VT
Vanguard Total World Stock Index Fund ETF Shares
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Investing vs Buying a Nice Car? or Try to Do Both? I am Young, Worth It ?
Came across buy and hold 17% CAGR portfolio backtested since 1987
Cosmos Health Provides Balance Sheet Update: Highlights European Investment Bank Financing Discussions for up to €25M, Eliminates 38% of Warrant Overhang with No Dilution; Reaffirms Growth Trajectory; Notes No Known Business Reason for Recent Share Price Decline
As a strict Boglehead indexer, I went in hard on $SPCE calls as soon as I heard the case for it.
Will VT tank severly when correction on semiconductors comes?
What is the best strategy to allocate and optimize a 100K investment?
Recently gifted a $12,500 brokerage account with E*Trade
Automated investing for retirement accounts (fidelity/schwab) vs picking your own distributions. The good vs the bad. Discuss
For parabolic gains DO NOT read this. It's just a Samaritan text for thise in despair.
Forbparabolic gains DO NOT follownthese advices.
Thought Experiment: What if everyone just DCA’d into VT?
Funds like VT that don't have the typical index problems
Questioning if the extra etf in my portoflio actually improves expected returns or just adds volatility
Roth or Brokerage for individual holdings - what is best?
What would you do with money gifted from family?
DD: All-in-one ETFs are probably the smart play right now… but I’m still YOLOing options cuz I’m broke at Wendys
Today is the day I finally accepted the truth about stocks.
85/15 VTI & VXUS in brokerage, 85/15 FZROX & FZILX in roth ira
Any tax implications/forced sale if/when a massive company gets absorbed into VT/VTI?
When It's Your Time, It's Your Time-
Unpopular Opinion: QQQM beats VOO over a 30-year horizon
EHang’s 2026 Strategy: Moving from the EH216 to the VT-35 (200km range)
EHang’s 2026 Strategy: Moving from the EH216 to the VT-35 (200km range)
Any specific ratio to set up recurring investment for Roth IRA long term?
Begginer here first buy: should i buy UCTIS ETFs or US? Eu based
Just YOLO'd $89k into QQQ / VT (65/35 split)
Non-US resident. Alternatives for US ETFs for 5 to 10 years’ investment period.
Risk-free flip with loc to buy XEQT(VT equivalent)
Seeking Advice: Living Off $1.8M Portfolio, Growth vs Dividend ETFs
Add more on Monday? (Added $40k on Thursday)
VTINX (Vanguard retirement fund) as a medium term investment in a taxable brokerage account
Just moved $200K to VT because I stopped believing in the American Exceptionalism narrative
Does VTI have ~5% higher expected future returns than VT in tax-advantaged accounts for U.S. investors?
VTI or VT?? (70% VTI - USA and 30% VT - International)?
36yo – Simple ETF portfolio. Overthinking factor tilts vs simplicity. Thoughts?
VT and chill but what if I added a little somethin' somethin' ?
Any criticism for my portfolio
Are Index Fund Holders About To Be Exit Liquidity For Mega IPOs?
Are index funds investors about to get fleeced by Musk and Altman?
Here is why it’s not always priced in: EMH is misunderstood
Trust investment claims outperformance vs indexes, looking for advice
How do I (28F) develop the correct mindset to invest?
Have any stocks/ETFs ever swapped ticker symbols?
How to calculate the true percentage holdings of a portfolio that's mixed with multiple ETFs and stocks?
In retirement (safe withdrawals) - is it better to have a single VT to sell, or US Broad & International Broad...then sell the better performer at time of withdrawal?
History of US equities, t-bills, treasuries, gold, and international returns
History of US equities, t-bills, treasuries, gold, and international returns
History of US equities, t-bills, treasuries, gold, and international returns
Seeking Advice: Best ETFs for Wealth Preservation
$PAVS is now 240+ % Short interest.
Front-Running Populist Reforms: Eyeing SYF Puts to Capitalize on Credit Cap Risks
Looking for portfolio feedback- GGUS/UGL/Senior AUD bank bonds
Do Fidelity.com comparison charts already factor in fees?
Elon Musk Donated Over 210,000 Tesla Shares Worth Almost $100 Million
Mentions
May I interest you in some VT and chill? also automate the investment and don't look at it like for 20 years.
What you should do I open a taxable brokerage account and invest in QQQI and turnoff dividned reinvestment. It is not growth fund like VT. QQQI produces dividend which are cash profit-sharing payments directly to you. With automatic dividned reinvestment turned off these cash dividend will go into a money market fund. When there is enough cash in the account you can buy a car. 4 years of saving 1000K a month in QQQI will generate 7K a year or about $583 a mont of income. If you keep you investment going into VT for retirment in a retirment account. and then open a taxable brokerage account in invest in QQQI The retirment account if for the future when taxable brokerage is for now. Over time you can build up a passive income stream in the taxable account that can exceed the ammount of money you can get from side gigs. And it could eventually exceed your work inocme. You can keep some the cash for emergencies , cover you montly bills (utility bills, mortgage, rent, or car replacement and operating andmaintnence costs.
I was going to buy a bunch of Intel right before it blew up but couldn't look past the 20 years of stock fail, my loss. In the end I don't give a shit though. Most of our investments are in VOO/VT like a boring risk averse loser and we keep pulling in steady gains over time.
You’re being pedantic. Obviously “the market” could mean things other than stocks. It could refer to bonds. Or bananas. Or Fentanyl. Or the human kidney market. So yes, sure, VT does not include bonds. But it also doesn’t include crypto or gold or bananas or fentanyl. Point being, it was pretty darn obvious in the context of this conversation, OP saying VOO was the market, that I was pointing out that VT was “the market” of stocks compared to VOO. Pointing out that VT is not actually the market over VOO even though it does hold all stock in the market because it doesn’t also hold every other thing traded on planet earth is pedantic and attention seeking. Everybody knows VT only has stocks and does not invest in, say, bonds, gold, crypto, futures, commodities, etc. All you did was point out the obvious. Like if someone said a car was a Toyota and I said no, it’s a Ford. And then you clarified it was a Ford *car* as opposed to a Ford *grandfather clock*. Like dude we were obviously talking about cars, not clocks. You’re being pedantic.
I just opened my brokerage account in late February of this year. I only have shares of XLI, VT, DRAM, AMD, and RIVN.
We don't need lucky stocks picks when VT and chill is available. No luck ever ever ever, just steady automatic contributions for a couple of decades. Increase those contributions each year instead of buying more stupid $hit!
You're using a much broader definition of "the market" than most investors do. In investing discussions, "the market" almost always means publicly traded equities, and VT is about as close to owning that market as you can get.
VT is the public market, it encompasses all?
No VT is not the market either. Even that is still a part of the market. But it doesn’t encompass all markets either
VOO is not the market. VOO is a specific list of 500 American companies. VT is the market.
I'm a beginner investor so this is really a question and not some sort of shade. I've only invested in QQQM and VT for the past few years. But I see the momentum with MU, SNDK (and other AI stack) plays. For the past 3-4 months I've been redirecting my monthly investment into MU and SNDK just to see how it plays out. I made a good sized gain. When people say, invest in S&P 500, how do you decide to stay out of momentum swings, especially if it seems like a good entry point?
Not illegal in VT as long as you leave your house naked.
VT isn't up that much more though.
Don’t beat the market. Be the market. Buy VT.
Everyone is giving you shit for having a bunch of different funds. I would say make an excel doc and put it in for the past 12 months and compare performance to VT only Do the same for the past 24 months. Leave it as is for now and check it in six months. And see if your crazy portfolio is beating VT only. If not - just switch it to VT only. It's ok - relax. You got 4-5 years to figure it out and if you get 42% vice 43% it won't be much different in the big scheme of things.
Thanks for the explanation on VT — seems like I had a misconception of what it tracks. I’ll look into it.
Just buy the world market: VT
VT tracks the FTSE Global All Cap Index, which does include VTI, but also VXUS. If you want to stock pick, time the market, what have you, sure, but diversification is your only free lunch in investing. If you want to protect yourself from a drawdown you can’t predict, diversification is the only sensible way to do so.
It’s fine but over complicated. You could just buy 100% VT instead of this. And reconsider using LLMs for advice like this
I see a double top on the one year chart on VT. A few of my friends got laid off or quiet fired via massive hour reductions. 34% chance of rate hike in 35 days. If you’re prepared, it’ll always be a good time; if I got laid off from one of my jobs it would be a welcome reprieve cause I’m exhausted.
Sell and simplify. If you wouldnt buy gold with cash today, holding inherited coins is just complexity for no reason. VT has historically outperformed over any 10+ year window, and you avoid the dealer spread whenever you change your mind.
You left out all the key info like, age, salary, savings rate, tax rates, what account you have access to (401k/457b/403b) and their caps and if they are ROTH vs Tax deferred ..... 100% VT is the allocation for stock. You need to hold cash or Tbills for the short term. [bogleheads.org](http://bogleheads.org) is a great start but the old fart aholes on the forums are a PITA. They are all "get off my lawn" type people, but read the threads and their wiki diligently and you will learn a lot.
Yet you only lost that 25% if you kept your assets in cash, which no one should do. [VT](https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/VT/), just as an arbitrary broad-market example, grew by 105% while the dollar lost 25%. 2.05\*0.75 still gives you a 54% gain (6.34%/year) in real terms.
At this point, just VOO/VT and chill. You will be much happier. Trust me
allocation looks reasonable for the timeframe. the one thing I would revisit is whether you actually need a separate international fund if VT is already global by weight; you end up doubling down on international tilt in a way that only makes sense if you have a deliberate view on it.
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fS2qS85Ru9I](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fS2qS85Ru9I) I would do something more like. 30% TFLO 20% TLT 33% VT 15% IAU 2% BTC
I’d focus on amassing your first $100k in VOO, VTI or VT. I like VTI personally. Once you get there, you’ll have a good sized chunk working for you every year. I think at that point you could continue with VTI - but feel free to cross that bridge when you get there. SCHD is inefficient use of capital in my opinion. I’d avoid it.
The short answer (from my personal experience of doing that over the past decade) is: you can, but it likely won't have a overall positive benefit on your portfolio return, and can actually hurt. Instead of trying to manually balance your portfolio by collecting individual sector ETFs (which often leads to overlapping, inefficient, or poorly optimized weightings), it is much cleaner and more effective to just buy the entire market via broad index funds. Broad index funds already contain the optimal, market-cap-weighted amount of technology, defensive stocks, and dividends automatically. That includes sectors such as "technology" (VGT). Easiest to stick to overall index funds (VOO for S&P500, VTI for broader US market, VT for even broader world market).
No such thing as being "behind." Everyone is running their own race, and everyone's life has curveballs. Anyway - how convinced are you that US stocks are going to solidly outperform the rest of the world for the foreseeable future? Or the tech center specifically for that matter. Being real here, the amount you can contribute is going to be doing all the lifting for like the next decade. Just pick something simple, either all-world (VT) or all-US (VTI), and keep shoveling as much as you can in it. You can worry about a more specific breakdown 5-10 years from now.
27m I wouldn't become a victim of analysis paralysis. Buy a globally diversified, all cap, market cap weighted, low expense ratio index fund. Bubbles will form, bubbles will pop, markets will crash. Treat it as a buying opportunity. Buy when there's blood on the streets. Never sell until retirement. VT & Chill Increase your income. Reduce / eliminate your expenses. The money you invest now is far more important than the money you invest 10, 20 or 30 years from now. Let compounding do the heavy lifting. Avoid overcomplicating and overreacting. The two hardest things for most investors to do.
Start with the fact they aren’t the largest VT company anymore. Kone surpassed them when the bought TKE.
> If you have a well diversified portfolio, you would likely not be down more than 1% today. I get your whole message but VT is down 2% today.
(110 - x)% in VT and (x - 10)% in BNDW with quarterly rebalancing and dividends reinvested. Where x is your age. That’s all you need!
Stupid. Buy VTI or VT and hold.
Literally just start buying some VT
I’m invested solely in VT and am shocked I’m only down $500 when the NASDAQ And S&P 500 seem to be nosediving.
> If you have a well diversified portfolio, you would likely not be down more than 1% today. VT was down 1.5% as of this post, just saying lol
Own the total market with VT. Statistically you're unlikely to do any better over the long term.
Keep in mind that your employment doesn’t really give you any edge in predicting the market. “I think renewables and nuclear are going to pop off because I’m in the industry” isn’t too much of anything because like… yeah, everyone thinks that. They’ve been thinking it for 5-10 years. That being said there are a ton of renewable/clean energy ETFs, and you can just google that phrase to find them. They tend to preform worse than just the S&P500 because again, it’s not exactly a trade secret that energy production is a big market. Nuclear is a slightly different animal. A lot of nuclear production isn’t publicly traded. There are some nuclear mining related stocks like UUUU and some nuclear tech related stocks like Lightbridge, so you can cast a wide net by just investing a bit in many of them, but it’s pretty speculative. Mining stocks have historically been a great way for naïve investors lose money for the past 300 years - it’s just a really easy industry to promise big future results and then run away with the bag. GEV is something to look into, but it’s hard to say if it’s hit a peak. TL;DR you should probably just buy SPY/VT/VONG/VXUS like every other boring but practical person. You can put 20% into ICLN or whatever but you might want to compare the 5 year projections first
If the DXY doesn't stop going up there are gonna be more dips to buy at better prices, hahaha. With that said just buy the indices. $VTI, $VT, or $VXUS. Pick your poison.
Or just VT for everything... or maybe VTI for US and VXUS for international if you want to control US-Int'l tilt.
VT is 50% or more of your portfolio isn’t it?
sell now and invest the proceeds in VT and hold that until retirement.
##Satya Nadella is worth 1.5b dollars he's probably got everything in VT and VXUS and could give a shit about your pity msft shares
I am infinitely more emotionally invested in the 10% of my account that is in options, rather than the 90% sitting in VT.
He probably learned 10x more on this single trade than losers holding only VOO and VT 🤣🤣
I subscribe go crazy while young, especially in retirement accounts where selling is not taxed. By crazy, I mean heavy in sector ETFs that are seeing big growth like semiconductors (SOXX, SMH) and tech (VGT). As you get older, let these run and add more to safer ETFs like VOO/VT, then bonds closer to retirement.
Stop investing into singular stocks. Pick 1-3 singular stocks and invest the rest into ETFs of your choice. You already mentioned VTI. Keep buying VTI or look into VOO and VT. Watch some videos on YouTube and do the research. Personally, I hold 4 stocks. VT, XLI, RIVN, and DRAM.
What I said is that fast track entry isn't new. "Since 2017, CRSP indexes have included newly public companies on the fifth trading day after listing." https://www.morningstar.com/stocks/how-will-mega-ipos-change-face-us-stock-market FTSE *Russell* added fast track for US indexes. VT is FTSE Global. “FTSE Global Equity Index Series and the FTSE UK Index Series already have a Fast Entry Rule." https://www.lseg.com/en/media-centre/press-releases/ftse-russell/2026/ftse-russell-introduces-ipo-fast-entry-enhancements-for-russell-us-indexes
FTSE (VT) and CRSP (VTI) both changed their rules to accomodate SpaceX.
Fast track entry is not new for VT / VTI.
Unfortunately this is a casino and no one wants to hear words of caution right now. Usually you get better prices to buy when there are a hundred angry DJT posts, the end of the world is near, and you feel sick after you buy. I'm holding cash b/c I'm getting ready to feel sick after buying $VT and $VXUS again, hahaha.
There's no one perfect answer, but many (including me) argue yes. Or just do VT (total world market) to simplify
DRAM Maybe Or just buy VT and enjoy paint dry (you’d still likely outperform 99% of those here on WSB)
I just need VT to go below 140 and I’ll dump my IRA that rolled over early April back into the market tbh
At your age, the most important thing is to own a diversified basket of assets, at a low cost, and to let them compound over time. Time is on your side so "don't let perfect be the enemy of good" very much applies to your situation. With that said, VT is a reliable, low-cost way to own the entire global stock market. I'd encourage you not to tinker - whatever fund or plan to decide to pursue, stick with it.
People in the Boglehead sub invest in multiple ways. Some are all VOO, others add some international exposure, others are all in VT. There isn't one right answer. Given what 21plankton said, I think index fund investing would be a great strategy for them, allowing them to not miss out on the latest stocks, and requiring no research to know "what" to buy. As soon as I learned that something like 85% of active investors cannot beat SP500 returns over the long run (10+ years), I knew index fund investing was the right choice for me. If it's not for you, no worries. Wishing you the best.
Yeah, you will have the rocketing stocks alongside thousands of losers which will drag them down to VOO returns if you’re lucky. The cult of VT is really obnoxious.
The best thing you can do is invest more this year than you did last year. Put it all in VT. Maximize it as much as you can.
What would I do? I’d be firmly in the wealth accumulation stage. I’d be fully aggressive by going 100% stocks (or close to it). I’d shovel as much money as I could into a low-cost, broad-based index fund like VT until I started slowly adding BND as I got older and entered the wealth preservation phase.
VT, VTI, VOO, SPY can’t go wrong
Yeah, I'm 100% EFT's. I changed my entire strategy during the March 2026 sell-off. My port is currently $VXUS, $EWJ, $GLD, and $VT. I was down so much money from Feb to March that the only way I kept myself in the market and keep BTD was to just buy the whole damn world market and take the loss and sell all my individual stocks. It's worked out swimmingly as I am so much more stress free.
I’m 34. All in VT equivalents in all my retirement accounts. I use FFNOX which is marginally less aggressive in my taxable brokerage accounts for short-medium term savings.
100% in VT then start adding bonds 5-6 years before retirement
not sure if this is what ur asking but when the trading accts hit a threshold i move some $ into a safer VT account. and when the safer account hits a certain level i raise the threshold in the trading accs.
Say you spend 100 hours learning trading strategies like options. If you could get an extra 1% returns at that point, you would be a famous prodigy. 1% of your $20k is $200. Working part time during that 100 hours is worth like $1000-$2000. Getting started is all about living lean and hustling hard. Use a boring diversified fund like VT or target date 2060 and just pump it as hard as you can. Get that ball rolling!
This is why I’ve moved most of my investment portfolio into VT. It won’t make me as rich but it will ride the storms well enough for my risk tolerance.
The best time to invest is yesterday. The second-best time is today. Just put it in VOO, VT, or SPY and relax. Chances are that unless the market crashes tomorrow, you will lose more by waiting for a dip than investing and getting gains between now the dip.
Too complicated. I doubt this mix would outperform VT + BND really. Probably purposefully to make it look complex. I would suggest selling it all out and yolo 0 dte SPY calls or no balls
The allocation doesn’t matter, it’s such a small part of VT, which is the entire world stock market. I could care less when SPCX gets added, what matters is that its float adjusted.
Not I. If the market wants to bid up the DXY b/c the new Fed Sheriff is gonna talk a tough game w/ no action I will use these inflated USD to buy more $VXUS, $VT, and $GLD. Jawboning is the final tool left in the Fed's so called toolbox.
Avoid options and single stocks in the future. Stick to VT (every publically traded company on earth) or VOO/VTI and DCA like a grandpa. If that somhow hits $0, then the world is literally ending and poverty dosn't matter anymore.
I fail to see how the KW Fed presser is ralliyng the DXY or King Dollar above 100.55. I just BTD in the usual suspects. $VXUS, $VT, and $GLD.
Anybody expect a (significant US stock market dump), on Monday? Because as of (June 17, 2026). —>VXUS = up by (0.80%) —>VTI = down by (0.10%) —>VT = up by (0.20%) International equities/companies = up. US equities/companies = down. —>US + Iran agreement — to be physically signed on (June 19, 2026). This Friday
Theoretically they have the same growth potential, or VT has slightly more because generally lower P/E = higher expected return. And VT is lowernrisk as it is more diversified. So it's the better choice. VOO has returned more over the last 20 years but that doesn't say anything about the next 20 years.
Time in the Market beats timing the market. I would start putting money in now into something like VT. Maybe do 25% month for the next 4 months the money you want to save long term as in 20 + years. The money you will need in 5 -7 years you might want to invest Treasuries. Look at something like CSHI it is the NEOS t-bills cc fund that pays around 4.5%. Best of luck. Note I’m not a financial advisor and only giving suggestions based on my own life style. Each persons situation is different. You might want to go to an actual advisor for best practices.
Get back into total market EFTS - VT, VTI, VOO. VXUS for international exposure if you don’t go VT. Hold for 20+ years and won’t even think about the gains you missed out on this past year. Obligatory cliche - time in the market beats timing the market
HYSA + ROTH ($VT, $SCHD) … is all you need. Thank me later.
[IllllIIlIllIllllIlll](https://www.reddit.com/user/IllllIIlIllIllllIlll/): Actually, VT and VOO had similar returns over a long time. Almost all the outperform comes from the last decade. You: Nah, VOO will yield more returns because that is what it did in the past (last 10 years, LOL). All of you don't really think, do you? Maybe you get lucky and VOO outperforms, but there is nothing supporting it other than recency bias. Like another commenter in this post said: One beautiful day Nvidia and SpaceX will be 90% of global market cap I would not be on that. Even if it happened, that doesn't seem like a good future.
There is one simple answer. Don’t try to time the market. Maintain a mix. A mix of safe investments like CDs, treasuries, bonds, and less safe like stocks including ETFs. Investors/savers at all ages should have a mix. People like your dad should have something like 50/50 stocks/safe. Or 60/40 or 70/30 or 40/60 or 30/70 or whatever lets him sleep at night in volatile markets. But the min stock allocation should be 30%. This way he is liquid when the market is down and he’s never forced to sell. Yet he still benefits from bull markets albeit at a lower rate than younger people. People in their 20s should start with a more aggressive mix (95/5 to 80/20) stocks/safe because they have much more time to ride out periods of stock underperformance. Within the stock/ETF portion of your mix one could decide to buy just a single ETF like VT. That covers the world. Thousands of stocks. It’s got one of the lowest fees. It will beat 90% of individual stock pickers over a long period. It’s simple. You never have to buy or sell anything. You just rebalance to your chosen mix between stocks and safe once a year. As you age and slowly build your wealth you increase your safe % but you don’t change it every minute. I personally changed it every 2-3 years. If growing your wealth slowly is too boring for you can pick a mix of stocks and ETFs instead of VT. Some safer dividend payers. Some growth. Some speculation. You can do this in buckets or all in one account. You’ll probably not beat VT over a long period and that’s ok. But however you do it make sure your savings/investments are spread across traditional IRA, Roth IRA, and cash accounts in such a way so that you can withdraw it when the time comes to minimize your taxes and maximize what you keep. That’s a whole other topic. With this strategy you get to benefit from head scratching up market periods like 2026 yet still have plenty of safety when we get a -35% year. I started doing this 25 years ago a few years after I immigrated here and after I bought my home. I was able to build my retirement slowly to a few million using this strategy. I know it could have been double that but I am OK with that because I recognize this past 15 years has been one of the best 15 year periods in the last 100 years. Third only to the post world war II boom and to the 15 years leading up to the internet bubble bust in 2000. I was lucky but I was not greedy. I hope you are as lucky.
Why not both? I split VT/VOO 70/30 at the moment. Probably going to keep the split but put more of my overall portfolio into them
I’m doing the same. VT superior imo
Gonna become a boring ETF bag holder. VT or VOOG?
I would personally look at VT over SPY and helps to diversify a little away from the crazy AI values in SPY
Academically I’d argue VT, international allocation important, past returns do not indicate future results, etc but personally find jf hard to stomach so I do VOO and VXUS with lighter international but you’re probably fine either way.
You mean VOO. VT is getting SPCX allocation immediately. S&P500 will wait until it can meet the 1 year profitability requirement. At earliest summer 2027. Meanwhile VOO is heavily concentrated in GOOG/GOOGL/BRK/BAC. GOOG/BAC who bought into SPCX at a way lower price pre-pandemic. BRK who has shares in GOOG/BAC. Then JPM/BLK/GS/MS who will make money off the SPCX ipo. The real winners are those dumping the bags or making money as the middle men.
Can't get back in? Just buy as many shares of VT or SCHB that you are comfortable with and move on with your life.
My 03 CRV is well over 300K and not rusted out in VT. I replaced it with a 4 year old RAV-4 (2014 bought 2018) with 35K knowing the electrics and other will die before the engine. I hate buying cars so I buy ones that go decades.
I do VTI and VXUS instead of VT.
Good day to be a VT investor 😅 I should’ve specified index as in S&P or total world, not Nasdaq
Index funds like VT, invest in the entire market and don't gamble on individual stocks.
Don't listen to them (or the greedy voice inside your head). Get out and drop it into VT. You can spend the rest of your life telling people you beat the stock market and got out alive. Don't listen to these regards.