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Vanguard S&P 500 ETF

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Reddit Posts

SOXX vs Broad Index Funds

Only VOO vs 3 fund performance?

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

Which stocks do I drop?

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

Portfolio Feedback

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Am I doing this right?…

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

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

Throwing all my free cash into Schwab

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Leverage in retirement accounts?

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

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Advice on investing at 17

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

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Looking for some help with kids/wife & I investments

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Morgan Stanley Advisor?

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

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VOO > QQQ for stability do you agree?

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What other sector should I invest besides Tech / AI?

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

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DCA allocation question

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

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One Year Into Investing… any tips?

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I have questions on long term investing.

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New to portfolio diversification

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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.

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

looking into investing

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

VOO and chill

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What to invest in with Roth IRA

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The more you learn investing, the more you realize there’s not much to optimize beyond saving more, staying invested, and avoiding mistakes

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20 y/o F looking for advice for my portfolio

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Is the stock market becoming more & more volatile?

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Why do people who just buy index funds call themselves investors? You set up an auto deposit once. My grandmother does the same thing with her savings account.

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What's the best strategy as a 30 year old?

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iShares Automation & Robotics

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Is Wall Street Bets a legitimate strategy what should I buy besides VOO ?

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Advice from experienced investors

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Late starter..has that tech ship already sailed? Amd, MSFT, VOO?

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Hit $100K… But It Came With More Risk Than I’d Recommend

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Need review on US market portfolio

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Trading platforms

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After about 7 years of losing money from options and meme stocks /coins, I'm finally back in the positive.

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“YouTubers”uncompensated risk?

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If someone is worth one million dollars, how much $VOO and $VTI should they own? What if they're worth *two* million; how much then?

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If you had $7.5k to invest tomorrow, what would you do in this current market?

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How not to miss "obvious plays" in front of us?

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Googl in Roth or Brokerage

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What’s your opinion on selling All Tech Heavy Stocks soon and moving to SP500 $VOO?

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Took my whole IRA out of VOO yesterday and bought AMD and NOK calls. Am I dumb? Probably.

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22, just started investing, any tips?

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We love VOO yeah 💚

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Should I get out of SPY and move it to a better long term index?

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Do automatic 401k contributions affect markets?

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My tech-heavy portfolio is up across the board, TQQQ leading the way

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Do you think tech will outperform the market over the next 30+ years

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Target Date Funds - outside of 401k

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We love VOO

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1st Month Investing on Leverage, Up 28%

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Question on two funds.

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$15K to invest 31 yo portfolio

Reddit Ticker Mentions MAY.04.2026 - $NVDA, $AMD, $SOUN, $MSFT, $SNDK, $SPY, $VOO, $XRX, $RDDT

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I have 358k of VOO at 44. Ive played around with several calculators to see what it can be worth at 74.

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22 Y/O and need some help

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I am at a crossroad in my mid 20s of what I should do, I'd be very appreciative for some advice

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100 to 1 million

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Need advice on investing/dca'ing

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Understanding Diversification

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Saving accumulation for property purchase strategy

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I just started investing at 19. Are these good investments?

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Beginner dipping my toes in the water…

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Advice on VOO covered call strategy

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Updated - J.P Morgan's Top Stock Picks for 2026 - +7.40% YTD

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Systematic profit-taking - worth doing? Or not recommended?

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What are everyone’s thoughts on this plan?

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Sticking to my investment portfolio allowed my investment assets to grow by 100%.

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Roth IRA for minors

Reddit Ticker Mentions APR.27.2026 - $SPY, $AMD, $MSFT, $POET, $INTC, $RDDT, $NVDA, $VOO, $ASTS, $QQQ

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Changed my life

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Overlapping ETFs as a good investment strategy?

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should I add SPMO or VOO to round out my portfolio?

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70k uninvested what options are there

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DCA in VOO + TQQQ backtesting

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Should we expect the same growth from US equities?

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Should we expect the same growth from U.S. equities?

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2026 YTD which tickers have you realized losses, or expect to realize losses soon? Yes, losses

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How would you allocate $70k CAD into ETFs?

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Ideal Roth portfolio and mix?

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Today is the day I finally accepted the truth about stocks.

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Best to hold or sell and reinvest?

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Sharing an investment strategy from a discussion group.I hope you find it helpful.

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A $337K Bet on the Future: The AI Stack + Space Thesis

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VOO vs: QQQI. What am I missing?

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I need advice for a 2k portfolio

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I need advice for a 2k portfolio

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Should I build wealth or buy land?

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am i investing too little?

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Diversified Leverage - Question

Mentions

Im definitely selling VOO if they bypass norms for this garbage .

Mentions:#VOO

I dunno man..if I was 60, I’d still be in VTI and VOO.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

VOO is my cash position

Mentions:#VOO

People that don’t consider taxes at all aren’t making money.  In your analogy, paying taxes on a paycheck is worth it, because I make more money getting a paycheck than I would by not getting a paycheck. And the more I make, the more I take home because brackets are marginal.  The opposite is true (statistically) of frequent trading. Most of the time, most people make more money by trading less. And frequent taxable events creates a drag on long term compounding. It’s just math. Yeah, I know. Everyone says they beat the market, just like everyone says they walk out of a casino with more money than they went in with. But the statistics disagree.  The probability of positive movement with the broad market is 55% day, 60% month, 70%-90% per year. Roughly.  Sure, sometimes getting in and out grows money enough to be worth it. Just make sure you account for taxes before you celebrate beating buy and hold VOO. And the odds of losing goes up with shorter periods.  Also keep in mind that the significance of tax in the math goes up with income. The higher the taxable amount you report, the more it matters. 

Mentions:#VOO

These ideas are pretty complicated for the average investor. The only one that’s not is direct indexing, but the fees for that are high. Like 0.4% vs 0.03% for VOO.

Mentions:#VOO

>Your option is to take control your self, or quit investing all together. Or just change the index. Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) won't include it but Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) will.

Mentions:#VOO#QQQ

VOO is fundamentally the best. some categories to look at are cpu stocks quantum and space stocks. but VOO contains a lot of those.

Mentions:#VOO

AVUS is a total market fund and VOO isn't. You should be comparing it to a total market passive fund like VTI, which it has outperformed.

Mentions:#AVUS#VOO#VTI

It makes sense directionally, but it’s not a perfect hedge because CSPX and VOO options won’t track identically tick-for-tick. You’re basically creating a “synthetic covered call” using correlated ETFs, so basis risk, currency differences, liquidity gaps, and assignment mechanics can still hurt you even if the charts look almost the same.

Mentions:#VOO

Funds that pay dividends (VTI, VOO, etc)

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

The practical answer underneath the noise here is that the exposure problem and the volatility problem are two different things and need different tools. The exposure problem: if you hold QQQ specifically, the NASDAQ one hundred small float multiplier rule means SpaceX inclusion gets weighted at three to five times its actual free float percentage. The practical fix some commenters pointed at is correct, swap QQQ for an equal weight version like QQEW or for a broader vehicle like VOO or VT where the inclusion math is much smaller. That is an allocation move, not a hedge. The volatility problem is different. Retail can not actually hedge an index IPO inclusion event with stock allocation alone. The cleanest expression is a long dated put spread on QQQ dated around the inclusion window, typically thirty to ninety days after the IPO date, because that is when forced index buying compresses then mean reverts. The IV term structure already prices some of this, the front month is cheap relative to the three to four month dated options where the inclusion driven flow concentrates. Put spreads also limit the bleed if the event passes uneventfully. Panic selling everything today or sitting in cash for two months is the option that combines highest cost with worst outcome distribution. Picking either the allocation move or the targeted hedge is the practical answer. Doing both is overkill but defensible if the position size warrants it.

Wouldn't VOO be just as exposed as the other popular ones?

Mentions:#VOO

It's a good idea in theory, but passively managed funds almost always both have significantly lower expense ratios, and outperform profitability funds. For instance, VOO had a 5x lower rate than AVUS and has outperformed it for every time period over a year.

Mentions:#VOO#AVUS

You did the impossible. Instead of trying to do it 3x just reinvest in VOO and let time work its magic

Mentions:#VOO

In 6 months around December 2026. VOO tracks S and P 500 which will likely add SpaceX to index after 6 months as per new rules currently under consideration.

Mentions:#VOO

Most traders eventually realize they were underperforming VOO with extra steps and stress.

Mentions:#VOO

Most traders eventually realize they were underperforming VOO with extra steps and stress.

Mentions:#VOO

Buy low-fee actively managed funds that have a profitability factor. Avantis (AVUS, AVEG, AVTM, ...) and Dimensional (DFUS, ...) are good. Avoid passively managed funds weighed on market cap like VOO, SPY, QQQ, etc.

Is VOO going to buy this overvalued dogshit?

Mentions:#VOO

lot of safe markets that out-preform 5% with nearly no risk if you plan to hold longer than six months, like VOO. It gone up an average of 15% every year for the last 5 years, 25% just this year alone. If it does go down its returns usually rebound within a year.

Mentions:#VOO

I have $4000 in cash sitting in my Fidelity account. I'm a passive investor with main investments across VOO, QQQ, SCHD. However, I would like to experiment with this $4000 to maximize my returns. What are some ways to do this?

Mentions:#VOO#QQQ#SCHD

All I know is I ain't touching QQQ for a hot minute. I am a SPY/VOO goblin until the Space X fast track into the NASDAQ shakes out.

Mentions:#QQQ#SPY#VOO

Just ditch QQQ if you have it and buy VT or VOO. The pump should have given way to the dump by the time it gets added to the S&P. Absolutely nothing says you need to own a NASDAQ index fund, if you really want 'high growth high risk tech' there are plenty of other ways to achieve it. I'd agree that its a pretty worrying precedent for the NASDAQ to set between changing the free float rules to overweight tiny floats, and allowing fast entry (while this specific IPO also lets existing shareholders exit earlier than normal). I'd worry less about this particular IPO wiping anyone out (besides a few foolish active investors), and more about the floodgates the index's greed has opened. SpaceX's tradeable market cap will 'only' be $80 billion in non-NASDAQ indices, so its unlikely to distort the prices of anything else besides he other space stocks Reddit obsesses over but which make up a tiny proportion of the overall index. Tesla has been sitting at unhinged valuations for years but doesn't move the wider market.

Mentions:#QQQ#VT#VOO

Can you buy, please? I just want to load up VOO and VTV at better prices. 

Mentions:#VOO#VTV

Combing a broad based with SOXX or SOXQ is the way to go. Maybe 70% VOO and 30% SOXQ

Not really. Unless I'm reading it wrong, I'm seeing 40% over 3 years from 2023. Underperformed compared to just buying VOO or SP500 equivalent.

Mentions:#VOO

I have a 50% VOO, 15 % VXUS, 25% individual stocks, 10% cash

Mentions:#VOO#VXUS

I hold VOO as well already. I’m not 100% sure where the ROTH IRA money is going yet but something along those lines

Mentions:#VOO

Is PSY/QQQ a better place to park over VOO?

Mentions:#QQQ#VOO

One thing these articles conveniently fail to mention is what is the approximate % of VOO, VTI they will be. Because if they mention it, the article will be big nothing burger!

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

Listen i think the same way. I am into both right now. And i tried splitting them both up 50/50. But the thing is when one goes down, so does the other. And when it goes up, so does the other too. But at different rates XEQT vs VOO is the clear comparison. And VOO (currently) has made more profit within the past 1day, 5days, 1month, 3months, 1year, 5years and 10years. So unless you think the USA is going to be collapsing very soon, i think they will be making more money. And keep in mind the US will sacrifice it's future for short term profits.

Mentions:#VOO

AI slop, VXUS is outperforming VOO YTD.

Mentions:#VXUS#VOO

Forgive my ignorance but how would this work in practice with something like VOO? Relatively new to investing, and have only ever bought individual shares, but increasingly feel like an index wide correction is on the horizon… especially with the midterms coming up

Mentions:#VOO

Compare RSP to VOO performance

Mentions:#RSP#VOO

If you had only bought VOO, your return would have been much closer to the S&P 500. That doesn’t mean your setup is wrong though. It’s just more diversified and less volatile, which can mean smoother returns over time even if it doesn’t match the S&P in every year. Theres tools out there that can help you out (:

Mentions:#VOO

Not a financial advisor but I like to do a core + satellite approach. Where the bulk of my money is in a broad index etf (like VOO or VTI, VXUS, VT etc) and then I supplement that with more risky individual investments. My satellite rn is GOOG, MSFT, MU and RKLB

Hi All, I am hoping to save to buy a home and afford a surgery. Both huge expenses. 40s, 85k-125k year dep on part time job and bonuses. I do have a savings as well as 32k invested, and diversified. (25% growth inc VOO, QQQ; 25% div QQQI, F, O, and more, 50% in VUSXX and VMFXX. Only $85 a month div. I'm wondering if it's smarter if I get a $100k trailer and losing investment cash. Or keep renting at an absurb 2500 a month. The trailer at least only slightly depreciates now with inflation. Id expect it to resell for $95k in a year based on the others that have sold. It is trailer park with lot rent. With the trailer I'd lose up front money but have 1500 more monthly to invest. Homes here are 6-12% increase a year. Very hard to outpace. Thus far my investment is at 10% but kind of a weird market. My pay is up 45% over last year. What are your thoughts if you were in the situation? Not financial advice.

I would allocate some of your money to VGT and VOO.

Mentions:#VGT#VOO

What can a passive VOO investor do to shield themselves from this rug pull?  Would love a low cost s&p498 (minus elon) etf.

Mentions:#VOO

At 30, I’d keep it boring. In taxable, VTI is usually a great core because it gives you the whole US market and is tax-efficient. VOO is fine too, but holding both doesn’t add much since they overlap heavily. Since your Roth is already 80/20 US/international, you could mirror that with VTI + VXUS in taxable and focus on consistency, low costs, and not tinkering.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO#VXUS

The problem isn't VXUS. It outperformed VOO both in 2025 and 2026. 33% of your money is in a MMF. That's a lot.

Mentions:#VXUS#VOO

Yeah if they were new accounts I’d just do VT and SPY. They say VOO tracks better than SPY at a lower expense ratio but I like the efficient options volume on SPY for writing covered calls.

Mentions:#VT#SPY#VOO

Inverse QQQ and SPY/VOO

Mentions:#QQQ#SPY#VOO

It was VOO 40%, VXUS & BND 30%. Retiring in 10 yrs. (Seems it might only grow to about 100k with contributions). Prior to today I thought perhaps 60/25/15 might be a better goal. Current % 33.50/17.42/15.87 and 33.21 in SPAXX to rebalance.

Your math checks out - VXUS has been dragging you down this year while bonds are basically dead weight. International has been underperforming US markets for a while now, and with rates where they are, BND isn't doing you any favors either. At your age though, having some diversification isn't the worst idea even if it hurts short-term performance. The 3-fund portfolio is designed for long-term stability, not chasing returns. If you went 100% VOO you'd definitely be closer to that 9.27% S&P number, but you'd also be taking on more concentration risk. Maybe consider tweaking your allocation instead of going all-in on one fund - bump up VOO percentage and reduce the international/bond weightings if you're comfortable with a bit more volatility.

Mentions:#VXUS#BND#VOO

I don't know what your percentages are in each fund, what your right tolerance is, or what other sources of income you may have. But the simple answer to your question is "yes, you would have gained more holding just VOO".

Mentions:#VOO

I don’t know why OP is worried about a single stock when the whole idea of indices is to invest outside your own domain. No one knows where spacex is headed, it could be the next railroad or it could be another Segway. For OP to even waste energy over this means he 100% needs to VOO and chill for 40 years.

Mentions:#VOO

This is what I've been thinking, to reduce exposure to the AI/tech concentration of VOO in general though. Building my own etf with RSP at the core and adding some MAG 8 (minus Tesla) albeit at lower weightings than VOO.

Mentions:#VOO#RSP#MAG

Unfortunately, because of the size of the offering, SpaceX will be added to the S&P 500 in six months to a year. So it's unavoidable to anyone holding SPY/VOO/FXAIX etc, for the long term.

I bought Nvidia because everyone wanted Nvidia, and then when the Crypto coins started taking off I saw, everyone wanted Nvidia. and then AI was starting to happen and everyone wanted Nvidia. so much that an entire country was not allowed to buy the best chips. so I just kept adding to my position. I didn't buy enough to become a millionaire, mind you And as Nvidia succeeded, I had enough conviction in the industry to buy other names like MU and AMD. Not enough to become a millionaire. But enough that it has allowed me to beat VTI and VOO had I bought that instead.

Can you choose which etf a stock buys? No. You can buy VOO or SPY, they're keeping the original rules for SpaceX. Tesla is already an SP500 co because they more than qualify. Keep in mind the Nasdaq only allocates based on the free float and Elon is only releasing 5 percent of spacex so even if you own QQQ the addition of spacex will be negligible. They're not buying 1 trillion worth of shares. As for Tesla, there's no real answer. You knew Tesla was a part of it when you bought it.

Mentions:#VOO#SPY#QQQ

In any case, you're joining me as an active (maybe even activist investor? ). As an active investor, I handpick every investment - I chose to buy SpaceX at Series E. I choose not to buy it at IPO. If you invest in VOO, you forfeit that right.

Mentions:#VOO

Theoretically if you do the math you can hold enough S&P 500 ETF, you can short out your exposure to SpaceX directly through their shares. That would probably be require you holding a lot of $VOO/$SPY, though. I haven’t done the math and I’m not sure what % makeup SpaceX would be yet of the index.

Mentions:#VOO#SPY

This is actually a strategy a lot of high rollers employ. Closest thing you get to an infinite money glitch. Theoretically (and practically), the investment return of circa 7% from VOO pays the loan off and gives you profits whilst the rest of your personal investments appreciate. However, there is a reason this is done by people with plenty of capital - if something goes awry, for example a down year in the market, or an emergency, you need the safety net of capital to continue to cover the loan for a period of time. So only do this if you're already well off.

Mentions:#VOO

What’s your age/ time horizon? If it’s 20+ years I’d go 80/20 VOO/ VXUS. Could go 80/20 VTI/VXUS for more exposure/ safety or just 100% VTI. But if your timeframe is 20+ I’d suggest the more aggressive approach.

Mentions:#VOO#VXUS#VTI

VOO

Mentions:#VOO

I'm of the opinion that 30 is young, and target date funds and bonds have no place in your 30-year retirement portfolio. I used https://www.etfrc.com/funds/overlap.php VOO and VTI are basically almost the same. Overlap: 88% by weight, 497 # of overlapping holdings I argue for replacing the target date fund and bond allocations for some sector ETF like VGT and SMH/SOXX. As you near retirement, you can rebalance tax free towards bonds and a more Boglehead-like portfolio. But while you're in your prime earning years, I think you can stomach the volatility for bigger returns.

How is it so hard to buy the VOO

Mentions:#VOO

It sounds like you should only VOO and chill going forward, this might not be the game for you. Being down 62% in the most insane bull market takes skill.

Mentions:#VOO

Just buy VOO and VXUS or just VT. Then in a tax deferred account add BND after you turn 40.

Be like Warren Buffett. Buy VOO and chill and make tendies.

Mentions:#VOO

Damn - this sounds like a great case for holding indexes instead. Could just hold QQQ , VGT, SPMO, VOO one of those.. you don’t have to second guess your conviction on bad days, weeks or months when you hold an index. or copy trumps portfolio knowing he’s got the insider info. (He had a great day today).

100% in VOO and don't look at it for at least 5 years. Stress free gains.

Mentions:#VOO

I thought I was doing good picking stocks and getting 30% which is way above market avg. until I realized VOO has gone up 30%. Hahaha! All that hassle to just… be exactly average.

Mentions:#VOO

Improper sizing! 0.5%-3% of your total port leveraged throughout one year, the rest in 3 months treasury bond or S&P500 ETF (VOO for lower fees) or even VT for total world stocks exposure.

Mentions:#VOO#VT

I'm working with much less capital than you but I've been struggling with the same emotional selling and poor timing. I keep trying to tell myself it is what it is and it's a lesson pretty much every investor has to learn at some point. Nobody's line ever just goes straight up. I recently took a $7k loss on LULU after finally deciding I was done with it after holding and averaging down for almost 2 years, then I see it starting to move up again although the value is still way off its highs, I sold MELI a few weeks ago and again that's going back up, sold out of half my UNH position at the bottom and lost a little money despite knowing I bought in really cheap and probably could've held it all, I made $4k instead of the $10k I should have had I held. The thing is though you have to move on once you sell a stock. Beating yourself up and, I'm guilty of it, I made a similar post in the value investing sub about how over the last few years I traded like $300k just to barely break even, but beating yourself up and dwelling does no good for your mental health or investing strategy it will only cause you to keep losing money. Not financial advice in the slightest but I think if you let go of META and MSFT you'll find yourself feeling sad again once they go back up. MSFT is my largest position so far and I'm not selling until it at least doubles which could take time but I don't think as much as the projections are showing. If it drops below my entry price of just under $400 again I'm loading the boat. It's the one stock I have 100% conviction in right now they'll never go away, corporate America runs on their products I wouldn't bet against that at all. META is riskier but I hold that too although much less. Earnings are good, no reason the stock should stay this low for long. I would just close the app and hold and see where things go if I were you. And also it sounds like you already have about $400-500k liquid net worth so you're already ahead of most people, if you're smart and can get a handle on the emotional aspect which is just as important as the technical analysis side of investing, you can make that money compound quickly. No need to be chasing anything too risky like options when you have that much to lose. If anything sell your current positions after you're in the green and throw it in VOO/VTI/VXUS/VTSAX take your pick at whatever low cost index fund and then just never sell. That's the beauty of index investing, if it goes down it just means you can buy more cheaper, unlike individual stocks where your gambling it all on horse to win it all but with indexes they pretty much always go up in the long term. Even buying at the top of the market you're still guaranteed to come out profitable unless a nuclear war breaks out or something of that magnitude.

VOO and chill for you

Mentions:#VOO

You buy on the way down and sell on the way up. 101 man. Also diversify. Maybe buy VOO or something like that.

Mentions:#VOO

I mean this in the nicest way possible but you are not good at this and should just allocate 7.5K into VOO in an IRA each year and chill You can have a self investment account to play around with but you don't have the stomach for this kinda swing trader stuff Nothing wrong with being boring, boring is usually safe

Mentions:#VOO

That actually reminds me, my longer term holdings are up severely today, to the point I did screenshot. But, they are meant to be longer term (SMH, VOO, VOOG). So I’m torn between sell because duh, or hold because that’s what it was planned as. Something tells me I’m going to smh when smh drops back down :/

Mentions:#SMH#VOO#VOOG

JUST VOO and chill from now on dude.

Mentions:#VOO

More like 0.7% of QQQ. Lower for VOO, VTI and VT, in that order.

You might be better off with 3 ETF’s ie. VGT, QQQM and VOO if you don’t like volatility. I like all your stock picks except Nebius. The problem even if you pick winners most of your gains will be concentrated in a few stocks. I suggest going mostly ETFs and a small percentage of your portfolio in stocks if you are investing in the long run.

Mentions:#VGT#QQQM#VOO

I think the valuation is going to come in crazy. Even if I could buy shares on day 1 I wouldn’t. It’s going to drop. Determining when to buy in at the drop is going to be the question. As much as I’m personally not a fan of Elon, I wouldn’t bet against him when it comes to the market. I’m hoping my one options contract on RKLB blows up more because of it. I have a decent sized portfolio but am smallstreetbets when it comes to options. Just started doing them a few months ago, have made money in spite of my knowledge and have a handful of open contracts but most are single contract LEAPS that I’m hoping I can double or more but if not, I’m not overexposed. As fun as it is to watch a single stock blow up, I’m to the point where a decent daily return in QQQM and VOO are good. I have some MSFT and AMZN shares that I’ve had for a while that I know are already in VOO and QQQM but I’ve owned them longer.

> i don't do options, but this is giving me the motivation to do it. So you want to go from missing out on gains from bad timing to being severely penalised for bad timing? Maybe rethink that plan.  VOO & chill seems the best option for you 

Mentions:#VOO

First of all, most people don’t know anything about investing in a stock market. They DCA into their employer 401(k) fund because they don’t really have a choice because it’s do that or eat Alpo in retirement. These people don’t get a call while they’re sitting at the dinner table. The majority 401(k)s are managed. You don’t get any input on how that’s done. And I have told the story on this several times, but here it goes again. 2008 was chaos. So many people lost big on their retirement and it took them several years to gain it back. I work in IT and people were in their cubes. One lady was weeks away from retiring and she ended up working another five years. If that bubble pops, a lot of people are gonna get hurt. Those DCAing into VOO - ouch. The best we can hope for is that never happens or it just slowly deflates.

Mentions:#VOO

I would buy index funds like S&P 500 VOO, FEZ Europe , EEM International You’ll sleep better at night and you’ll make money over the long run with dividend reinvestments. I’m up 65% in VOO in a three year period

Mentions:#VOO#FEZ#EEM

You should really start looking at 10, 20 50 100, and 200EMA to determine if you are buying in a bull or bear trend long term and short term, and if you are buying way too high in a bull run (i.e. way above the 10 or 8EMA in an increasing market, which can still be a mistake) sound like you have picked stocks pretty well, but with really bad timing and not paying attention to fundamentals. Also should check PE and PE/G for every stock you buy as well as news and projections, etc. I like using gemini for consensus price targets and trajectories as well. More fundamentals!!! And have the lion's share of your funds in tried and true things like VOO, VT, VTI, and so on.

Mentions:#VOO#VT#VTI

Long term 10x potential is definitely $VOO. Almost guanteed. Just not the get rich quick gamble it all scheme that you're looking for.

Mentions:#VOO

VTI or VOO and chill.

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

Just follow the money really. Billionaires, governments etc are shoveling money into tech/infrastructure. Me too. And I'll keep doing it until i see the money leaving or going elsewhere. If you want an entry, sit on your $ and wait for SPY/QQQ to hit the 200day EMA again on the daily chart after some "event". Then start scaling into something "safe", VOO, SCHD, VTI, QQQ/SPY etc to start out (OR SOXL, DRAM...i REALLY like CHPY). And just hold it. And keep adding. Then you wait. Then you're rich. 👍

Beans, lentils and legumes are essentially VOO, VXUS and VTI.

Mentions:#VOO#VXUS#VTI

>Why this matters? Forcing quick inclusion means all passive index and benchmarking strategies will trigger systematic buy to hold to index weights which is something like 4%.  Which passive funds track the nasdaq? The big funds that I'm aware of are VTI, VOO and their non-etf equivalents. All of which don't track the nasdaq 

Mentions:#VTI#VOO

Fucking SCHD doubled the returns of VOO YTD wtf 🤣

Mentions:#SCHD#VOO

Auto invest what you can in VOO or VT. You could sell all of this and get QQQM for similar exposure but not as much risk as individual shares.

Mentions:#VOO#VT#QQQM

I'm weighing between Cash vs. Equity at a very large Private Company I recently received an offer from Stripe (\~$159B valuation) and have the option to take my equity package (\~$80K/year) entirely in cash or as stock. This isn't a traditional 4-year RSU grant with a fixed strike price. Instead, the grant resets to FMV each year. So if the stock is at $65 in Year 1 and $85 in Year 2, my Year 2 grant is priced at $85. I capture year-over-year appreciation, but I have no long-term compounding upside from a single grant. Given this structure, does taking stock over cash still make sense? The way I see it, the stock only beats cash if Stripe continues to meaningfully appreciate each year, and at a $159B valuation, I'm skeptical there's much runway left before a plateau. I don't see them IPO'ing in the near future, but they offer liquidation events twice a year, so I'm not worried about liquidation. What I'm weighing: * Stock upside is capped to annual increments, not long-term compounding * $159B is already a massive valuation for a private company * The conventional wisdom is to take cash and put it in VOO/VTI * But if Stripe does continue to grow, there could be short-term gains Stripe's business varies with transaction volume, so the business's success correlates with market performance.

Mentions:#VOO#VTI

The only dividend timing I would try is moving IVV to VOO to SPY in Jun, because they're the exact same thing.  You're just getting 3x the dividends for passive index investing

Mentions:#IVV#VOO#SPY

As long as my VOO outperforms 99% of you fuckers I'm happy

Mentions:#VOO

International diversification is important. People will say that VOO is all you need but I disagree. 

Mentions:#VOO

VOO has better returns than my port 🫩

Mentions:#VOO

Sitting on cash, with the hope of buying at discount is also greed. Not different than somebody shamelessly greedy to make money from current bulls. Both are extremes. Normal investors who don't want to spend time and energy in picking stocks and trade active, needs to lower greed and be happy with VOO returns as long as they don't need that money for the next 10 years.

Mentions:#VOO

Also, you can squeeze down this cost if you only hold the minimum required exposure in futures contracts. Something like $90,000 in VOO and ~$35,000 in futures exposure makes the dead cash issue into a smaller slice, something like 40 bps total. 

Mentions:#VOO

most people recommend diversifying both beyond top 500 large-cap in US, to include med-cap and small-cap in US, as well as buying international (emergent markets). So instead of ETF like VOO or SPY that only tracks S&P, you may want to get VTI or FSKAX that tracks total US market, as well as international market, VXUS or FTIHX. Most people go with cap weight of about 60 US to 40 ex-US, but it depends on whether you are in US or elsewhere (then you may tilt towards home country due to exchange rates) and whether you want to increase US allocation because of personal beliefs. International underperformed S&P (and S&P has been lately dominated by top 7 companies) until about a year or so ago, when international has been outperforming S&P. There are periods when small cap or mid-cap outperform large-cap, and most of the time bottom 450 S&P companies outperform top 50, so over time it will all averages out - stay diversified.

USFR Treasury fund pays about 3.6% BOXX - sells box spreads and pays out ~4.2% (apy) in gains every day. I don't know any 5% guarantees But if you did maybe 80% BOXX and 20% VOO that should average to 5% or even 6%

NVDA has been decoupled from SPY NVDA call holders crying while SPY chugs along VOO and chill > playing NVDA earnings, every day of the week and twice on Sundays

Mentions:#NVDA#SPY#VOO

I’ve been taking gains and putting half the gains into VOO each time I sell. The other half I roll into different AI segments like fiber, photonics, broadband, etc to diversify but stay in the ai game

Mentions:#VOO

Don’t need both VOO and VTI. Pick one and chill

Mentions:#VOO#VTI