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Vanguard S&P 500 ETF

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Big gains today

r/stocksSee Post

Suggestions please

r/investingSee Post

Why do you invest in stocks?

r/stocksSee Post

Why do you invest in stocks?

r/investingSee Post

If you’re young, increase risk until you are 100% you’ll hit your goal!

r/investingSee Post

What is the best argument against a large cap Growth ETF?

r/StockMarketSee Post

Roth IRA Allocation at 18 - Part 2: Revised portfolio After Feedback

r/stocksSee Post

List of most promising stocks to hold over the coming 6-12 months?

r/investingSee Post

Started My Bogle Head Journey Today

r/RobinHoodSee Post

Alright I got roasted before and changed up my portfolio. How does it look now after rebalancing without heavily investing in anything in a while?

r/investingSee Post

Value or Growth Investing

r/stocksSee Post

Investing in stocks as supplemental income?

I Looked at My Portfolio Today and Saw THE DEVIL HIMSELF in My VOO

I Sold All My VOO for a Concentrated NVDA Bet. Should I Have Just Bought Options Instead?

r/investingSee Post

Why I think Berkshire Hathaway is the best investment right now

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Rate my Portfolio 24 years old

r/investingSee Post

No, the spacex ipo is not going to tank your 401k

r/investingSee Post

Advantages of having a CFP (fiduciary) managed portfolio vs. Self directed (all index funds)?

r/RobinHoodSee Post

Thoughts on my Portfolio in the late 30s

r/investingSee Post

What do you think of the growth section of my portfolio?

r/stocksSee Post

Best foreign domiciled ETF for S&P500?

r/investingSee Post

Best foreign domiciled ETF for S&P 500?

r/stocksSee Post

Is it crazy to have 36 postions across my retirements?

r/stocksSee Post

The "bull case" for SpaceX: re-running the Tesla dilution playbook?

r/StockMarketSee Post

The "bull case" for SpaceX: re-running the Tesla dilution playbook?

r/stocksSee Post

I have mostly VOO portfolio. What would be a strategy to exclude exposure to AI companies?

r/StockMarketSee Post

Aggressive Roth IRA at 18 – What Would You Change?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Did I Pick An Awful Time to Start?

r/investingSee Post

Hypothetically if you were holding close to infinitely, would VOO or QQQ be the move?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Blew my account - truly done

r/stocksSee Post

Another day of me DCA’ing the VOO

r/investingSee Post

For those investing in S&P 500 ETFs (VOO/SPY/IVV), how have your returns been?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

VOO Becomes First ETF to Reach $1 Trillion AUM, also: VOO bounced exactly at 700 a couple of days ago but nobody noticed

r/stocksSee Post

SpaceX IPO: Every ETF That Will be holding it

r/investingSee Post

Dividend Stocks in Your 20s Worth It or Just Stick With Growth?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Just gonna leave this here.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Sp500 - 100 years of changes - how significant is the mega ipo changes?

r/stocksSee Post

Sp500 - 100 years of changes - how significant is the mega ipo changes?

r/investingSee Post

Sp500 biggest 100 years of structural changes

r/investingSee Post

Got rollover money coming but hesitant of ATHs

r/investingSee Post

80k to invest + no debt how would you invest it?

r/investingSee Post

Is anyone actually selling VOO or QQQ over Space X concerns?

r/investingSee Post

Helping my mom with portfolio

100k to invest, how's this look?

r/pennystocksSee Post

$KIDZ - Will this take off?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Solid month, cheers 🍻

r/investingSee Post

100% VOO, should I add something else?

r/stocksSee Post

Not sure what to do about mid-caps

r/stocksSee Post

New to DCA method investing - VTI/VXUS or VWRA (ETF)

r/stocksSee Post

Help - STX vs NVIDIA vs SP500

r/investingSee Post

Help - STX vs NVIDIA or VOO

r/investingSee Post

Best Energy Stocks to Buy

r/stocksSee Post

Do I just hold MU? Not really sure what to do.

r/RobinHoodSee Post

Should I change from an Investment Account to a IRA?

r/investingSee Post

What is the best strategy to allocate and optimize a 100K investment?

r/RobinHoodSee Post

Thoughts on portfolio and gold margin usage

r/investingSee Post

VOO only or VOO + SCHD for wife’s Roth IRA?

r/investingSee Post

21 year old college student with $10k saved, what would you do in my spot?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Vote against S&P changing rules to fast track IPOs into the S&P 500 indexes(SPY, VOO) - (Deadline TOMORROW, May 28)

r/investingSee Post

Automated investing for retirement accounts (fidelity/schwab) vs picking your own distributions. The good vs the bad. Discuss

r/investingSee Post

Built my first Roth IRA portfolio in my 20's - here's my 6 ETF allocation and the reasoning behind each pick

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Made money but depressed

r/investingSee Post

Do you keep growth stocks in retirement accounts and dividends in taxable?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

For parabolic gains DO NOT read this. It's just a Samaritan text for thise in despair.

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Forbparabolic gains DO NOT follownthese advices.

r/investingSee Post

If I want to generate the most money from my traditional & roth IRA accounts - where should I "park" it for the next 20 years?

r/investingSee Post

SOXX vs Broad Index Funds

r/StockMarketSee Post

Only VOO vs 3 fund performance?

r/investingSee Post

$4,200,000 In Stocks, How Dangerous?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Which stocks do I drop?

r/stocksSee Post

MAG7 is outperforming all the hype stocks posted about constantly, why do people not learn, holds true for last 40+ years

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Portfolio Feedback

r/stocksSee Post

Am I doing this right?…

r/smallstreetbetsSee Post

Little less than 3 months in and I think I’m doing well

r/investingSee Post

the s&p 500 vs equal weight spread just hit 13.8%. it's only been this wide twice before

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Throwing all my free cash into Schwab

r/investingSee Post

Leverage in retirement accounts?

r/wallstreetbetsSee Post

Roast my portfolio

r/stocksSee Post

Is too much money in a HYSA a waste of capital?

r/investingSee Post

Advice on investing at 17

r/optionsSee Post

Anyone here actually outperforming just buying VOO long-term after taxes, stress, and time?

r/investingSee Post

Looking for some help with kids/wife & I investments

r/stocksSee Post

Morgan Stanley Advisor?

r/investingSee Post

Choosing VTI over VOO has cost me about $44,000.00 over the past 6 years

r/StockMarketSee Post

VOO > QQQ for stability do you agree?

r/stocksSee Post

What other sector should I invest besides Tech / AI?

r/stocksSee Post

Small business owner here, looking for investing advice from people further ahead than me

r/StockMarketSee Post

DCA allocation question

r/RobinHoodSee Post

18 year old who just started - any advice would be appreciated! I don’t know how to diversify properly.

r/RobinHoodSee Post

One Year Into Investing… any tips?

r/investingSee Post

I have questions on long term investing.

r/investingSee Post

New to portfolio diversification

r/stocksSee Post

Sell some Intel to take a larger position in SLS? I’m OKAY with the greed, but I’m not sure my logic is sound.

r/stocksSee Post

Hold Intel vs buying more SLS . I’m leaning greed, but have I’m not sure about my logic.

r/smallstreetbetsSee Post

looking into investing

r/stocksSee Post

Investing my first $250.. Is this a good profolio for buying and holding?

r/smallstreetbetsSee Post

VOO and chill

Mentions

Equal parts VOO and SPCX. What better lesson could you learn?

Mentions:#VOO#SPCX

Meh, I don't disagree with you, but picking stocks can be fun too. I pick a few every once in a while and then if they do good, sell half and put it into VOO

Mentions:#VOO

Not sure about SOFI but I like your individual stocks. Keep them! As others suggested I would suggest you add an index fund like VOO or QQQM and perhaps an international ETF like VYMI or VXUS. Time is on your side.  Keep investing regularly. Great start!

I am a VOO fan boy but shares are $700. Which is like 7x what he has

Mentions:#VOO

SPY and VOO. Use one of these and prosper, don’t and find yourself outside a Wendy’s.

Mentions:#SPY#VOO

Bro you speedran retirement 😂 Everyone else: “slow and steady in VOO.” You: “nah I’ll just solo queue IBM calls and accidentally front run Trump.”

Mentions:#VOO#IBM

Half in $VOO, half in $DRAM

Mentions:#VOO

Let's go all in then. What other stocks with VOO? VT?

Mentions:#VOO#VT

Every day. Sold my stupid shit up 10% on a day and dumped into VOO for the week

Mentions:#VOO

Should I invest more in VOO?

Mentions:#VOO

So it has 3 big bumps coming that everyone is aware of. VTI buying, QQQ buying and ITOT buying. Then it needs 4 profitable quarters for SPY and VOO. This is combined against investor lock ups going into Q2 earnings. So it’s going to squeeze, the major investors in the IPO will take profits and we get to see if retail can hold it up. If one looks at Bitcoin one can see how irrationality can maintain price forever.

I’m in VTI in my retirement accounts (Fidelity BrokerageLink and Vanguard IRAs) and am seriously debating switching to VOO and VXF.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO#VXF

I think it's good. Developed markets ex-US hasn't been doing great for me. Everyone jumped in at the beginning of last year and drove the prices higher than growth could keep up with. I'm not losing but gains are close to flat. Emerging markets are doing very well but you coming in late may hit the same situation I did with Developed. Small caps has also been doing decent after two years of barely staying above water. You'll have to keep an eye on that as well as your internationals. I don't think they are as reliable as large-cap US indexes but I'm not dumping mine. I have GRID since February 2025 and it's given me a 63% gain. I'd keep VOO and QQQM the same percentage. Take VXUS down to 15% and apply 7.5% each to AVDV and AVES. AVUV at 10% and 5% to all the rest (If I counted correctly, you have to drop one). I think we're at the end of the tech boom but 5% isn't huge and some of those should hit at least 10% gain a year to balance out any losses. Since I think you'll need to drop one, that would be either HUMN or WQTM. But that's based only on vibes I haven't done any research. Or BTC which I don't trust at all but it's popular. Full port DRAM means put everything on memory. You have SMH so ignore that. He's trolling. Plus you've got more chip exposure with VXUS.

Hold $VOO for five years you should be fine.

Mentions:#VOO

Monster energy drink, chipotle, Tesla, KLAC , VOO. Amat arm, Nvidia, AMD.

Mentions:#KLAC#VOO#AMD

IMO - the ETF's at 5% and under are not worth holding (7.5% is borderline as well). When you have an individual stock with high potential (ex NVDA AVGO), a low weight can still make a substantial difference to the overall portfolio. But most ETF's returns will be much more muted since it will combine both winners and losers (again compare NVDA and AVGO versus SMH). You can run some possible scenarios, but how much does XAR or GRID have to blow up to make a meaningful difference? If VOO weight is 25x that of XAR weight, VOO doubling would add same nominal amount as XAR going up 11x. High percentage weight times lower return multiple equals lower percetnage weight times much higher return multiple. You took on more risk on concentrated asset/ETF, yet you need an extreme peformance for it to just match the conservative choice with conservative return (SP500 long term CAGR with dividends reinvested is over 10% or doubles your money every 7 years). TLDR - I'd go higher weight on a more selective set of industry specific ETF's to supplement your core ETF's. If you want to hit a home run on a potentially up and coming sector, try to pick their biggest winners with low weight.

Well, only invest in equities if you don’t need the money for at least five years. And I believe for most individual investors the vast majority of their portfolio should be in low cost total market index funds like VOO or VTI. These give you diversified exposure to a variety of sectors. You will float up as top performers are helping to lift the market and your risk is mitigated on downturns. It’s very difficult for the individual investor to outperform the market averages with individual stocks. Less than 10% of my entire investable assets are in individual stocks. They don’t usually outperform the market average but I enjoy the process, data and news.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

Its not a bad portfolio. If you went to r/Bogleheads they'd tell you it's wrong because you are concentrated more than 0.2% in the nasdaq-100. I'd remove the outlier ETFs in specific industries though. SMH, GRID, XAR, WQTM, HUMN, etc. There is nothing wrong with prioritizing some exposure, but I do not think a 2.5% holding on a specific industry going up 200% is going to change much in your portfolio long term. If you just want a broad, super aggressive fund, I'd prioritize QQQM on a heavily weighted percentage (30%) instead of all those. Updated: * QQQM 32.5% * VOO 25% * VXUS 20% * AVDV 7.5% * AVUV 7.5% * AVES 5% * BTC 2.5%

Just do VOO or VTI and call it a day bro, maybe throw in international exchange stock like VXUS for diversability 😂

Mentions:#VOO#VTI#VXUS

>so weird, my VOO heavy portfolio nearly 2x'd Inflation adjusted all-VOO portfolio was up ~35% across Biden's term (vs 68% real previously). Pointing out a specific overweight created different nominal results does not contradict anything I said regarding real returns or the broad market, which is what the previous commenter referred to. Reddit is highly unrepresentative of "the market", and most of the gains coming from inflation is not most people's idea of "ripping".

Mentions:#VOO

so weird, my VOO heavy portfolio nearly 2x'd

Mentions:#VOO

I’m not a bear I’m just vewy scared :3 Shoot me in the face for being a VOO puss

Mentions:#VOO

First off, sorry for your loss. Good on you for educating yourself, but that is what you need, education. Money is about when you will spend and always having a savings/investment plan. Only three numbers matter. Monthly income vs monthly expenses vs monthly auto investment. Open a Fidelity account. Deposit cash there. SPAXX is fine while you learn. Then auto buy VOO on a weekly basis. Start with what is comfortable, then work to increase that auto weekly. Only sell assets in order to pay for urgent expenses. You will learn a ton more. But as long as you get that first part down, you will always be fine. You will do great!!

Mentions:#SPAXX#VOO

So $21k after living expenses and taxes. It will be tough because you need your money to compound and grow over 20+ years typically. Check and see if your employer offers a Roth 401k. $24.5k contribution limit for 2026. Within 5 years while remaining employed and contributing $20k per year, you will have put away $100k USD at age 36. After $100k, your money exponentially works for you. Easy path to early retirement after that. This assumes there is a Roth 401k offered. If no Roth 401k offered, You can focus on building wealth via the company regular 401k plan. Same contribution limit, but pre-tax contribution. Follow the same plan. Unfortunately, any withdrawals before 59.5 years old will have a 10% penalty and taxes on that untaxed income. A taxable brokerage account is another option. No 10% penalty, but you will have to deal with regular taxes on capital gains. Use a stable core ETF (VTI or VOO) and some growth individual stocks with a good balance sheet (Google and Nvidia).

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

Sell half and put it in VOO

Mentions:#VOO

I need some advice/reassurance I guess? I’ve started the whole investing journey about a month ago now. Had the expected happiness when it went yo, and the absolute depression when it went down. Now, I’ve been reading up a bit more and want to learn. I’m currently 90% S&P (VOO) and 10% Nasdaq (QQQ). I’m non US and non EU. Should i bother changing from VOO to VUAA for my next round of buying? Or is the difference marginal enough? Also, should I go for more of a 70/30 split US/International? If so, VT?

Just look at the VOO chart zoomed out and think about whether the market being “currently high” means anything for its trajectory. When VOO is at 1300 in ten years, you won’t care whether you got in at 694 or 650. You WILL care if you sat on the sidelines waiting for a dip that never came. Wondering how the big players do it is silly because you aren’t one.

Mentions:#VOO

VOO and chill: 9% YTD, 26% YoY SPMO, FOMO and chasers: 31% YTD, 48% YoY 🤡 Fed rewarding gamblers and those slamming calls on every dip.

Mentions:#VOO#SPMO

Thats probably a little too aggressive for VOO but I like your optimism.

Mentions:#VOO

Thats why I dumped it into VOO, ive taken way too many big gambles and hits with mango at the wheel

Mentions:#VOO

VOO is at 17% and my acct is at 23%.

Mentions:#VOO

Managed as in paying fees? It feels like it should be really easy to just buy VOO and nothing else.

Mentions:#VOO

Hold my VOO 690 Call? Only got one contract for 240$ on Friday feel like we hit ATH this week?

Mentions:#VOO

A person owns various lots of SPY. Over the year, at various times they sell lots at a loss and at the same time buy the exact same amount in VOO.  Come tax time they are able to offset up to 3k from dividend income without affecting their portfolio. 

Mentions:#SPY#VOO

Take it, even if you sustained or even grew income it would take forever to catch up. Don’t invest tin AI bs, it’s a bubble. Keep an emergency fund HYSA, most into index fund (SPY, VOO), and maybe 10% to play around with if you really wanna pick AI stocks.

Mentions:#HYSA#SPY#VOO

Do we think VOO just green dildos today or falls back a bit after morning frenzy?

Mentions:#VOO

That was my original intention but after the first year, the interest rate is the current rate. 2% first year, 6-7% or whatever the current rate is at the time. Thanks for the suggestion, I am leaning towards VOO or VTI over a rental property.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

Are you still contributing and have time to recover? If so just dollar cost average (DCA) for the entire 16 year recovery. If you are not adding more money and really worried about it... you could do 50% cash and deploy 1% of the cash every time nasdaq drops 1% and ride it down. There is obviously a risk/reward trade-off here and all the "time in the market beats timing the market" shit is pretty valid. Or just do VOO instead of nasdaq... again, risk/reward trade-off.

Mentions:#VOO

My life is boring now that I am 90% VOO. Any tips? Had way more fun when I was trading memory stocks

Mentions:#VOO

My life is boring now that I am 90% VOO. Any tips? Had way more fun when I was trading memory stocks

Mentions:#VOO

watching my bros up 10%, 20% a day and my full port VOO up merely 1% hurts

Mentions:#VOO

15% of a portfolio is a big ass bet no? I've heard of managed futures before. Is there an obvious best practice to start (like a VTI or VOO of managed futures)? And is there a good resource on understanding them that you found useful?

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

You should absolutely invest in individual stocks. There's a good chance Google, Nvidia, Amazon, Microsoft, etc, will outperform VOO from the years of 2028-2038. Not guaranteed, but this is the time to get in on those companies, and this next decade is when their true value will break out (especially Amazon which is the closest thing to a near monopoloy globally).

Mentions:#VOO

Thanks Jim, just sold my house and liquidated all my assets to buy VOO

Mentions:#VOO

Investing is always worth it, especially starting in your teenage years. Low fee, broad ETF like $VTI or $VOO are great options for you to research.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

please short VOO tomorrow and report back

Mentions:#VOO

That’s a great start. Add some VOO or VUG mixed in with VT. Single stocks can be very profitable but can also lose you a lot. Index funds are a lot less risky and it’s hard to beat them in the long run. At 22 you need to be thinking 40 year return not 1 year or 2 year.

Mentions:#VOO#VUG#VT

Sure, VOO has a lower expense ratio, go for that. I was generically discussing funds that track the two indexes.

Mentions:#VOO

Curious why SPY and not VOO?

Mentions:#SPY#VOO

Cash out and VOO, imo

Mentions:#VOO

Thanks! And yeah, the more I study the markets the more DCAing every month into VOO and VTI seems like the best (and least stressful) strategy for medium or long term horizons.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

The bottom half of the VOO. Plus my investment horizon is 20 years and I don’t want anything paying dividends.

Mentions:#VOO

QQQ all the way. So much garbage in VOO I’ll never touch it.

Mentions:#QQQ#VOO

I agree that a sudden market crash would be real bad for this, but in terms of it being competitive with ETFs, it has been so far. VOO is up 75% over five years, which is about 15% a year (technically less) and this seems to be doing maybe 5-6% a month. I would never put more than this 15% in it because it’s risky, but it seems to be doing okay at this scale

Mentions:#VOO

Open something like a Fidelity account and put 300k in something like VOO and keep 100k in SPAXX as your cash reserve ready to scoop up a dip when it comes. This is a good conservative plan. Impossible to time markets.

Mentions:#VOO#SPAXX

My feelings, diversify a little more. Perhaps include the RSP since it's equally weighted. Set a schedule and pick an allocation amount over a period of time (weekly, monthly, quarterly, etc.) That should reduce anxiety. I think VOO has a lower expense ratio than SPY. I'm not a financial advisor so just giving you things to think about

Mentions:#RSP#VOO#SPY

You're going to get a lot of answers here. The best, actual answer is: do what makes you feel most comfortable. That said, here's my 2¢: Put about 20% of it into VOO, VTI, or your index of choice—and the rest into T-bills or a core account that returns at least 3.5%. A month from now, move another 20% into index funds. If there's an irrational pullback in the meantime, consider moving more. The reason for this isn't so much to average your cost basis, as it is to give you a tiny bit more control over your eventual tax situation. It's possible that a year from now you'll want to sell some at prefereable capital gains rates, and you can then select from tax lots that have higher or lower cost basis, depending on your tax needs at the moment. Or if the market moves sideways for a while or even dips, you'lll have more options for tax loss harvesting.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

You sound like a dumbass. Go buy VOO

Mentions:#VOO

Keep rebalancing to 80% VOO 10% single stock % 10% speculative Rebalance when it's out of that percentage. Otherwise you're already in the 99fh percentile

Mentions:#VOO

Moms at the pool were super impressed when I taught them about VOO. Just wait until I teach them about SPY 0dtes 🤌🏼

Mentions:#VOO#SPY

I already have VOO and QQM so I’m just chilling even though I know it’s a low concentration compared to yours.

Mentions:#VOO

Def dca 75% of it. I've 100k in my vanguard settlement account that I've been to pussy to buy with, going to start dca'ing weekly into VOO.

Mentions:#VOO

Go the ETF route. VOO or VTI are great. Invest half now, and then DCA the other half over a fixed timeline. Weekly or monthly for 12-24 months would likely be the best approach. Look for days that are deep in the red and capitalize on it.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

Lump sum beats DCA about 66% of the time historically because markets spend more time rising than falling. If you try to wait a month for things to stabilize, you run into a definition trap. If the S&P 500 climbs 3% next month, you end up buying at a higher price. If it drops 5%, most people freeze instead of buying, hoping it goes lower. If putting $400k in all at once is too stressful, set up a mechanical schedule. Put $200k in VOO today, and automate the remaining $200k in equal chunks over the next 6 months. That takes the emotion out of it and keeps you from sitting on cash drag indefinitely. Is this going into a taxable brokerage account or a tax-advantaged retirement account?

Mentions:#VOO

When you hold SGRT and FMTM alongside AVLV, you are mixing growth and value tilts with momentum in the same U.S. large-cap universe. Combining these factors in a 25/25/50 split effectively replicates a core index like VOO or VTI. The problem is you are paying active management fees to do it. SGRT charges 0.59% and FMTM is 0.45%. Rebuilding a total market index this way creates a massive fee drag compared to just holding VTI at 0.03%. The same issue applies to the international side. JIVE charges 0.55%. If you put 40% of your stock allocation into high-fee active funds, you are losing a significant chunk of your inheritance compounding power to management fees. On a $500k portfolio, a 0.40% average fee drag is $2k a year, which compounding over 20 years eats up over $70k of your final wealth. Are you holding these in a taxable account or a tax-advantaged one? Using short-term bonds to cushion the inheritance makes sense if you have low risk tolerance, but holding 40% in cash/bonds specifically to buy a dip usually backfires. You end up sitting on cash drag for years waiting for a crash that might not drop prices below where they are today. If you want to tilt, keep it to a 10% allocation in something like AVLV on top of a low-cost core index fund.

It won't be a bloodbath. VOO probably sideways or slightly down, definitely less than 1% down.

Mentions:#VOO

Meh. All personal finance is the same. Auto invest. Don’t panic sell. Sell assets to pay for things after years of growth. You talk like pension is magic money, it’s not. If you took all the contributions and just VOO’ed it, then sold each year to pay the bills in retirement, it would be much more money. Same thing with social security. If all that was just in VOO the benefit would be much much higher than what you get for “your lifetime”. Invest how you like, it’s your money. And I like pensions. But there is nothing different about it. It all boils down to spend less, invest more auto, don’t panic sell (not even an option in pensions). Is it a little more “easy mode”, sure. But you paid a price in growth that you don’t seem to understand.

Mentions:#VOO

Which is why owning VOO, VTI, or VT is a good decision. Youll own about 60% growth anyway, and if value does better you are benefitting from that.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI#VT

This is true They talk about S&P 500 VOO like it's the Bible when it's clear America is falling to pieces I prefer total market funds like VT or AOA

Mentions:#VOO#VT#AOA

VOO, SGOV, T-Bill ladder, Silver, hell idk.

Mentions:#VOO#SGOV

Why not both? $200k in the market now and DCA the rest out over the next year. I got into investing earlier this year and put my savings ($20k) into the market in February (VOO/VXUS). If I had DCA’d over February and March, I’d have more money right now, but if you zoom out there truly is no bad time to enter the market if you have a good time horizon.

Mentions:#VOO#VXUS

50K in SGOV then DCA or just Lump into VTI or VOO man.

Mentions:#SGOV#VTI#VOO

4k - RKLB 4k - VOO 2k - SPAXX

Wow, I thought your question did not make sense until I read the comments. It seems like every board has there VOO and chill subste. Apparently this subreddit is not one of them. I have never seen so much indignation about a stock picking choice. Though I am not VOO and chill, it does seem like a good way to reduce stress and get a historicity pretty good return at the same time. Good luck

Mentions:#VOO

I would DCA IN 10% chunks weekly until it's all in. VOO would be my choice but I like the idea of a more managed fund vs blindly dumping proportionally into s&p500. A lot of SP500 Is in overvalued tech right now. If they drop you erase nearly 20% of the entire index value in just a few stocks. I.e. nvda is over 7% weight of the 500.

Mentions:#VOO

Is it not already taxed? If you have a long investing horizon, consider doing sector ETFs on what's hot for the past few years e.g. tech and semiconductors. Once their cycle is over, it's tax free to sell and switch to another fund. I really dislike the bad advice of VOO/VT and chill for people who are decades away from using it.

Mentions:#VOO#VT

the correction in the top reply matters, free float is the shares actually available to the public, not the most recent amount sold, but the underlying point still holds for an index investor. seasoning and float weighting are why a hyped IPO doesnt immediately become a big chunk of your VOO on day one, which is mostly protecting you. its one of those mechanics you never have to think about but are quietly glad exists, imo.

Mentions:#VOO

worth being clear about the comparison the other commenter made; a target date fund underperforming VOO over five years is mostly the bonds and international it holds by design, not a flaw. youre paying a small return drag in exchange for never having to make a decision or rebalance, which for a hands-off IRA is a fair trade. if you genuinely want all equities thats a different choice, but then the honest comparison is VT, not a dated fund.

Mentions:#VOO#VT

If you have a long timeline/horizon, time in the market beats timing the market. Lump sum is technically better but DCA has better vibes. If you want, maybe split it as $80k/month through end of 2026, though I'd probably be more aggressive if I were you. As far as which ones, VOO is fairly safe. Maybe put 70% in VOO and 20% in an international fund. And then put 10% in a money market for now while you research some good individual bet stocks. For example, in my HSA, I just have 200 shares of Nvidia that I'm selling covered calls on 3 times a week. Easy money and it's a fairly stable stock right now. AAPL is another good option for that.

Mentions:#VOO#AAPL

VOO, want to be aggressive? # Talk to a financial advisor

Mentions:#VOO

The overwhelming advice from people on Reddit (and this thread) is to invest in an index fund like VOO or SPY. Set it and forget it. That’s about as safe as you can get in the market, and pretty much the exact advice any worthwhile financial advisor would give you. So idk what you’re trying to say. This ain’t wallstreetbets. Financial advisors very rarely outperform simply setting and forgetting with VOO/VTI/SPY/other major index funds. Most portfolios I’ve seen from financial advisors are basically just a more complicated VTI - their “magic diversification” is a split of different market sector ETFs or mutual funds that all basically add up to what you’d get with VTI. The real magic comes down to risk tolerance and knowing how much you can invest and how much you should keep in low risk things like money market. You don’t need to give someone a cut of your portfolio for the rest of your life to figure that out.

Mentions:#VOO#SPY#VTI

If you are young, it is better to invest as soon as possible. You can always save 10 to 15 percent cash ($40,000 to $60,000) in SGOV to buy the dip on market corrections. Invest in a broad S&P500 index like VOO or VTI. You can also invest in some portions in growth and/or value ETF because they can outperform S&P500 in some years. I like SPMO for momentum factor and VTV for value factor. How aggressive you want to invest depends upon your goals and time horizon. If you throw it all into the VOO, you will make around 10 percent a year just matching the market ($40,000+). You can lump sum or DCA. Whatever gets you to start investing, do it!

If you want s&p500 buy VOO all at once. Set it up to reinvest dividends.

Mentions:#VOO

Gotta buy VOO for that port alert

Mentions:#VOO

If the real goal is to stop tinkering, a low-cost target date fund is a totally reasonable answer inside an IRA. The trade-off is not that it is bad, it is that you are accepting more diversification and a glide path instead of maximizing whatever happened to lead the last 5 years. If simplicity is the thing you actually need, that usually matters more than winning a recent VOO comparison.

Mentions:#VOO

Just put your money into an index like VOO and Carry on with your career and life while having reoccurring buys.

Mentions:#VOO

Is it worth buying SPCX tomorrow or should I just put more money into my VOO?

Mentions:#SPCX#VOO

TSLA 1yr 24.51% 5yr 99.92% VOO 1yr 23.35% 5yr 74.82% bite me

Mentions:#TSLA#VOO

Well, when you posted this I looked at my target date fund vs VOO, rather depressing. In 5 years VOO has outperformed my target date fund by 42%. That’s a lot of money. So, do with that information what you will.

Mentions:#VOO

Screw VOO.

Mentions:#VOO

At the end of the day VTI and VOO have an 88% overlap in market cap so their fates are tied together. Even the other 12% is pretty highly correlated with large cap. So in a drawdown they will both get hit hard there is no hiding from that. At the end of the day, more diversification has its benefits. Owning literally everything in a market weighted fund is a beautiful way to be totally neutral to the market.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

Thanks. Do you think this is because the nature of PE and investment has changed in the last decade+ or could it be a result of the 15yr+ bull market? A concern I would have is a recession affecting the large caps harder than others, causing an even larger drawdown in VOO vs VTI.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

Here is what I would do: **10 Years left for Retirement** - 50% VOO - 35% VGT - 15% SMH Rebalance every year **20 Years left for Retirement** - 30% VOO - 45% VGT - 25% SMH Rebalance every year **40 Years left for Retirement** - 80% VGT - 20% SMH Rebalance every year

Mentions:#VOO#VGT#SMH

Why VOO instead of VTI or VT?

Mentions:#VOO#VTI#VT

She should just buy VOO and her funds will do very well.

Mentions:#VOO

We need an automod reply that just says VOO to these stupid questions

Mentions:#VOO

If you can tolerate taking gains, just switch to SPYG. It has the same protection as SP500 SPY or VOO and basically tracks with QQQ