VONE
Vanguard Russell 1000 Index Fund ETF Shares
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Depends the index. The NASDAQ (via QQQ, etc..) will add within 15 days at a small float est at 3% but will artificially magnify that 3x. CRSP (some Vanguard index funds), the Dow Large Cap (SCHX), and Russell (VONE, etc) will add in about 5 days, as normal, at the reduced float.. have not read any alterations. S&P is considering reducing its IPO “seasoning” (aka price discovery) period for its flagship S&P500 index, plus no profitability screen. S&P has extended indexes which will probably add it fairly quickly like CRSP or Russell.
I think instead of acwi you should buy (( VOO or VONE) and VEA ). It would be less expense ratio and more customizable
I have two types of accounts. Accounts I can’t fully trade in because of tax implications (older investment non retirement) and accounts that I can fully trade in (retirement and newly opened where I can buy what I want with money we have left over after our spending). On the accounts I can fully trade in I am making 22%. I got a bit lucky with Nvidia but the rest is VYMI, VOO, Gold, silver, precious metals mining etf, VONE, VYM. Would have been even higher if I hadn’t put so much into bitcoin. The luck with Nvidia is balanced out by the losses in bitcoin so I call it a solid no luck 22% with a good mix of US and international ETFs and precious metals to hedge for inflation.
I transitioned to VONE over VTI or VOO in part because of the premium S&P pays when adding/dropping new names. VTI has too many little zombie companies that will never produce meaningful returns. VOO suffers from the attention on S&P. I do think you're overthinking this a bit though. These companies are going to be tiny percentages of the total index.
Something like: 80% VONE 16% BND 2% GLDM 2% SMH
IUSB yields about 0.5% more on average but with bond funds/etfs every little bit helps (%yield, %er) to make it worthwhile over purchasing bonds themselves (though most may prefer shorter term CDs, TIPs for inflation, etc. the latter US govt backed for US saver-investors fwiw). It still has enough investment grades and ultimately Treasuries to weather foreseeable downdrafts, plus probably respond better to the inevitable bounceback. High yield default rates long term averaged 4% in the 1980s down to 2% recently; 2009 was a high with 10% defaulting in the U.S., but the amt of high yield in IUSB is still very low vs investment grade. Now if looking at risk parity like I did when starting, look at long term Treasuries. I did following the late Harry Browne’s advice on his late ‘70s “permanent portfolio” though there’s an updated discussion on optimized portfolio website (which points out that investment grade corporates aren’t as safe as govt bonds … to each their own). Caveat: I might be a little fearless as I still have long term Treasuries and even long term zeroes from a previous “risk parity” portfolio of mostly US aggressive growth for .. growth vs. LT treasuries as a “hedge”, though still be looking to cash most of those in with my going into retirement bond funds [they themselves “4 fund”] being almost equal SHY/maybe ISTB, IUSB>>TLT, hedged BNDX>>> unhedged IGOV (not counting actual TIPs and CDs to cash in …). [i]Add[/I] so for stocks, I’ll be “2 fund” with VONE>IXUS in my IRA (US self-directed retirement account), .. for bonds I’ll have more than a few funds/etfs to spread various risks.
Remember when you do retire in 15 years you will still have to assume you'll have 20+ years in retirement. You're looking at a 35 year time horizon. I would invest aggressively and ETF's like VTI, VONE, VOO, VXUS are great. If you're afraid you're going to poorly time the market, take a smaller chunk each month to invest, $25k/mo would have you invested fully in 7 months, $12.5k would be 14 months. And if you feel more comfortable keeping 20-40% in bonds, do that, just understand that over an extended period of time, the more risk we take on, the higher our returns tend to be.
I use VUG/VONE. At your age, just be investing, as you're investing in your future self. Have the majority go to indeces. You can even stock pick, just don't bet the farm until you research and learn what you're really doing there. If you want to keep it easy, index invest.
VOO isn't a growth in the strictest sense. I'd say VONE, VUG, MGK, XLK if you want some tobasco on your food TQQQ, FNGU SOXL
> the differences between the two funds are very small rounding errors for the most part. Years ago when I took my tax classes, my professor said that when rules are ambiguous a taxpayer’s position just has to pass the straight-face test. That’s a lot easier if the taxpayer hasn’t behaved as if they were consciously trying to defer taxes. That’s exactly what it looks like to swap VOO to SPY and right back after 31 days. It would be more convincing if you’re taking a loss on VOO to buy SCHX, XVV, VONE, or whatever else and *hold* that for a while.
It's a running joke that investing in VOO and VTI is a crime, you don't need VTI if you got VOO. While VTI is market weighted, it is also market cap weighted which means it's top heavy even though they advertise themselves as being more diversed, so you end up being LESS diversed investing in both. If you want to diversify and invest in mid caps and small caps, aka 501-3000, you would rather invest in funds that specifically focus on them instead(eg. VTWO(Russel 2000 - small-mid cap), VONE(Russel 1000 large cap), IVOO(S&P Mid Cap 400, VIOO(S&P Small Cap 600), etc.). But in general most portfolio that did well with above 10% returns usually consist of SPY/VOO/VTI, one or more mega cap tech companies, and some dividend companies with DRIP enabled.
Index funds are great. S&P 500 is classic and has a high return rate, you can do research on which ETF or mutual fund to use. I personally go with Russell 1000 since it’s a bit more diversified, using VONE. In any case, index funds are your friend. Easy, good long term, low risk, and consistent.
Below is what my Vanguard Robo Advisor bought for me and I’m 32. If you match it and continuously invest monthly, I think you’ll be good. 2% VB 3% VONE 1% VOO 54% VTI 40% VXUS
IMHO never “back off” contributions. Always contribute max allowed by law for tax deferral benefit. Plus no capital gains if you make changes in the 401k over your career until you withdraw, subject to some limitations. As to allocation you should consider the target date funds the super easy button for people who aren’t thinking about their investments. I was never willing to give up the returns on 100 percent equities on my investments but I am stubborn and have been able to outlast every market panic. Try VONE for low fees and just keep investing for 30 more years !
You can't go wrong with things like VOO, VTI, VONE, or SCHD as a set-it-and-forget-it in a brokerage. There are a couple other ETFs but those always come out on top when I compare expense ratios and consistency. For a more dividen approach I aim at SCHD and something like JEPI but I lean more VOO.
>VOO, what does that stand for? It doesn't exactly market itself. It stands for 500. Roman numeral V and two 0s. The 400 fund is IVOO. The 600 fund is VIOO. The Russell 1000 fund is VONE and the 2000 fund is VTWO.
Large diverse index based ETFs for your equity side VOO VTI RWR QQQ VTV VONE VTWO
I've been picking up the following: VOO, COST, MSFT, QCLN, TAN, VONE. my main issue is I'm getting over-committed to some of those so I'm hesitate to buy in more on them...but I also firmly believe they are good buys.
Russell 1000 (IWB, VONE) and CRSP Large Cap (VV) indices both include large cap and medium cap. https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/File:Stock_Benchmarks_-_Major_US_Index_Providers.png
Before you do your 2021 taxes be sure to max out a Roth IRA. *(if you are under 49 yr old the max should be $6000) but you can still do that between now and the time you file your 2021 taxes and that money can grow 100% tax free until you retire. If you start an account like at fidelity for example - it takes about 15 minutes to set up the whole process. This month is a great month to start since all stocks are on sale right now. *(there has been a 10% "correction" where the stock market as a whole has been dipping to recent lows not seen in months so it's like the stocks you buy are on discount.) If you are not sure what to invest in right now......you could start with 20% QQQ 20% VOO 20% VONE AND 20% EMXC AND 20% VXUS and you would have a nice diversified portfolio - slightly heavy in tech but tech is on sale......and 40% to international stocks. ***note - I am not a financial advisor. Please do your own due diligence and invest wisely. Investing comes with risks.
>Pick five growth companies at random... and I'll look up their financials. I went to forbes and searched the top 100 fastest growing companies - then i ran a random number generator - which produced the following results: \#83 Market Axxess Holdings \#10 AMD - Advanced Micro Devices \#39 Harbor One bancorp \#67 IES Holdings \#22 Medifast I am actually very interested in this conversation and hope you really will follow up with results - I promise results are 100% random. I was thinking about changing up my portfolio some since my current model is shit the past couple months. If there are growth stocks with good debt to equity ratios that make more sense in an environment where fed is raising rates - Maybe I need to move some assets in that direction. \*(Right now I am about 80% in ETFs - but only like 10% in Spy, 10% in QQQ, 10% in EMXC, 10% in VEA, 10% in VONE, 10% in QABA, 10% in XLE, etc etc - spread over alot of different ETFs - and not working since november) Only things I have that are green are a few hundred shares of Ford and a couple thousand in USO (US OIL)
IWM and VONE and SPY and TQQQ for me. yay.
SCHK has a lower expense ratio than VONE, a comparable ETF. Otherwise, these are identical to Vanguard funds in every meaningful way: SCHB = VTI SCHX = VOO SCHG = VUG SCHV = VTV It doesn't matter whether you buy Schwab ETFs or an identical ETF through a different company. Don't overthink it. What symbols do you like better?
Some more tickers since this is news for some. VXUS = Vanguard Ex-US IVOO = S&P Mid-Cap 400 VIOO = S&P Small-Cap 600 VIOV = S&P Small Cap 600 Value VONE = Russell 1000 Index VTWO = Russell 2000 Index VTHR = Russell 3000 Index
Maybe a fellow canadian. we the north like the steel. Did a decent profit on a penny stock related to steel (VONE.V on the TSX) but having access to US market, may as well take advantage. I'm steel holding CLF though.
Let's take a look at historical performance using 3 Vanguard ETFs: * VOO - tracks the S&P 500 ([0.02% tracking error, 0.03% expense ratio](https://screener.fidelity.com/ftgw/etf/goto/snapshot/snapshot.jhtml?symbols=VOO)). * VONE - tracks the Russell 1000 ([1.17% tracking error, 0.08% expense ratio](https://screener.fidelity.com/ftgw/etf/snapshot/snapshot.jhtml?symbols=VONE)). * VTI - tracks the entire US market ([1.91% tracking error, 0.03% expense ratio](https://screener.fidelity.com/ftgw/etf/snapshot/snapshot.jhtml?symbols=VTI)). In the past 10 years, [VOO outperforms VONE and VTI by a hair](https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/backtest-portfolio?s=y&timePeriod=4&startYear=1985&firstMonth=1&endYear=2021&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&reinvestDividends=true&showYield=false&showFactors=false&factorModel=3&benchmark=-1&benchmarkSymbol=VOO&portfolioNames=false&portfolioName1=Portfolio+1&portfolioName2=Portfolio+2&portfolioName3=Portfolio+3&symbol1=VONE&allocation1_1=100&symbol2=VTI&allocation2_2=100), but with lower volatility/risk. Both VONE and VTI actually *underperform* VOO on a risk-adjusted basis, and that's before expenses and tracking error. That said, the difference here is marginal - if you pick VOO, VONE, or VTI, your mileage will pretty much be the same. As the old adage goes, "time in the market beats timing the market". If you like this advice I'd recommend heading over to /r/ETFs - we talk about this stuff a lot over there :)
Hi. So I’m not arguing that inclusion will make a HUGE difference but you’re a little off on your calcs. That’s because in addition to “Russell 1000” ETFs there are also “Russell 1000 Value” and “Russell 1000 Growth” ETFs, which are actually more popular and have more assets. Safe to assume that UWMC will be in R1000 Value. The iShares ETF (IWD) has $50B in AUM. Vanguard,s is much smaller ($5B) So iShares R1000 (IWB) has $26B its R1000 Value has $50B, Vanguard’s R1000 (VONE) has $5B and its R1000 Value (VONV) has $5B. There add other funds and ETFs that track the Russell 1000 as well. Question is how big UWMC would be in it and I don’t know the calcs.
Vanadium One Iron Corp : VONE Global Hemp Group Inc : GHG Troubadour Resources Inc : TR