% MCD - 13.58% MSFT - 12.79% TSLA - 7.86% VDC - 3.81% VGT - 3.80% VHT - 3.81% VIS - 3.81% VOO - 3.80% SCHD - 5.33% (I’m most likely going to sell my position here and put it into my other ETFs, as I feel much better about them). Overall, very happy with my portfolio as I’m up 22% YTD. But any advice or criticism? I’m open to it all!
Damnit 🅱️VIS. Don't just sit there; do something.
VIS getting beside its self with the train comment
NOOOO VIS WE WERE BOYS!!!! But I’m obviously I’m a poor idiot I’m in this sub
Sony Computer Entertainment. Who could forget that? VIS. Apple? Now who calls Apple inflated? They are not an adware data mining company like "Meta".
VIS but it lacks semis. You could just get SMH for semis and VIS for industrials.
>STILL DISCUSSING WITH G7 WAYS TO AVOID REFLAGGING AS WAY AROUND OIL CAP - EU OFFICIALS \>LEVEL PLAYING FIELD IMPORTANT FOR EU SEAFARING NATIONS VIS-A-VIS COUNTRIES LIKE PANAMA - EU OFFICIALS ^First ^Squawk ^[@FirstSquawk](http://twitter.com/FirstSquawk) ^at ^2022-10-06 ^10:43:20 ^EDT-0400
I liked the other heat map better. RTX is not considered "electronic technology", it's an industrial. Same with BA and NOC. Aerospace and defense is considered industrials if not it's own sector. Look up VIS holdings vs VGT. You'll see it doesn't belong. You wont see any of these companies in XLK either, but ITA exists as an aerospace and defense ETF to hold them. Nitpicking, but this doesn't really divide sectors in a way that agrees with a lot of fund managers.
They actually do fairly similar over the last 4 decades, VIS with a lot more volatility. [Backtest link](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=VIS&allocation1_1=100&symbol2=VPU&allocation2_2=100)
What do you feel has the better long-term prospects: a utilities ETF (VPU) or an industrials ETF (VIS)?
They can also ask the Spaniards to make more seasons of LA CASA DE PAPEL and VIS-a-VIS
Very good. Can’t go wrong with Vanguard. I like VOO, VGT, VOX, VIS and VFH. Have done well and buy each of these regularly
Eh. Even industrials came roaring out of the hole. The magnitude was smaller, but the direction was the same. Look at VIS and VFH and VTV. Even the "Boomer" and value stocks got pumped. Looking for value to buy last year was painful, because everything except the stankest garbage was like 2 StDev above normal growth.
I think that Spy will trade down long term but not from the war in Ukraine. Realistically that dosent affect the earnings of many domestic companies, however inflation will increase because of the the sanctions against Russian oil and materials so the fed will have to raise rates which of course will cause a bear market. Hopefully increased military and infrastructure spending will drive VIS up and make me rich. 🤷♂️
Yeah I realize that, so instead I’m yoloing into VIS. The etf has Raytheon and Boeing so maybe I’ll survive with some long term calls.
Should I buy calls for VIS, its oversold on the daily and the 50 ema about to cross the 1000, or do I buy puts for spy 🤔🤔🤔
Should I either buy puts on spy or calls on VIS, puts on spy for obvious reasons or I buy calls on VIS because it’s oversold on the daily and the 100 ema is about to cross the 1000 on the minute chart.
Are we saying MVIS or VIS?
What. April to $200 $VIS
Been alright bro. Yeah, he's a huge VIS, imo. Actually, he's a fucking BUM
Foldyflops!!! Whatsup bro!??? Long time no talk. How you been bro? Your bro u/floppyfolds is kinda a VIS
Everything that got gassed up on easy money will deflate. Values/cyclicals are no exception. Look at the growth curves for VIS (Vanguard Industrials ETF) or VFH (Vanguard Financials) or more broadly VTV (Vanguard Value ETF). Completely preposterous unsustainable rises. Even VXUS is bloated. They're down now, but the mean regression is barely underway. Just wait until AAPL rolls over. That's when you'll find the good deals--when the weak hands have even panic-sold the safe havens.
Seeking is a VIS - very important simp
US wafer production has been in decline steadily for over 22 years from 37% to just 12% in recent years citing high cost investment was the primarily reason. Twn has two other lessor know fab companies. United which has 12 manufacturing facilities worldwide, employing approximately 19,500 people in Twn, Singapore, Korea and China. Vanguard International Semiconductor Corporation (VIS) is 3rd largest.
# Update! I back-tested the sector rotation strategy that I was suggesting where I would choose which Vanguard sector ETF to add to based on how that industry ETF is doing in any given week.... A few observations about the data before I reveal the methodology and results: * $VDE (Energy) had the most weeks as the best-performing sector ETF with 21 weeks! The second most was five. * $VDE (Energy) had the most weeks as the worst-performing sector ETF with 16 weeks! The second most was eight. * $VIS (Industrials) was never the best-performing or worst-performing ETF in any given week. **Methodology:** * Paper portfolio starting with $11,000 total * Calculated the weekly closing price for each fund from November 2020 - November 2021 * Contributed $100 to the portfolio each week * **Compared six different strategies:** 1. **Strategy A:** Trim 10% off the best performing sector ETF of the week, add the profits gains plus the $100 weekly contribution to buy shares of the worst performing sector ETF of the week. 2. **Strategy B:** Trim 20% off the best performing sector ETF of the week, add the gains plus the $100 weekly contribution to buy shares of the worst performing sector ETF of the week. 3. **Strategy C:** Let the winners ride - buy $100 worth of shares of the worst performing ETF each week. 4. **Control Test: Equal Weighting** \- $11,0000 split evenly across the 11 funds ($1,000 each). $100 added to the portfolio each week, split evenly across the sectors. 5. **S&P 500 Index Fund:** Buy $100 worth of $VOO each week 6. **Total Stock Market Index Fund:** 1. Buy $100 worth of $VTI each week **The results....** [GRAPH](https://imgur.com/YkRb16h) * Strategy A = 42.87% gain ($20,530.08 total value, minus the $11,000 initial investment and $5,000 worth of contributions) * Strategy B = 43.27% * Strategy C = 43.14% * Control Test = 41.18% * S&P 500 Index Fund = 38.13% * Total Stock Market Index Fund = 38.69% **In summary** \- it is not worth the time and effort to calculate the best and worst-performing sector ETFs and investing accordingly. May as well just DCA into $VTI.
VIS - very important simp 🤣🤣🤣
Any thoughts on industrial ETFs right now? Looking at VIS and XLI.
Yeah but archer literally has almost nothing. They don’t even have a flying prototype yet. 3-4 years away from FAA approval Their website reminiscent of M VIS - bunch of flashy graphic and investor relations, but no real products
New to investing. I've been putting about 10% of my paycheck into VOO/VTI/VGLT/VXUS in a 30/30/20/20% split. With the infrastructure bill rattling around in Congress I'm leaning towards putting some money into something like VIS in anticipation of large amounts of government spending into this sector. But I'm still new to all this and I'm worried that I might be misreading the situation. What do you all think?
A little off topic but what if the right to repair stuff passes? I've heard farmers buy old crappy equipment because they can fix it, if cat or de starts making their equipment fixable I would think new sales would go up. Then again they would probably lose out on repair profits. I don't own any of those stocks(I do have VIS tho) but I've been thinking about it for a while.
I've been wondering that myself. The stocks of terrible companies like WKHS, FSR, M VIS, and others are sitting at or near ATHs despite being in bad economic shape and with terrible revenue generation. The only thing keeping them afloat at this point is retail investors who expect the win big by hurting short sellers. On top of that you have clear pump and dumps going on too, where people flood into companies with small market caps sending their values soaring, which fuels momentum chasers and algos, who send it even higher. Something isn't working in this market and I'm not sure what the long term implications or solutions to these things might be, but they are troubling.
Step 1 - Pick a brokerage (I always suggest your banks for easy money transfer) Step 2 - Read into the terminology (Podcasts, YT videos, Text) - Just please stay away from "financial gurus" or anyone saying they will get you some stupid 100% + returns easily or be careful of people selling courses and what not. Step 3 - Maybe look into index ETFs to begin with those are considered "Safe" (lack of a better word in finance since nothing is technically safe). Indexes like tickers QQQ or SPY are the big ones that pay a dividend. OR if you prefer sectoral ETFs there are others like tickers VIS (industrial sector) or technology ones or gaming theres so many! Thats another thread on it's own. If your not sure on how Expense Ratios for ETFs work or would like just say so here and I'll explain. As well as take a look at the holdings tab to see what the ETFs hold in them. (under yahoo finance - Holdings tab). Let me know what you need help with. Congrats on starting your investing journey! Best of luck and be excited for all of the long term compounding :)
M VIS All caps when you spell the lady’s name.
QQQ is another index ETF that's good. Sectoral ETFs like VIS are a personal one I like (industrials). Just depends what your going for; 10% is kind of a stretch and can't be promised but I can assure that they are strong ETFs. - Basically Investing Podcast
Check out $VIS.VN. On the way up! Looking for a couple other VERY young tech companies. Any suggestions?
Vanguard have a range of sector ETFs too, e.g. VFH financial, VIS industrial, VAW materials.
Bought some SCHD yesterday morning myself. I'm probably going to dump my real estate ETF (which has done well so far) and move into VIS, an industrials ETF.
Man. Where are all the apes shit talking M VIS and M NMD? Pump and Dump amirite?
I know this is a bit sadistic but is anyone happy to see em -VIS go down today. I'm not short or anything
why so silent? just admit you bought M VIS at 19.14 my little bagholder
shorts getting margin called on m!VIS keep it up boys
M^(y) VIS^(ibly) profitable puts are going brrrrrrrrrrrrrr!
Lemme just say that EM-VIS is just starting!! $17.5 been a block for months and it's gone!
🅱️VIS about to hit 40 million volume, holy fucking hell
Not financial advice. I do own a few REIT. Minto, Smartcentre and Granite are my favourite. Vanguard Industrial VIS has done really well for me.
I dig it. I own a bit of VIS, which I guess is an indirect player, here (VAW would probably be more appropriate). I wonder if I should cut a bit off to make a pure steel play.
RIOT, MARA,VIS go fuck yourself
I've got a thesis in my head id love if someone could poke some holes in it. Looking at VIS an industrial etf with mostly us based companies. Two reasons, firstly in an inflationary environment industrial companies can always raise the prices for their goods and secondly if the economy is really gonna come back with as much growth as they are forecasting and if we even get a fraction of infrastructure spending that they are planning it should be good news for the industrials no?
How are you guys feeling about industrials? Looking at something like VIS but damned it its not at 52 week high lol
I'm considering buying some VIS im thinking industrials will do good
Be VERY careful with leveraged assets, whether it be leveraged ETFs or options. This can go tits up for you. I have a watch list of leveraged ETFs, and they’re all either inverse ETFs or volatility ETFs. You typically don’t stay in these longer than a day. Long term, you’re better off looking at things like VOO, VUG, VTI, and similar. They don’t have to be Vanguard funds, but diversified assets tracking an index or an industry can be helpful. I also hold and have done well with VIS and FIDU, but I am a bit biased towards industrials and skeptical or many tech companies, especially ones that have been part of this “bandwagon” game.
VIS is killing it for me. Waiting for a down date to add even more.
I own VIS, which is very similar to XLI. PAVE isn't actually considered an industrials ETF according to the ETF database, it's considered a utilities ETF.
> MSOS MSOS many swaps in it. I don't know what kind of etf this is. https://stockanalysis.com/etf/msos/holdings/ I added VIS and VAW. Will publish the list again later.
Vanguard Industrials (VIS) - a little bit on the expensive side but it only has 0.1% expense ratio
Vanguard Industrials (VIS) and Materials (VAW)
Thanks for sharing. Interested in MSOS, given that more U.S. states are legalizing cannabis. Also, VIS and VAW, with Biden's infrastructure plan for the next 8 years.
I’ve been flipping M(a)VIS for a couple months now seeing how it seems to bounce around a lot in the $10-20 range. Would you say it’s too late to jump in on this train? I personally believe their tech is great and see a ton of potential in them, but I’m not experienced enough to know how well that translates into stock value. Do you think it’ll keep going up from here, or has the news already settled?
Vanguard Materials (VAW) and Vanguard Industrials (VIS)
People will give you hate but i did the same thing. 75% VTI here now... 10% Stocks (for fun) and 15% ETFs (VIS, SCHD, SMH, QQQM/J). I couldn't be happier. Its exhausting watching the market 24/7 Personally id stick with VTI only. I dont forsee the international out running the us markets but thats just my play
You need some value in there. Maybe a financials ETF or something like VIS (industrials).
Honestly i dont think its too safe. Qqqm is still slightly risk just cause of the huge tech correction we are in but should play out well for you. I dont know anything about FXAIX tho to speak on that but 50% VTI is super solid. This correction has made me rebalance and rethink my future. I truly believe VTI will continue to perform well im only 28 but going to grad school, working full time and havin a family i dont wanna try and monitor my portfolio 24/7 to try and beat the market. Id rather have most in VTI with a few tilts for fun. This is what im running... its relatively conservative but VTI 10 year return is 14%... i mean i for one will not be upset to make 14% on my investment for doing absolutely nothing VTI 74% SCHD 5% (shcawb dividend) QQQM 3% QQQJ 3% VIS 3% (vanguard industrials) Stocks 8%
This is what I ended up doing today...bought VFH and VIS. Got a nice little gain from them today too do that was a nice touch. I've been watching the Nasdaq closely...my theory is that it won't break more than 10% down. Creeper close today but rebounded a bit. Wondering if we're starting to see signals of a bottom. If it breaks 10% I'm going to do some more averaging down with my tech/growth stocks. I'll be adding to VFH and VIS. Feel like my portfolio has some solid counter balances to the growth stocks now. Thanks for the advice. Don't know why I couldn't put my finger on this as the most reasonable action to take...guess you have to talk through it out loud sometimes
Is holding QQQJ (Nasdaq 100-200 (lots of mid caps)) too redundant while also holdings VO (Vanguards mid cap etf). 51% of qqqj holdings are in VO. QQQj is new so its YTD performance is 5.34% while VO is 6.34%. Qqqj expense ratio is 0.15% while VO is 0.04%. I really want midcap exposure but i dont wanna be too over exposed. For reference this is the rest of my portfolio: VTI 43% QQM 10% QQQJ 10% SMH 5% SCHD 5% VB 8% VO 8% VIS 3% Stocks 8%
Is holding QQQJ (Nasdaq 100-200 (lots of mid caps)) too redundant while also holdings VO (Vanguards mid cap etf). 51% of qqqj holdings are in VO. QQQj is new so its YTD performance is 5.34% while VO is 6.34%. Qqqj expense ratio is 0.15% while VO is 0.04%. I really want midcap exposure but i dont wanna be too over exposed. For reference this is the rest of my portfolio: VTI 43% QQM 10% QQQJ 10% SMH 5% SCHD 5% VB 8% VO 8% VIS 3% Stocks 8%
Is holding QQQJ (Nasdaq 100-200 (lots of mid caps)) too redundant while also holdings VO (Vanguards mid cap etf). 51% of qqqj holdings are in VO. QQQj is new so its YTD performance is 5.34% while VO is 6.34%. Qqqj expense ratio is 0.15% while VO is 0.04%. I really want midcap exposure but i dont wanna be too over exposed. For reference this is the rest of my portfolio: VTI 43% QQM 10% QQQJ 10% SMH 5% SCHD 5% VB 8% VO 8% VIS 3% Stocks 8%
Look at sector ETFs, like VDE for oil / shit that isn't green, VFH for banks, VIS for industrials. Just listing the vanguard ETFs you could go with any ETFs / mutual funds you like.
Not at this exact moment, because all growth stocks have been suffering, not just tech. This is due to long term treasury yields rising, which puts a lot of downward pressure on companies that rely on cheap borrowing costs to stay afloat until they can generate more revenue. That being said, if you’re planning on holding for 5+ years, the big FAANG growth names are still a pretty safe bet. Just don’t expect the returns we saw in the past few years, and don’t be surprised by a lot of volatility. My plays over the next couple of years don’t involve many growth stocks. I’m currently bullish on banks (KBE) due to the steep treasury yield curve, which banks implicitly benefit from. I also like value plays that will benefit from a naturally recovering economy (VIS, VTV). And I will always have a large chunk of my portfolio in VOO. I’m also bullish on XLE into this summer. My method of investing is semi-passive, and I use index ETFs to play macro trends. This removes individual company risk and means I can safely ignore my portfolio while I’m on vacation. It also means I usually pay long-term capital gains tax, which means automatic 15% gainz on profits.
XLI vs VIS for a reopening/ future infrastructure bill/ industrials tilt play? VIS has about 1% greater gains year over year with triple the holdings of XLI. However XLI is traded in much higher volume. Thoughts? Which would you grab as a tilt away from a tech heavy portfolio