Thanks for watching! ▸ Try Seeking Alpha Premium: seekingalpha.me/dividendgrowthinvesting ▸ Try M1 Finance: dgitofi.com/TryM1 ▸ My favorite business cash back credit cards: dgitofi.com/CashBack ▸ My favorite rewards credit cards: dgitofi.com/RewardsCreditCards ▸ Book 1:1 time with me to talk about your portfolio: dgitofi.com/TalkWithJake Dividend reinvestment calculator: docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1W8UvXLZdEpVX-UPTKiHIT1oYIkj7Omvf30FgB3FTKWY/edit?usp=sharing
random, but just so you know, i got a pop up saying 'this content may be inappropriate for some users' when i clicked on this video. super odd, cause thats never happened to me on one of your videos before, but i clicked through anyway so didn't affect me too much 😅 anyway, excited for the video!
@@lolomissa yeah I think someone didn’t like the short clips that I put in there and reported the video to RUclips. I offered to edit them out… but in RUclips fashion they didn’t give me any options to fix it and just put an age restriction on the video. They also shadow banned the video so people are unlikely to watch it now. 🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️ oh well…
Hi... Since you and your wife retired early and are living off of dividends then what are your tax implications? How much do you pay on tax when you take out those dividends to pay for the bills and such?
52, hoping to retire in 4-5 years. If I could generate 8% returns I probably could today. I just don’t want to need that type of return in case something paying it didn’t perform well enough to make payments or had to cut dividends
Yeah that is part of the dilemma. Finding something that will give you higher than market average yield and a higher than market dividend growth rate. I appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment!
The expense ratio is quite a bit higher than JEPQ/JEPI. I personally like the strategy of JEPQ/JEPI a bit more and the taxes are more straight forward (no return of capital).
That really depends on your goals and tax situation. I’d consider all your options and educate yourself on the pros and cons of all options then make the decision that best supports your personal goals.
Good stuff! Sounds like a solid strategy! Keep an eye on if JEPI makes sense now or would it make more sense in the future to rebalance out of VOO into JEPI in the future. Food for thought.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting for me it's the good dividends coming in now that helps motivate me to keep going and push harder into it. Plus to be more frugal. JEPI is my highest payer as of now, and will soon be over a hundred a year. I'm at about 16k total in my brokerage. So, though I know it's not the greatest strategy, it's definitely a mental thing for me.
That’s a very valid suggestion. Future growth of your portfolio will suffer with JEPI as opposed to the total stock market index. Translation you are leaving money on the table.
Hi Jake, I went back and looked at your core/satellite and dgro/dgrw videos. Is this idea a satellite slice? Or are you considering this for a new core option? Time horizon dependent of course. You’re living off your dividends and I’m 58!
I love all your videos so I must be a nerd like you lol. They’re easy to understand and very informative regardless of your age or time horizon which is what I find the most appealing. Keep up the great work!
Hello I’m about 3 weeks into my investing journey and I’m looking into dividend investing. I’m looking for canadian alternatives to these etfs because I do live in canada
Good video, Jake. I have been implementing a similar strategy and am 64 this year, retiring at 65. So, a version of option 2 is what I have been constructing for the covered call dividend income portion of my portfolio. I also have a significant bucket of individual bonds, a smaller short-term treasuries bucket, a portion in pure dividend growth stocks, and some managed futures for diversification.
Hi there! Its a really good time to retire with rates so high. You will get a good return on your cash. CDs have been a pretty good conservative way to park your cash. You could even look at 12-18 month CDs before the FED lowers rates this year. Here is a link to the calculator (remember to make a copy and save to edit): docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1W8UvXLZdEpVX-UPTKiHIT1oYIkj7Omvf30FgB3FTKWY/edit?usp=sharing
Good Content, Thank you for all the research and time put into this video. As a content creator I know how much work each video takes to make. This is very thorough and helpful.
One thing that I didn't see and want to ask about: Is this doable for a taxable account? I know JEPQ has a high tax amount with the way the distributions are. Overall I'm 30 and looking for a longer term. What do you think?
SCHD/DGRO is going to be better for most people who are still working and are dollar cost averaging into their portfolio. JEPI/DGRW are great for satellite positions in addition to SCHD/dgro.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting I hear you Jake, I'm in my mid 40's and have at least twenty years of work ahead of me. Luckily I love what I do so I'll be concentrating on building up SCHD and DGRO for at least the next decade or more.
Awesome video Jake! Always wrote off investing in JEPQ or JEPI unless I was forced to. This video is making me reconsider. Also I enjoyed the formatting of this video
And if the market drop 30% would Jepq go to zero or would our capital be safe... maybe just down? Guess what I'm asking is... is jepq safe for 20 years?
Hey Jake, awesome stuff as usual. Thanks for your service. I know you talk about SCHD and DGRO a lot and how you were influenced by the simple path to wealth. What’s your opinion on VYM? I personally owned VYM a while ago and sold all of it to buy more SCHD because I liked the higher yield with the growth aspect of it as well. Would like your take on this whenever you get the time. Again, thank you..
Hey Jake, what do you think of a Roth IRA (or taxable acct) containing DGRW, JEPQ, and a "growth" ETF like VGT, VUG, QQQM, or a S&P500 ETF like SPLG, where all dividends are re-invested only in the growth ETF for a 5-15 year runup to retirement? I'm wondering if monthly dividends from DGRW/JEPQ feeding into the growth fund would significantly accelerate the returns on the growth ETF . . ? Just a thought experiment. For example, starting with $10K in DGRW and/or JEPQ ($5K each?), and $10K in SPLG.
It’s an interesting approach, but in most cases you are going to be better off owning the growth outright because the returns on JEPQ are capped in a bull market. It comes down to what will give you the highest total return. Focus on growth now and then once you get closer to living off the dividend, you can start adding JEPQ. Yes even in a tax sheltered account :)
Hi Jake! Really great video and such an important concept that is vital down the road if you do want that FI or RE life. I added JEPQ and DTD to my portfolio two months ago, also have DGRW, to address that exact issue of trying to have monthly income and not wanting to completely budget around a quarterly dividend. Having 1-3 monthly paying dividend ETFs in your portfolio earlier on will pay itself off when reaching your FIRE goal!
Yeah that could be a good combination. I personally like JEPI a bit more due to the lower fees, but having one focusing on the NASDAQ and one on the SP500 is not a bad way to go!
Good presentation as always Jake! Do you have any thoughts on including some percentage of international dividend ETFs like VYMI/SCHY in the portfolio?
Thank you!! I like both of these international ETFs. I don't own any international dividend ETFs, but if I were to own any, the two you listed would likely be what I would go with. Unless you really want extra exposure to international, I probably would limit international to around 10-20%. You have to remember that by investing into SCHD/DGRO, you are already getting international exposure. The companies in these indexes operate internationally, but you don't have the geo political risk and the currency risk. Just my two cents.
Thanks so much for the video! I have been looking at DGRW for a while now but it seems so inconsistent as a dividend ETF. Maybe there is something I'm not seeing. According to SA it has Negative 7.21% TTM Dividend Growth! 3 year CAGR is only 5.77%. 5 year CAGR is only 5.76%. You have to go all the way out to the 10 year to get a double digit dividend CAGR of 11.68%. Yes it does pay monthly but wow does it vary month to month. Just last year it paid as little as .005 per share in January to as much as .215 per share in December and everything in-between. Again, I'm not hating on the fund, I think its a great large cap blend fund, just doesn't look the greatest if you're relying on consistent and growing monthly dividends. Thanks, I love your channel and keep up the great work man.!!!
Yeah the income can vary heavily month over month. There are pros and cons for sure with this. That is why I said this is more of a satellite strategy vs a true core holding. If you build this around SCHD/DGRO, you will have a much more consistent and reliable yield.
Great video. Have you done breakdown on a JEPQ only hypothetical plan? I understand you may not prefer that strategy but would be interesting to see. The 70/30 split is pretty close I guess !
haha I know the feeling! Once you realize you could retire tomorrow in a different country and never work another day in your life.. it puts things into perspective lol.
So what if i had money in roth ira and money in traditional ira would it be smart to do jepq in the roth ira and the dgrw in traditional for tax purposes?
Am I missing something. Does BIZD have an 11% expense ratio??? I’d run for the hills and never look back. Too high of an expense ratio. I much prefer JEPQ.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting The Van Eck website explains the reason for the apparent high fee structure for BIZD. The expense fee is actually .40 If you chart it on Seeking Alpha showing total return you'll see the income potential.
@@Alex-he1ve I have PBDC too. Want to see if an actively managed ETF can do better than BIZD. I think the fund manager Michael C. Petro will deliver better overall returns in the long run.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting oh, I'm sorry! I meant more weight in jepq wrt dgrw. It seems 70% in jepq gives best results in all the options, is that correct?
@@giuliofz listen to what I said about option 3. If you have longer than 20 years, then Dgrw would benefit you more. Both go better together in my opinion. It’s just how you weight them based on your time horizon
I used to day/swing trade and if u know u know... I like dividends investing better....i prefer monthly dividends i currently earm $10.00 to some thats a little i just times it by 12 $120.00 for the year
Are you sure that DGRW pays monthly dividends? There may be differences between the US and Europe, but all I can find is that dividends are paid quarterly. (in the German prospectus) I am invested in WisdomTree Global Quality Dividend Growth.
Hello there, how about a portfolio of QQQM 40%, AVUV 40% & JEPQ 20% for a young investor? And use the dividends from jepq to evenly distribute them to all etfs for added income. Then have a final portfolio of jepq, w/ dgrw.
The tax drag makes this strategy not the best. Would be more efficient to buy growth and rebalance into JEPQ in the future if you don’t plan to live off the dividends within the next 5 years. When you are young you want growth. Time is your greatest asset.
haha.. It's an investment strategy the Core & Satellite. You may like it! Check out this video where I talk about it: ruclips.net/video/iEwAipBKPUo/видео.html
Hi Jake. It was great meeting you a week and a half ago. I was doing some research about DGRO, and on the ishares website they wrote that its strategy has outperformed the s and p 500 since 1979; I know the etf did not start back then. The expense ratio of this etf .08. Have you read about any other etf or mutual fund with an expense ratio of .08% or less that has a greater dividend yield than the s and p 500 that has literature that says it outperformed the s and p 500 over the long term?
Hey Richard! It was great meeting you as well! DGRO tracks the Morningstar U.S. Dividend Growth Index which is from Morningstar. Ishares simply mimics the strategy in their ETF. So by investing into DGRO, you effectively are investing into the Morningstar U.S. Dividend Growth Index. That is a really good question in terms of the expense ratio and higher dividend yield vs the SP500. I ran a ETF screen on seeking alpha and the only ETFs that have beaten the SP500 with
@@DividendGrowthInvestingI looked over the data on the ETFs you listed, in portfolio visualizer. In my taxable account, I will attempt to build up my position in DGRO to what I have in schd, and then add to both, following what you presented in the simple path to wealth with dividend investing. Thank you so much!
Great content Jake. Our investing philosophy are very similar. I am investing in several growth and income oriented ETFs every month to setup additional monthly income upon my retirement in 7 years. DGRW and JEPQ are both part of my portfolio. Always appreciate your insights. Keep up the motivation for us all. 👍💰💰💰💰💰💰
Awesome as always Jake 👏 would love to see more like this, my only take that i personally wouldn't have DGRW JEPQ as core portfolio but a satellite position, but yes i love the idea
Thank you for letting me know! Yeah I completely agree that this is more for your satellite not for your core. I much prefer SCHD/DGRO as my core and adding others like DGRW/JEPQ as a satellite can make a lot of sense!
I cant access the Excel file....which link you click on to get to the excel file? I will love to save it on my local drive and test this scenario out on different portfolio (including SCHD and VGT)... Thank you!
Thank you for your quick reply. Could you please provide insight into the tax implications of earning dividends? For instance, if we were to earn $50,000 annually from dividends, wouldn't we still be liable to pay taxes on that $50,000, despite not being actively employed?
Hi Jake, thank you for this incredible helpful video. I'm a 56 year old woman trying to get some dividends in 5-7 years horizon. I have $25k in my Roth IRA to reallocate. Took a big hit the last couple of years and finally back up. The 50% DGRW+50% JEPQ is what I understood makes the most sense? I'm not the most investment saavy here! Thank you again for sharing.
Well these are simply examples. If you are looking for monthly income and want the income to grow, having a combination of DGRW/JEPQ is a good approach to consider. I personally wouldn't have ALL of my money in DGRW/JEPQ, but having a portion allocated to these is a great way to get a growing monthly dividend. Check out this video where I talk about how to build a portfolio based on your time horizon and goals: ruclips.net/video/iEwAipBKPUo/видео.html
doesn’t dgrw have a high e/r? can’t recall off the top of my head but I’m pretty sure it’s like .35 which is higher than I’d like plus I’ve watched other channels like Average Joe Investor for example as he compared a whole plethora of dividend etfs and monthly paying dividend ETFs and dgrw was one of the poorest performers
Yeah it has a higher ER. I think it comes down to your goals. DGRW has done very well on a total return basis - even outperforming the SP500. I personally see it as a satellite position, not as a core holding.
Enjoyed the video. As a later in life (62) investor I enjoy spending time every day looking at stocks. ETF's are more hands-off so not my cup of tea. I'm a value investor who likes dividend stocks and sell covered calls. I look for 1 percent per month in premiums and 5 % per month out of the money. Only been investing for around 5 months but spent almost a year paper trading. I have invested in the past but incredible bad timing ( 2000 and 2008) .
Thanks for sharing! The covered call approach can work very well! Have you ever considered having ETFs as your core portfolio as your base just in case mr market decides to not cooperate? This may add a bit more stability to your approach.
The statement made that "DGRW has increased its dividend by 348% since 2013" is misleading. While technically true that DGRW started paying its dividends in 2013, DGRW's first dividend was paid in June 2013. So DGRW did not pay dividends for the whole year (only 7 months that year). The partial payment significantly impacts the percentage of "has increased its dividend by 348% since 2013". Why? Because its dividend paid for 2013 totaled $0.294/shr. In 2023, DGRW paid $1.23/shr in dividends. If we projected out 2013 for the entire year (estimate), it would have paid about $0.484. So, if the starting year dividend was for an entire year, at about $0.484 and increased to $1.23, its 10 year dividend increase percentage is now 154%. That is less than half of what is stated in this video. I am using the statistics from EOY 2013 to EOY 2023. The whole point is you have to be careful with statistics, especially within the time frame of those stats. Statistics can be misleading. That stated, I am sure Jake is not doing anything to try to mislead anyone. His videos are very nice and informative. It may be the case where he did not realize that DGRW's 2013 annual dividend was only for a partial year. So, I am NOT making this comment to criticize or discredit Jake.
Hmmm, I got a "some viewers may find this video inappropriate" type warning before this video. How intriguing. Now I'll definitely have to watch till the end. Lol
Lots of ways to make a sausage. Pick a strategy that you can understand and one that meets your goals. Then it comes down to sticking with the decision long term.
Lots of things to think about in here. I gave up thinking about investment income on a monthly basis a while ago. But i still have a few years of work left so maybe that changes between now and when i pull the trigger. One thought i had based on what yiu can do with M1's cash fewtures is set thr cash balance to be 4 months of withdrawals then set up the withdrawals on a weekly ir monthly basis, whatever works. Then sonce the payments are lumpy it should continue to fill back up when yiu are in a month ehere yiu get a lot of dividends. Plus if you hit a spot where your cash balance goes over your specified value then the excess automatically gets reinvested. No idea if this would actually work. If anybody sees any gaping holes in this please point them out. My biggest issue with pursuing only monthly payers is that it eliminates so many good investments.
Completely agree! There are a few diamonds in the rough when it comes to monthly payers. Most are pretty bad though. That’s an interesting strategy with M1. I think it’s probably easiest if you can manage to build up a cash buffer where you have the money in there to begin with that you need and that it gets refilled quarterly.
I would assume you are looking to retire sooner than later so you’d want a higher starting yield. I like SCHD. You could look to include VYM and consider a small % in DGRO for continued growth.
@DividendGrowthInvesting yes. I'm retiring in December... moving to Thailand with around 1.5 million. So just trying to get to the point where I can live off of 3k a month and not lose my capital
@@Happ1971Oh you can easily get that with a $1.5M portfolio! I like SCHD/DGRO as the core of a dividend portfolio and adding DGRW/JEPQ for additional income and weighed based on your time horizon and age.
I think you math is wrong or at least too optimistic. DGRW is not really a dividend growth ETF that regularly increases its dividend. Actually 3 out of 10 years the dividend is reduced. The ETF investst in quality growth stocks that pay dividends. Growing dividends are not guaranteed because of dividend cuts and rebalancing with lower dividend stocks. Dividend Growth Rate 5Y (CAGR) is actually much lower than in your calculation. Such numbers are too good to be true.
Yeah that’s where 🧂🧂🧂🧂 comes into play. It really depends on your yield on cost. It’s hard to project what will happen in the future so best to plan conservatively.
The JEPI & JEPQ fund manager has given interviews on YT that are very educational. Nevertheless Jake did a good job explaining the different tax treatment of dividends
At the end of the day I want the investment with the highest total return. Preferably with low volatility. Even if the yield is low, I can always pay myself a “dividend” by simply selling the stocks and withdrawing the exact amount of money that I need in a more tax efficient manner.
@@Life_Kyle Its a newer ETF. The yield is likely going to go down just like what we saw with JEPQ and JEPI. It really depends on a few factors like volatility in the market. Its a covered call ETF.
SPYI is not as good as it looks on the surface. It basically pays back your own capital in the form of dividends. That's why it's 'great for taxes'. It's very misleading.
@@bonanzatime The return of capital is actually a tax treatment, it’s not destructive to the fund’s NAV. The fund manager did an interview with Armchair Income on RUclips explaining this. It is actually better than JEPI from a tax perspective and has so far outperformed JEPI in total returns since inception.
BUT DGRW only has a 0.89% dividend, it has increased from next to nothing to inconsequential, pretty pathetic for a 348% increase.. I do have it in a portfolio with some of the high income ETFs (10+%). SCHD has a real meaningful dividend unlike DGRW.
Hi...new to dividend investing. Im 49 and hoping to retire by 60 to 62. Is it worth investing in dividends now or should i focus on growth? If so whats the best dividend/growth erfs? I was thinking KNG +SCHD+DGRO. thoughts?@DividendGrowthInvesting
You should focus on growth, not on dividends in your accamulation stage. Dividends are bad thing. There is no difference between getting income from dividends vs selling lots from growth etfs. Buying covered call etfs is not smart either.
I have never liked JEPQ, JEPI and other covered call ETFs. They are the last resort for retired people who don't have sufficient funds to invest in good ETFs or individual stocks.
Fair enough. I agree but unfortunately most people will struggle to generate the same amount of income with SCHD/DGRO alone. CC ETFs give you a bit of a bump if you don’t have enough invested.
@26:35 You need to use real world like numbers. Price appreciation of 7.54% while dividend growth is at 11.01% is not realistic for moderate to long periods of time. That will completely distort the output
Did you decide to stop working with only 850K saved? Boy that sounds foolish. I dont care if you try to live off covered call income etfs, (which will take away virtually all upside). Just wait until the market has a correction on what the downside will be. And then you you have the audacity to make videos on how this makes sense? Perhaps I misunderstood your status. Listening to your video you sound smarter than that.
In my last video (ruclips.net/video/ZL9uEQBhcao/видео.html) I talked about how we have $1M in our taxable accounts focused just on dividend investing. We also have about $300K in retirement accounts focused on growth that we saved from our day jobs. I sold two rental properties in the last few years, so we have about $600K in an account where I write covered calls and cash secured puts for income. We are mostly invested in the stock market and own our home (with a fairly small mortgage).
Buyer Club-Careful with your comments and criticisms. Feedback is always good but your words, like this, are what makes the community worse, not better. Super proud of you Jake! Another great Dividend Growth Investor video!!!
@@DP52001At this point all that I can say is GOOD LUCK. Glad that he has what now appears to be $1.9MM which IS a lot better than 850K, but I still see problems in the future. And no, covered call ETF's that are now being harped all over YT are NOT the savior that most advocate. But, DGI does appear to be more sane than most of the ones I have watched.
Thanks for watching!
▸ Try Seeking Alpha Premium: seekingalpha.me/dividendgrowthinvesting
▸ Try M1 Finance: dgitofi.com/TryM1
▸ My favorite business cash back credit cards: dgitofi.com/CashBack
▸ My favorite rewards credit cards: dgitofi.com/RewardsCreditCards
▸ Book 1:1 time with me to talk about your portfolio: dgitofi.com/TalkWithJake
Dividend reinvestment calculator:
docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1W8UvXLZdEpVX-UPTKiHIT1oYIkj7Omvf30FgB3FTKWY/edit?usp=sharing
random, but just so you know, i got a pop up saying 'this content may be inappropriate for some users' when i clicked on this video. super odd, cause thats never happened to me on one of your videos before, but i clicked through anyway so didn't affect me too much 😅 anyway, excited for the video!
@@lolomissa yeah I think someone didn’t like the short clips that I put in there and reported the video to RUclips. I offered to edit them out… but in RUclips fashion they didn’t give me any options to fix it and just put an age restriction on the video. They also shadow banned the video so people are unlikely to watch it now. 🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️ oh well…
so sorry to hear that!
Hi Jake, My wife and I retired a few months ago at 58 and have been living off of dividends and I can say that it works. Keep up the great videos.
Hey!! That is so great to hear!!! Kudos to both of you!! Congrats on your early retirement!!
Hi...
Since you and your wife retired early and are living off of dividends then what are your tax implications? How much do you pay on tax when you take out those dividends to pay for the bills and such?
Between the standard deduction and qualified dividends, taxes are not really and issue. @@tiwarivikram
Why you invest in VYM and SCHD?
81.0% of SCHD's 104 holdings also in VYM
In total 5 ETF's that overlap each other
Look at a fund overlap tool from etfrc and you will see there is only 25% weighted overlap. 81% of the holdings, but only 25% weighted overlap.
52, hoping to retire in 4-5 years. If I could generate 8% returns I probably could today. I just don’t want to need that type of return in case something paying it didn’t perform well enough to make payments or had to cut dividends
Yeah that is part of the dilemma. Finding something that will give you higher than market average yield and a higher than market dividend growth rate. I appreciate you taking the time to watch and comment!
Hey Jake, what’s stopping your from investing into something like SPYI and QQQI and getting about 1% a month
The expense ratio is quite a bit higher than JEPQ/JEPI. I personally like the strategy of JEPQ/JEPI a bit more and the taxes are more straight forward (no return of capital).
Hi Jake, should I stop funding my traditional retirement account and focus on growing my dividend growth account instead?
That really depends on your goals and tax situation. I’d consider all your options and educate yourself on the pros and cons of all options then make the decision that best supports your personal goals.
I see a 30 minute video, i get excited, keep them up
So glad you like the longer videos!!
My main 4, at 15% each are VOO, SCHD, DGRW, and JEPI. Then 40% into stocks I like. Im definitely still learning, and am thankful for your videos.
Good stuff! Sounds like a solid strategy! Keep an eye on if JEPI makes sense now or would it make more sense in the future to rebalance out of VOO into JEPI in the future. Food for thought.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting for me it's the good dividends coming in now that helps motivate me to keep going and push harder into it. Plus to be more frugal. JEPI is my highest payer as of now, and will soon be over a hundred a year. I'm at about 16k total in my brokerage.
So, though I know it's not the greatest strategy, it's definitely a mental thing for me.
That’s a very valid suggestion. Future growth of your portfolio will suffer with JEPI as opposed to the total stock market index. Translation you are leaving money on the table.
I have JEPI and JEPQ and SCHD , but leaning more to combination of SCHD and SPYI/QQQI ( more tax afficient). Let see what happens.
JEPQ dividend is 8.5% now. Not nearly 12%
This is awesome! I wish I had known this information years ago. Keep the awesome videos coming!
Appreciate it!! Yeah I wish I also started earlier.
Just signed up with your link for seeking alpha ... appreciate all you do man!
Thank you so much!!
Hi Jake, I went back and looked at your core/satellite and dgro/dgrw videos. Is this idea a satellite slice? Or are you considering this for a new core option? Time horizon dependent of course. You’re living off your dividends and I’m 58!
This is a satellite slice. Thanks for taking the time to watch!
I love all your videos so I must be a nerd like you lol. They’re easy to understand and very informative regardless of your age or time horizon which is what I find the most appealing. Keep up the great work!
I appreciate that!
Hello I’m about 3 weeks into my investing journey and I’m looking into dividend investing. I’m looking for canadian alternatives to these etfs because I do live in canada
Good question. I don’t have insight into Canadian ETFs. I’d be interested in alternatives to DGRO/SCHD for Canadians.
Great work Jake! Also interested in you writing these out as you mentioned. Would def look forward to more. Best wishes to you and your fam!!
Thanks! You too! Happy Easter!!
Hey Jake can you do a vid covering the pros and cons of building a dividend growth portfolio vs a growth portfolio consisting of maybe voo and vgt
Yeah I actually have that on my radar. Stay tuned!
Great idea. You could backtest using portfoliovisualizer
VIG vs VUG or
VOO vs VUG or
60% VOO + 40% VIG compared to VUG
@@Dividendflywheel I meant more as like schd and dgro vs like voo and vgt
Good video, Jake. I have been implementing a similar strategy and am 64 this year, retiring at 65. So, a version of option 2 is what I have been constructing for the covered call dividend income portion of my portfolio. I also have a significant bucket of individual bonds, a smaller short-term treasuries bucket, a portion in pure dividend growth stocks, and some managed futures for diversification.
Hi there!
Its a really good time to retire with rates so high. You will get a good return on your cash. CDs have been a pretty good conservative way to park your cash. You could even look at 12-18 month CDs before the FED lowers rates this year.
Here is a link to the calculator (remember to make a copy and save to edit): docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1W8UvXLZdEpVX-UPTKiHIT1oYIkj7Omvf30FgB3FTKWY/edit?usp=sharing
So this is only assuming you’ve been planning for retirement for 10 years and not freshly starting out?
Good Content, Thank you for all the research and time put into this video. As a content creator I know how much work each video takes to make. This is very thorough and helpful.
I appreciate that! Takes a lot of time and effort, but if you enjoy it, its a win win! Thank you for stopping by and commenting.
One thing that I didn't see and want to ask about: Is this doable for a taxable account? I know JEPQ has a high tax amount with the way the distributions are. Overall I'm 30 and looking for a longer term. What do you think?
So now my question is which combo is better? JEPI/DGRW, or SCHD/DGRO? 🤔
In any case great content as always Jake.
SCHD/DGRO is going to be better for most people who are still working and are dollar cost averaging into their portfolio. JEPI/DGRW are great for satellite positions in addition to SCHD/dgro.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting I hear you Jake, I'm in my mid 40's and have at least twenty years of work ahead of me. Luckily I love what I do so I'll be concentrating on building up SCHD and DGRO for at least the next decade or more.
Awesome video Jake! Always wrote off investing in JEPQ or JEPI unless I was forced to. This video is making me reconsider.
Also I enjoyed the formatting of this video
Hey! Thanks for the feedback!!
And if the market drop 30% would Jepq go to zero or would our capital be safe... maybe just down?
Guess what I'm asking is... is jepq safe for 20 years?
Hey Jake, awesome stuff as usual. Thanks for your service.
I know you talk about SCHD and DGRO a lot and how you were influenced by the simple path to wealth.
What’s your opinion on VYM?
I personally owned VYM a while ago and sold all of it to buy more SCHD because I liked the higher yield with the growth aspect of it as well. Would like your take on this whenever you get the time.
Again, thank you..
I really like VYM as a satellite position. I own VYM in my portfolio. It’s great to skew more towards a higher starting yield.
Hey Jake, what do you think of a Roth IRA (or taxable acct) containing DGRW, JEPQ, and a "growth" ETF like VGT, VUG, QQQM, or a S&P500 ETF like SPLG, where all dividends are re-invested only in the growth ETF for a 5-15 year runup to retirement? I'm wondering if monthly dividends from DGRW/JEPQ feeding into the growth fund would significantly accelerate the returns on the growth ETF . . ? Just a thought experiment. For example, starting with $10K in DGRW and/or JEPQ ($5K each?), and $10K in SPLG.
It’s an interesting approach, but in most cases you are going to be better off owning the growth outright because the returns on JEPQ are capped in a bull market. It comes down to what will give you the highest total return. Focus on growth now and then once you get closer to living off the dividend, you can start adding JEPQ. Yes even in a tax sheltered account :)
Hi Jake! Really great video and such an important concept that is vital down the road if you do want that FI or RE life. I added JEPQ and DTD to my portfolio two months ago, also have DGRW, to address that exact issue of trying to have monthly income and not wanting to completely budget around a quarterly dividend. Having 1-3 monthly paying dividend ETFs in your portfolio earlier on will pay itself off when reaching your FIRE goal!
Hey!! Thank you! Yeah having the flexibility goes a long way! It’s also so much easier to manage and not have to follow up on 20 different companies.
what about SPYI...it sounds good. I wonder if JEPQ and SPYI would be better together👍
Yeah that could be a good combination. I personally like JEPI a bit more due to the lower fees, but having one focusing on the NASDAQ and one on the SP500 is not a bad way to go!
Good presentation as always Jake! Do you have any thoughts on including some percentage of international dividend ETFs like VYMI/SCHY in the portfolio?
Thank you!! I like both of these international ETFs. I don't own any international dividend ETFs, but if I were to own any, the two you listed would likely be what I would go with. Unless you really want extra exposure to international, I probably would limit international to around 10-20%. You have to remember that by investing into SCHD/DGRO, you are already getting international exposure. The companies in these indexes operate internationally, but you don't have the geo political risk and the currency risk. Just my two cents.
What do you think about GPIQ or GPIX
Thanks so much for the video! I have been looking at DGRW for a while now but it seems so inconsistent as a dividend ETF. Maybe there is something I'm not seeing. According to SA it has Negative 7.21% TTM Dividend Growth! 3 year CAGR is only 5.77%. 5 year CAGR is only 5.76%. You have to go all the way out to the 10 year to get a double digit dividend CAGR of 11.68%. Yes it does pay monthly but wow does it vary month to month. Just last year it paid as little as .005 per share in January to as much as .215 per share in December and everything in-between.
Again, I'm not hating on the fund, I think its a great large cap blend fund, just doesn't look the greatest if you're relying on consistent and growing monthly dividends. Thanks, I love your channel and keep up the great work man.!!!
Yeah the income can vary heavily month over month. There are pros and cons for sure with this. That is why I said this is more of a satellite strategy vs a true core holding. If you build this around SCHD/DGRO, you will have a much more consistent and reliable yield.
Great video. Have you done breakdown on a JEPQ only hypothetical plan? I understand you may not prefer that strategy but would be interesting to see. The 70/30 split is pretty close I guess !
Just kidding. Listened to the conclusion and I no longer have the same question!
What about using all 4 - SCHD, DGRO, JEPQ and DGRW 25 % each if you have at least 15 more years
Thanks. How does JEPQ perform in a bear market ?
JEPQ outperformed QQQ in the 2022 bear market. The dividends really help in a bear and flat market. It should underperform the index in bull markets.
Thank you for this, I'm 44 with 500k invested. I can totally retire on option 1 in another country 😂
Keep them coming please!
haha I know the feeling! Once you realize you could retire tomorrow in a different country and never work another day in your life.. it puts things into perspective lol.
Haha christ im 38... and same boat give or take 😂
So what if i had money in roth ira and money in traditional ira would it be smart to do jepq in the roth ira and the dgrw in traditional for tax purposes?
Jake what are your thoughts on SPYI, and QYLD for high monthly dividends?
Both good options. I prefer JEPI and JEPQ. More growth potential and lower fees.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting I have both in my wallet too! Can i send you a screenshot of my portfolio for u to take a look If u don’t mind?
Jake do you think a BDC ETF like BIZD would have a place in a retirement portfolio?
Am I missing something. Does BIZD have an 11% expense ratio??? I’d run for the hills and never look back. Too high of an expense ratio. I much prefer JEPQ.
I decided for me to see how PBDC works instead of BIZD.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting The Van Eck website explains the reason for the apparent high fee structure for BIZD. The expense fee is actually .40 If you chart it on Seeking Alpha showing total return you'll see the income potential.
@@Alex-he1ve I have PBDC too. Want to see if an actively managed ETF can do better than BIZD. I think the fund manager Michael C. Petro will deliver better overall returns in the long run.
Great video, very informative, I really liked your asset allocation by age.
Glad you enjoyed it!
14% total return for JEPQ (12% div, 2% price) seems really high to assume it will continue indefinitely.
The 12% is based on Yield on cost but yeah time will tell.
Hi Jake, maybe I'm wrong, it seems the best option is more wight in jepq, anyway, isn't it?
I personally like JEPQ more because it tracks the nasdaq. Both are great and I own both.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting oh, I'm sorry! I meant more weight in jepq wrt dgrw. It seems 70% in jepq gives best results in all the options, is that correct?
@@giuliofz listen to what I said about option 3. If you have longer than 20 years, then Dgrw would benefit you more. Both go better together in my opinion. It’s just how you weight them based on your time horizon
I would like to do a video on my portfolio. I can resend it because I am looking for advice or changes that I can make. I do use M1
Sure. Resend it and reference this comment in the email.
Very awesome video!! Recommending it to my dad and looking at maybe how I could start planning for this myself for later on.
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed the video!
you put your stocks in a taxable account, not roth IRA?To have access to dividends before 59.5.
I thought the real estate composition in DGRW would make it non qualified. Have you heard about IVVW? Would you prefer it over DGRW?
What’s your opinion on schd and jepi in combo
I used to day/swing trade and if u know u know...
I like dividends investing better....i prefer monthly dividends i currently earm $10.00 to some thats a little i just times it by 12 $120.00 for the year
Yup!!! I much prefer dividend investing!
Are you sure that DGRW pays monthly dividends? There may be differences between the US and Europe, but all I can find is that dividends are paid quarterly. (in the German prospectus) I am invested in WisdomTree Global Quality Dividend Growth.
Ticker DGRW pays monthly. Check on seeking alpha the ticket may be different for the European version.
Excellent! Why didn’t you post it?
It would have been too much of a time commitment to post articles consistently on seeking alpha. Maybe in the future.
Hello there, how about a portfolio of QQQM 40%, AVUV 40% & JEPQ 20% for a young investor? And use the dividends from jepq to evenly distribute them to all etfs for added income. Then have a final portfolio of jepq, w/ dgrw.
The tax drag makes this strategy not the best. Would be more efficient to buy growth and rebalance into JEPQ in the future if you don’t plan to live off the dividends within the next 5 years. When you are young you want growth. Time is your greatest asset.
I heard you say satellites... What do you mean? Would this be my whole portfolio? Or am I missing something 😊
haha.. It's an investment strategy the Core & Satellite. You may like it! Check out this video where I talk about it: ruclips.net/video/iEwAipBKPUo/видео.html
Smaller amount that revolve around your main (larger) holdings.
Hi Jake. It was great meeting you a week and a half ago. I was doing some research about DGRO, and on the ishares website they wrote that its strategy has outperformed the s and p 500 since 1979; I know the etf did not start back then. The expense ratio of this etf .08. Have you read about any other etf or mutual fund with an expense ratio of .08% or less that has a greater dividend yield than the s and p 500 that has literature that says it outperformed the s and p 500 over the long term?
Hey Richard! It was great meeting you as well! DGRO tracks the Morningstar U.S. Dividend Growth Index which is from Morningstar. Ishares simply mimics the strategy in their ETF. So by investing into DGRO, you effectively are investing into the Morningstar U.S. Dividend Growth Index.
That is a really good question in terms of the expense ratio and higher dividend yield vs the SP500. I ran a ETF screen on seeking alpha and the only ETFs that have beaten the SP500 with
@@DividendGrowthInvestingI looked over the data on the ETFs you listed, in portfolio visualizer. In my taxable account, I will attempt to build up my position in DGRO to what I have in schd, and then add to both, following what you presented in the simple path to wealth with dividend investing. Thank you so much!
I’m 17 and I’m investing on cash app. I’ve now invested almost 1k and have almost 2k mainly from bitcoin
Thats awesome! I wish I started so early!
Great content Jake! Happy Sunday!
Hey!! Thank you! Happy Sunday!
Great content Jake. Our investing philosophy are very similar. I am investing in several growth and income oriented ETFs every month to setup additional monthly income upon my retirement in 7 years. DGRW and JEPQ are both part of my portfolio.
Always appreciate your insights. Keep up the motivation for us all. 👍💰💰💰💰💰💰
That good old saying of great minds think alike!! Glad to hear it man! That’s awesome. Those 7 years are going to fly by!
Awesome as always Jake 👏 would love to see more like this, my only take that i personally wouldn't have DGRW JEPQ as core portfolio but a satellite position, but yes i love the idea
Thank you for letting me know! Yeah I completely agree that this is more for your satellite not for your core. I much prefer SCHD/DGRO as my core and adding others like DGRW/JEPQ as a satellite can make a lot of sense!
I cant access the Excel file....which link you click on to get to the excel file? I will love to save it on my local drive and test this scenario out on different portfolio (including SCHD and VGT)...
Thank you!
It’s in the pinned comment. Go to file and make a copy and save and you will be able to edit it.
Thank you for your quick reply. Could you please provide insight into the tax implications of earning dividends? For instance, if we were to earn $50,000 annually from dividends, wouldn't we still be liable to pay taxes on that $50,000, despite not being actively employed?
Hi Jake, thank you for this incredible helpful video. I'm a 56 year old woman trying to get some dividends in 5-7 years horizon. I have $25k in my Roth IRA to reallocate. Took a big hit the last couple of years and finally back up. The 50% DGRW+50% JEPQ is what I understood makes the most sense? I'm not the most investment saavy here! Thank you again for sharing.
Well these are simply examples. If you are looking for monthly income and want the income to grow, having a combination of DGRW/JEPQ is a good approach to consider. I personally wouldn't have ALL of my money in DGRW/JEPQ, but having a portion allocated to these is a great way to get a growing monthly dividend. Check out this video where I talk about how to build a portfolio based on your time horizon and goals: ruclips.net/video/iEwAipBKPUo/видео.html
doesn’t dgrw have a high e/r? can’t recall off the top of my head but I’m pretty sure it’s like .35 which is higher than I’d like plus I’ve watched other channels like Average Joe Investor for example as he compared a whole plethora of dividend etfs and monthly paying dividend ETFs and dgrw was one of the poorest performers
Yeah it has a higher ER. I think it comes down to your goals. DGRW has done very well on a total return basis - even outperforming the SP500. I personally see it as a satellite position, not as a core holding.
Just curious, where did u get ~$300k to put in your portfolio in early 2022 ???
Sold a rental property.
10:47 - Do you have a video recommendation for someone with a much longer time horizon? (20-30 yrs) Thanks!!
SCHD/DGRO :) You can check out this video to learn more about time horizons: ruclips.net/video/XOZ0DRuJsME/видео.html
Enjoyed the video. As a later in life (62) investor I enjoy spending time every day looking at stocks. ETF's are more hands-off so not my cup of tea. I'm a value investor who likes dividend stocks and sell covered calls. I look for 1 percent per month in premiums and 5 % per month out of the money. Only been investing for around 5 months but spent almost a year paper trading. I have invested in the past but incredible bad timing ( 2000 and 2008) .
Thanks for sharing! The covered call approach can work very well! Have you ever considered having ETFs as your core portfolio as your base just in case mr market decides to not cooperate? This may add a bit more stability to your approach.
Any ideas on qual etf?
Pretty impressive results at a reasonable fee. I'd have to dig into the fund methodology more, but at the surface, it looks like a good growth ETF.
Retired on 25% each JEPI, JEPQ, QQQM, VOO. DGRW is interesting due to the monthly. Still underperforms VOO though.
Great ETFs! Not sure where you see Dgrw underperforming VOO. My chart shows it outperforming on a total return basis.
@@DividendGrowthInvesting I used portfolio. Visualizer. Since inception. Was really only the ER that that seperated them. Very similar returns.
I appreciate your work but people that are looking for retirement should be careful about the market crash
Always good to diversify and understand what you are investing in.
The statement made that "DGRW has increased its dividend by 348% since 2013" is misleading. While technically true that DGRW started paying its dividends in 2013, DGRW's first dividend was paid in June 2013. So DGRW did not pay dividends for the whole year (only 7 months that year). The partial payment significantly impacts the percentage of "has increased its dividend by 348% since 2013". Why? Because its dividend paid for 2013 totaled $0.294/shr. In 2023, DGRW paid $1.23/shr in dividends. If we projected out 2013 for the entire year (estimate), it would have paid about $0.484. So, if the starting year dividend was for an entire year, at about $0.484 and increased to $1.23, its 10 year dividend increase percentage is now 154%. That is less than half of what is stated in this video. I am using the statistics from EOY 2013 to EOY 2023.
The whole point is you have to be careful with statistics, especially within the time frame of those stats. Statistics can be misleading.
That stated, I am sure Jake is not doing anything to try to mislead anyone. His videos are very nice and informative. It may be the case where he did not realize that DGRW's 2013 annual dividend was only for a partial year. So, I am NOT making this comment to criticize or discredit Jake.
Very fair. Thank you so much for taking the time to write this comment and share your thoughts and opinions!
Hmmm, I got a "some viewers may find this video inappropriate" type warning before this video. How intriguing. Now I'll definitely have to watch till the end. Lol
lol…. Yeah I guess someone reported it.
Why didnt you end up posting the article; btw; i finally realized what the couple at the end of each viseo is trying to say..😅😅😅
Time commitment to writing articles each week. Lolol ya
What if you lumpsum into dgrw and drip into jepq?
Lots of ways to make a sausage. Pick a strategy that you can understand and one that meets your goals. Then it comes down to sticking with the decision long term.
Lots of things to think about in here. I gave up thinking about investment income on a monthly basis a while ago. But i still have a few years of work left so maybe that changes between now and when i pull the trigger.
One thought i had based on what yiu can do with M1's cash fewtures is set thr cash balance to be 4 months of withdrawals then set up the withdrawals on a weekly ir monthly basis, whatever works. Then sonce the payments are lumpy it should continue to fill back up when yiu are in a month ehere yiu get a lot of dividends. Plus if you hit a spot where your cash balance goes over your specified value then the excess automatically gets reinvested.
No idea if this would actually work. If anybody sees any gaping holes in this please point them out.
My biggest issue with pursuing only monthly payers is that it eliminates so many good investments.
Completely agree! There are a few diamonds in the rough when it comes to monthly payers. Most are pretty bad though.
That’s an interesting strategy with M1. I think it’s probably easiest if you can manage to build up a cash buffer where you have the money in there to begin with that you need and that it gets refilled quarterly.
So under example 2 .... What would be a good core position?
I would assume you are looking to retire sooner than later so you’d want a higher starting yield. I like SCHD. You could look to include VYM and consider a small % in DGRO for continued growth.
@DividendGrowthInvesting yes.
I'm retiring in December... moving to Thailand with around 1.5 million. So just trying to get to the point where I can live off of 3k a month and not lose my capital
@@Happ1971Oh you can easily get that with a $1.5M portfolio! I like SCHD/DGRO as the core of a dividend portfolio and adding DGRW/JEPQ for additional income and weighed based on your time horizon and age.
Love the monthly dividends that get keep getting bigger Jake!
Thanks man!! Appreciate you stopping by!
Do like ur info you share! Vid clips I've seen, breaks the monotony off the start.
Good to know!
Well done Jake!
Thank you!!
I think you math is wrong or at least too optimistic. DGRW is not really a dividend growth ETF that regularly increases its dividend. Actually 3 out of 10 years the dividend is reduced. The ETF investst in quality growth stocks that pay dividends. Growing dividends are not guaranteed because of dividend cuts and rebalancing with lower dividend stocks. Dividend Growth Rate 5Y (CAGR) is actually much lower than in your calculation. Such numbers are too good to be true.
Yeah that’s where 🧂🧂🧂🧂 comes into play. It really depends on your yield on cost. It’s hard to project what will happen in the future so best to plan conservatively.
Awesome video. More like this please.
Hey Andrew! Thank you for the feedback!!
Is jepq and dgrw taxed the same way?
DGRW is a qualified dividend and JEPQ is mostly non-qualified. At the 11:53 mark I talk about how JEPQ is taxed.
The JEPI & JEPQ fund manager has given interviews on YT that are very educational. Nevertheless Jake did a good job explaining the different tax treatment of dividends
At the end of the day I want the investment with the highest total return. Preferably with low volatility. Even if the yield is low, I can always pay myself a “dividend” by simply selling the stocks and withdrawing the exact amount of money that I need in a more tax efficient manner.
How about jepg?
Great video. Thank you!
Glad you liked it!
DIVO, SPYI, JEPQ, and DGRW are good contenders in my view for a monthly income focused portfolio
Great group of ETFs!
$1 million in SPYI would be roughly $117,000 per year. Am I doing the math wrong because that seems too good to be true.?
@@Life_Kyle Its a newer ETF. The yield is likely going to go down just like what we saw with JEPQ and JEPI. It really depends on a few factors like volatility in the market. Its a covered call ETF.
SPYI is not as good as it looks on the surface. It basically pays back your own capital in the form of dividends. That's why it's 'great for taxes'. It's very misleading.
@@bonanzatime The return of capital is actually a tax treatment, it’s not destructive to the fund’s NAV. The fund manager did an interview with Armchair Income on RUclips explaining this. It is actually better than JEPI from a tax perspective and has so far outperformed JEPI in total returns since inception.
BUT DGRW only has a 0.89% dividend, it has increased from next to nothing to inconsequential, pretty pathetic for a 348% increase.. I do have it in a portfolio with some of the high income ETFs (10+%). SCHD has a real meaningful dividend unlike DGRW.
@@mikesgarage394 I see it at 1.53%
I think schd/jepi better combo
These are just examples. I mentioned in the video these would be more considered your satellite positions.
I left a comment
that you did!!! :D
Jake’s wife: “So what do I do?” 😂
lol :)
Hey Jake,! Haven't commented in a while, but I hope you and the wifey are well.. Keep up the great content as always!
Hey, thanks! Thanks for stopping by!!
I retired at 35 years old last year 2023.
omg what a small world! I retired last year at 37! Are you living in the US?
@DividendGrowthInvesting yes, l live in America for 27 years.
@@ryanchinh1040ok very cool! Congrats on your early retirement!!
If you are aiming for fire and living off dividends why does it matter if you participate in the upside?
You still want to outpace inflation
Go 😊
:)
Hi...new to dividend investing. Im 49 and hoping to retire by 60 to 62. Is it worth investing in dividends now or should i focus on growth? If so whats the best dividend/growth erfs?
I was thinking KNG +SCHD+DGRO. thoughts?@DividendGrowthInvesting
So, who’s the goose ?
🤷🏼♂️🤷🏼♂️ :)
You should focus on growth, not on dividends in your accamulation stage. Dividends are bad thing. There is no difference between getting income from dividends vs selling lots from growth etfs. Buying covered call etfs is not smart either.
👌
87 1/2 th
lol
I have never liked JEPQ, JEPI and other covered call ETFs. They are the last resort for retired people who don't have sufficient funds to invest in good ETFs or individual stocks.
Fair enough. I agree but unfortunately most people will struggle to generate the same amount of income with SCHD/DGRO alone. CC ETFs give you a bit of a bump if you don’t have enough invested.
@26:35
You need to use real world like numbers.
Price appreciation of 7.54% while dividend growth is at 11.01% is not realistic for moderate to long periods of time. That will completely distort the output
The 11.01% is for something entirely different. Disregard those numbers in regards to this video.
3rd
Hey!!!! So glad to see you here!
@DividendGrowthInvesting thanks for great content
You sound like the penny stock guy a little
lol not me. Which one?
Second
Yes!!!!
First
Hey Michael!! Yes!!!
@@DividendGrowthInvesting excellent video and article sir.
Did you decide to stop working with only 850K saved? Boy that sounds foolish. I dont care if you try to live off covered call income etfs, (which will take away virtually all upside). Just wait until the market has a correction on what the downside will be. And then you you have the audacity to make videos on how this makes sense? Perhaps I misunderstood your status. Listening to your video you sound smarter than that.
In my last video (ruclips.net/video/ZL9uEQBhcao/видео.html) I talked about how we have $1M in our taxable accounts focused just on dividend investing. We also have about $300K in retirement accounts focused on growth that we saved from our day jobs. I sold two rental properties in the last few years, so we have about $600K in an account where I write covered calls and cash secured puts for income. We are mostly invested in the stock market and own our home (with a fairly small mortgage).
Buyer Club-Careful with your comments and criticisms. Feedback is always good but your words, like this, are what makes the community worse, not better.
Super proud of you Jake! Another great Dividend Growth Investor video!!!
@@DP52001At this point all that I can say is GOOD LUCK. Glad that he has what now appears to be $1.9MM which IS a lot better than 850K, but I still see problems in the future. And no, covered call ETF's that are now being harped all over YT are NOT the savior that most advocate. But, DGI does appear to be more sane than most of the ones I have watched.
I got the popcorn 🍿 on this one
@@buyerclub2 Do you suggest me at 59 1/2 to continue keep my VWENX fund or to do something with SCHD/SPYI/QQQI ?