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Thank you for this video. I thought it was excellent and very informative and the flow from topic to topic was easy to follow. I definitely learned a lot in a short amount of time.
Word of mouth is the best form of marketing. Thank you very much for sharing our content and please continue to do so! We need to keep growing so we can do more good things.
Yeah so you'll need to check and see with the provider if they've waived fees for the underlying but that's not always the case. In fact, I don't believe it's standard practice. Always assume it isn't and then check. It's not so obvious information to find. Joe P.
At min 15:57 I disagree. A manager should make as much as possible for investors. I think a benchmark is arbitrary and should be used for a bottom limit. With your approch it is no wonder most managers do not meet their goal. But I am just a retail investor. Thanks for your insite.
IETC is an iShares active ETF (U.S. Tech Independence Focused ETF). You mentioned avoid active ETFs but the expense ratio in only 0.18% and performs phenomenally well even compared to VGT.
Always important to state the time frame over which outperformance has been observed. Those are low fees for an active ETF, but that doesn't change the fact that 95% of active managers - over the long term - can't beat a benchmark.
@@Nanalyze The time frame is important. IETC outperformed both IVW and VGT over the last 5 years. That's why I'll likely choose it in my IRA to replace the ETFs that are charging almost double the expense ratio such as IYW.
That is great to hear man! When two people can agree to disagree, shake on it, and get back to life it's encouraging for us all. On the Internet it's easier to hold grudges than in real life where it's very easy just to move on with things. I can't recall whatever disagreement we had but it has long been forgotten. Thank you for the kind words and the best to you always! :) Joe P.
Very informative detailed video. Besides you are responding to all comments very nicely. What is your opinion about JEPQ? I knew you have a video on JEPI. Thanks
Thank you! We always want the comments sections to be as informative as the videos and we put a lot of time and effort into making that happen. A video on JEPQ would be the same conclusion as JEPI.
It all comes down to fees. If any ETF provider offers low fee ETFs then they ought to be looked at, though it's best to stick with known brand names to reduce risk. We use Schwab so clearly find value in their offering.
@@Nanalyze bought last week a good quantity of VUAA, German version , xter. Price around 110,7 euros. You think I should buy more now; Kyriakos ASU alumni, Tempe, Arizona THANKS
@@kyriakoskitsios Always best to use dollar cost averaging. Then you don't have to worry about trying to time the market :) Cool to see you studied in the States!
Cheers, I am a newbie to ETFs, I had been avoiding them. I was just picking my own stocks. But as I build my portfolio out, I am starting to consider them. Your video was very helpful. Thank You!
Joe, I'm fairly new to ETFs, but i do need to diversify and was looking to add bonds. Is it a better move to directly buy TIPS? If i go the ETF route, what are your thoughts on BKAG? They're no fee, but all my reading has indicated its because they are latento the game and trying to lure investors.
Interesting. That could be. We tend to prefer larger ETFs by AUM. BKAG isn't tiny, but they're certainly not large. It may be worth looking into a larger ETF like BND or AGG with a nominal expense ratio as opposed to taking a chance on a smaller fund. Just something to consider. Ultimately it's your call! If you're able to buy individual TIPS, that's also an option, just bear in mind that there may be minimum order sizes, fees, and other considerations.
Hey Joe! I’d love to hear your thoughts on Wisdom Tree’s QGRW. I like the quality metrics but stress if the expense ratio will allow it to outperform SCHG/XLK/QQQM over the next 20+ years
Looks like "large and mid US growth" for 0.28%. That seems way too high. VUG gives you "large US growth" for 0.04%. Poke around a bit and you can probably find something with equivalent exposure for less fees :)
@@Nanalyzeso you don’t think the screening metrics for profitability and growth are worth the expense ratio? Are there other ETFs that filter for similar metrics that are cheaper or is it not worth it and cheapest is best in your opinion?
As you can imagine analyzing any given ETF takes some time. We need to go examine the underlying index to understand the mechanics, and that takes research resources. To have anything of value to offer up we would need to do that work and we're happy to for paying subscribers who raise such questions on our Discord server ;) Joe P.
I would love to Invest long term in a dividend ETF greater china/ far east ex Japan, like the SCHD, with low fees. A lot of Chinese companies pay a lot of dividends and I believe the market will eventually recover. Any recommendations? Could this be a video?
So Chinese companies weren't really into dividends but the government started pressuring them to start having more lenient dividend policies. Really it's a matter of talking about investing in China first which is its own animal. (We have a number of videos on this topic.) We don't know of any Chinese dividend champions so that's as far as we looked when putting together our international champions report. This is an obscure niche but an interesting one given my own interests in China. Not sure this would make a good video (probably just not enough interest) but it's on my radar now. Joe P.
Great information. Not the sexy stuff, but the smart stuff. I thought total expense ratio tells you what percentage of an ETF's total assets are being used to cover its annual operating expenses. i.e. cost of doing business, which is then passed on to investors. Divide a fund's total costs by its total assets. Nvm...i get it. They set the expense and then that takes away from performance gain and that difference is the index perf vs etf perf
Oh boy. Just look at the chart on that thing. ;) That's not something we'd ever want to get involved with tbh. Anything we cover needs to have a sizable amount of AUM so we can be sure there's sufficient interest in the topic. Joe P.
Thanks for this video. Vanguard’s target date retirement funds seem like a good way to go for Roth IRAs but I wish there was a similar style fund that combatted ESG scores (like Strive). Roughly speaking, do you think it’d be wise to continue investing in both-say Roth IRA contributions to the Vanguard retirement and leftover money to a Strive fund? Or is there a smarter investing strategy that emphasizes an ethical mission to move past ESG while still being safe and effective for retirement?
You're most welcome. Yep, we covered Strive before and their mission is spot on. (ruclips.net/video/MiOxfhWKUmE/видео.html) Hopefully ESG is dying a slow death because investors of all kinds are realizing it was a mess to begin with. It's probably just easier - for right now - to just focus on low fees then set it and forget it. Vanguard is a leader in low cost so you can't go wrong there.
Good question. They're generally active, though some have more rigid methodologies for asset selection (GICS for example). They almost always have high expense ratios. We analyze lots of them and they probably need to be taken on a case-by-case basis.
Index investing self-inflates in a bull market and overperforms. I'm not interested in being in that game when we go into a bear market. These funds could self-deflate on the way down and deliver proportionately much higher losses.
Since 95% of professional investors can't beat an index and charge higher fees for the privilege, the alternatives aren't looking very rosy. Investing in broad market strategies like the three fund approach works. It may sound boring and unfulfilling, but it is anything but.
You are asking a very complicated question with lots of nuance that largely surrounds domicile and taxation. This is discussed pretty heavily on our Discord server.
Analyzing ETFs on the fly takes research resources. We're working on a fixed income video that you may find quite useful. Paying subscribers can email us at any time with questions and we'll happily answer them (Discord too). Joe P.
You make a great point here. I took my degen hat off for this video and now I'm wondering just what the hell was I thinking. (Palm hits forehead.) I'll try to do better.. err... worse going forward. Joe P.
Really glad to hear that and thank you for letting me know. I was hoping it was but I can never tell :) Sometimes I think it's explained simply but the reality is I'm all over the place. It's only after we publish that I know based on feedback. Much appreciated. Joe P.
I’m quite disappointed, Joe, that you backpedaled after letting the cat out of the bag. Anyone who follows the most important investing gurus on RUclips is anecdotally aware that rocket ships and diamond hand emojis truly are the ultimate catalyst, especially when applied to stocks that will clearly be “the next NVDA.” Now we have clear and concise evidence to that end. I believe I am now thoroughly equipped to set my latest AI algorithm loose on the market. With those criteria alone, I should be able to buy a Lambo and start a new channel within a few weeks when my 0 DTE strategy moons. Thanks for all the help. I’ll apologize in advance for not following you in the future, but I see a rock and roll life style in my future and generational wealth accumulation that needs to be squandered. I’m wasting time. Gotta get to the car and speed boat dealers. Can anyone with experience in these matters tell me if the unnaturally shapely ladies in bikinis come with the boat or if you have to procure their presence through alternative means?
This is a completely underrated comment. You have an AI trading algorithm? Which 25-year-old guru did you buy it from because I'm having a hard time deciding which one to buy mine from. There are so many and they all create alpha so easily. There's never been an easier time to become rich. Also it's okay to just say you have a lambo a bit early. This is an effective tool to use when attacking those who criticize your new 0 DTE money printing machine. So speaking from experience, the "unnaturally shapely" ladies in bikinis arrive *shortly after* your expensive goods do. But please be careful. If you lose your wealth - which will never happen because this has never happened in the history of the fintwat space - the "unatural shapes" move in the opposite direction. Due south. Thank you for the comment, and wen lambo #2? Joe P.
You're very welcome. If we can teach people how to become better investors then they'll become our biggest supporters. That's the most efficient way to market our offering. :) Joe P.
Well the stability part should be covered, at least when compared to a benchmark, because you have fixed income and international equities providing asset class diversification. As for your 3 grand a month target, be wary of chasing yield. If you're following a three-fund approach that won't happen though, provided you stick with the strategy. What you might do is sub out the US stocks ETF with perhaps an SCHD for growing income. We use a Quantigence portfolio ;)
The list is actually from the Boglehead community. The idea is that if you're going to invest in the U.S. you probably want to include more than just the largest 500 companies.
We always throw this stat around - 90 to 95% is typically cited. It's bad either way. When asking AI, "According to most investment research, the statement that "only 5% of active managers can beat an index" is generally considered accurate, with studies showing that a very small percentage of actively managed funds consistently outperform their respective market indexes, often cited as being around 5% or less, making it extremely difficult for most active managers to beat the market consistently."
@@Nanalyze I trust your channel because you're obviously not promoting funds that generate a commission or unnecessary expenses. All of our retirement funds are no-expense, or exceptionally low expense index equity funds.
@@Nanalyze FNILX the rest in FZIPX. Last year we booked a cruise on Royal Caribbean where shareholders of 100 shares get onboard credit. I felt like a moron buying 100 shares just to get wifi covered, and lo and behold the stock went from $100 to $258 a share. God watches over babies and fools. Good night.
That company has more rabid Kool-Aid drinking apes posting emojis than any other name we cover by far. And the ASTS "community" has nobody to thank but themselves because they encourage people to attack anyone who doesn't join the circle jerk of constant praise they shower on a firm that has missed its revenue targets by a country mile and (checks notes) STILL doesn't have meaningful revenues. Joe P.
Yes, we have half our audience ex-USA so we try to cater to that as much as possible when able. Problem is that 50% comes from all over and they all have very unique rules and tax situations.
👮You need to be subscribed to this channel before reading the below comments. Sorry, we don't make the rules. 🙏 Just click the below link please. 👇
ruclips.net/user/nanalyze
I’m a firm believer that discovering the channel has changed my financial future for that I’m grateful!
That's about the best feedback that we could hope to receive. Thank you!
Nanalyze continues to be my favorite financial youtuber. Learn something new and useful in every video, especially in Tech.
That's some of the best feedback we could possibly hope to receive. Thank you! Joe P.
Another classic video. Great information.
Really happy to hear such positive feedback. Thank you!
Thank you for this video. I thought it was excellent and very informative and the flow from topic to topic was easy to follow. I definitely learned a lot in a short amount of time.
This is great feedback, thank you
Joe I tell everyone about your channel it’s such a goldmine of quality information
Word of mouth is the best form of marketing. Thank you very much for sharing our content and please continue to do so! We need to keep growing so we can do more good things.
Just found this channel and really enjoyed it. Looking forward to learning more....thanks 😊
Really glad to hear such positive feedback, thank you!
I never realised an ETF inside an ETF includes two management fees. Thanks for the video.
Yeah so you'll need to check and see with the provider if they've waived fees for the underlying but that's not always the case. In fact, I don't believe it's standard practice. Always assume it isn't and then check. It's not so obvious information to find. Joe P.
What can I say, Yes, yes, YES, wash and repeat. Been with Vanguard for decades, it pays to stay the course.
Agree! Good to hear you are on the right path.
Astounding content, as always !
That's just great to hear, thank you!
At min 15:57 I disagree. A manager should make as much as possible for investors. I think a benchmark is arbitrary and should be used for a bottom limit. With your approch it is no wonder most managers do not meet their goal. But I am just a retail investor. Thanks for your insite.
Always enjoyed your content!
That's great to hear, thank you!
Very nice video Joe.
Really glad to hear you enjoyed this one! Joe P.
IETC is an iShares active ETF (U.S. Tech Independence Focused ETF). You mentioned avoid active ETFs but the expense ratio in only 0.18% and performs phenomenally well even compared to VGT.
Always important to state the time frame over which outperformance has been observed. Those are low fees for an active ETF, but that doesn't change the fact that 95% of active managers - over the long term - can't beat a benchmark.
@@Nanalyze The time frame is important. IETC outperformed both IVW and VGT over the last 5 years. That's why I'll likely choose it in my IRA to replace the ETFs that are charging almost double the expense ratio such as IYW.
Thank you for the added info!
Still subscribed to you even with our disagreement, I still enjoy your content brother
That is great to hear man! When two people can agree to disagree, shake on it, and get back to life it's encouraging for us all. On the Internet it's easier to hold grudges than in real life where it's very easy just to move on with things. I can't recall whatever disagreement we had but it has long been forgotten. Thank you for the kind words and the best to you always! :) Joe P.
The more I watch, the smarter I get. Thanks, Joe.
That's precisely the effect we want to have on viewers. Great feedback George!
Amen Joe--I'm sick and tired of hearing "whoa, vanguard *believes in* XYZ, look at all the buying activity!!!!"
We covered that in an entire video here: ruclips.net/video/UWNVuZ8wixY/видео.html
Very informative detailed video. Besides you are responding to all comments very nicely. What is your opinion about JEPQ? I knew you have a video on JEPI.
Thanks
Thank you! We always want the comments sections to be as informative as the videos and we put a lot of time and effort into making that happen. A video on JEPQ would be the same conclusion as JEPI.
Ok thanks.
As Always Thank You !!!!
Your appreciation is encouraging, thank you!
Great video, curious why Schwab ETF's are not thrown in with Black Rock & Vanguard.
It all comes down to fees. If any ETF provider offers low fee ETFs then they ought to be looked at, though it's best to stick with known brand names to reduce risk. We use Schwab so clearly find value in their offering.
Solid advise.
But we as Europeans do not have access to all good Etf.
Vuaa of Vanguard is available in euro currency.
Excellent comment for all our European friends. That's the S&P 500 UCITS ETF with a seven basis points expense ratio.
@@Nanalyze bought last week a good quantity of VUAA, German version , xter. Price around 110,7 euros.
You think I should buy more now;
Kyriakos
ASU alumni, Tempe, Arizona
THANKS
@@kyriakoskitsios Always best to use dollar cost averaging. Then you don't have to worry about trying to time the market :) Cool to see you studied in the States!
Cheers, I am a newbie to ETFs, I had been avoiding them. I was just picking my own stocks. But as I build my portfolio out, I am starting to consider them. Your video was very helpful. Thank You!
That is great to hear. You absolutely should consider ETFs to supplement your overall portfolio of assets.
Joe, I'm fairly new to ETFs, but i do need to diversify and was looking to add bonds. Is it a better move to directly buy TIPS? If i go the ETF route, what are your thoughts on BKAG? They're no fee, but all my reading has indicated its because they are latento the game and trying to lure investors.
Interesting. That could be. We tend to prefer larger ETFs by AUM. BKAG isn't tiny, but they're certainly not large. It may be worth looking into a larger ETF like BND or AGG with a nominal expense ratio as opposed to taking a chance on a smaller fund. Just something to consider. Ultimately it's your call! If you're able to buy individual TIPS, that's also an option, just bear in mind that there may be minimum order sizes, fees, and other considerations.
Bonds covered here: ruclips.net/video/vX8ha4cgjtY/видео.html Joe P
Hey Joe! I’d love to hear your thoughts on Wisdom Tree’s QGRW. I like the quality metrics but stress if the expense ratio will allow it to outperform SCHG/XLK/QQQM over the next 20+ years
Looks like "large and mid US growth" for 0.28%. That seems way too high. VUG gives you "large US growth" for 0.04%. Poke around a bit and you can probably find something with equivalent exposure for less fees :)
@@Nanalyzeso you don’t think the screening metrics for profitability and growth are worth the expense ratio? Are there other ETFs that filter for similar metrics that are cheaper or is it not worth it and cheapest is best in your opinion?
@@makeitcold6649 According to research by experts, cheapest is always best. Expect active ETFs to be replaced by cheap smart beta strategies.
How do you feel about SPYI and QQQI.....?
Thanks for your input.
As you can imagine analyzing any given ETF takes some time. We need to go examine the underlying index to understand the mechanics, and that takes research resources. To have anything of value to offer up we would need to do that work and we're happy to for paying subscribers who raise such questions on our Discord server ;) Joe P.
where i can buy 8n germany qqq and the other one
@@ahmetyas3402 Good question. UCITS ETFs exist for lots of the themes we talk about but you'll need to check with what your broker offers.
I would love to Invest long term in a dividend ETF greater china/ far east ex Japan, like the SCHD, with low fees.
A lot of Chinese companies pay a lot of dividends and I believe the market will eventually recover.
Any recommendations? Could this be a video?
So Chinese companies weren't really into dividends but the government started pressuring them to start having more lenient dividend policies. Really it's a matter of talking about investing in China first which is its own animal. (We have a number of videos on this topic.) We don't know of any Chinese dividend champions so that's as far as we looked when putting together our international champions report. This is an obscure niche but an interesting one given my own interests in China. Not sure this would make a good video (probably just not enough interest) but it's on my radar now. Joe P.
Great information. Not the sexy stuff, but the smart stuff.
I thought total expense ratio tells you what percentage of an ETF's total assets are being used to cover its annual operating expenses. i.e. cost of doing business, which is then passed on to investors. Divide a fund's total costs by its total assets. Nvm...i get it. They set the expense and then that takes away from performance gain and that difference is the index perf vs etf perf
Glad you found this useful!
Great video Joe! We need a video on $ULTY Thank you! 🚀
Oh boy. Just look at the chart on that thing. ;) That's not something we'd ever want to get involved with tbh. Anything we cover needs to have a sizable amount of AUM so we can be sure there's sufficient interest in the topic. Joe P.
Thanks for this video. Vanguard’s target date retirement funds seem like a good way to go for Roth IRAs but I wish there was a similar style fund that combatted ESG scores (like Strive). Roughly speaking, do you think it’d be wise to continue investing in both-say Roth IRA contributions to the Vanguard retirement and leftover money to a Strive fund? Or is there a smarter investing strategy that emphasizes an ethical mission to move past ESG while still being safe and effective for retirement?
You're most welcome. Yep, we covered Strive before and their mission is spot on. (ruclips.net/video/MiOxfhWKUmE/видео.html) Hopefully ESG is dying a slow death because investors of all kinds are realizing it was a mess to begin with. It's probably just easier - for right now - to just focus on low fees then set it and forget it. Vanguard is a leader in low cost so you can't go wrong there.
What about thematic etf ?
Good question. They're generally active, though some have more rigid methodologies for asset selection (GICS for example). They almost always have high expense ratios. We analyze lots of them and they probably need to be taken on a case-by-case basis.
thanks!
You're most welcome Jim!
Index investing self-inflates in a bull market and overperforms. I'm not interested in being in that game when we go into a bear market. These funds could self-deflate on the way down and deliver proportionately much higher losses.
Since 95% of professional investors can't beat an index and charge higher fees for the privilege, the alternatives aren't looking very rosy. Investing in broad market strategies like the three fund approach works. It may sound boring and unfulfilling, but it is anything but.
Do you know if there are countries that are excluded from investing in ETFs in the US?
You are asking a very complicated question with lots of nuance that largely surrounds domicile and taxation. This is discussed pretty heavily on our Discord server.
Is VUSXX as safe as HYSA for an emergency fund? Thank you
Analyzing ETFs on the fly takes research resources. We're working on a fixed income video that you may find quite useful. Paying subscribers can email us at any time with questions and we'll happily answer them (Discord too). Joe P.
15:13 Any link to the video mentioned the JEPI leverage risk? @Anyone?
JEPI video here: ruclips.net/video/nd9AmdTd0g0/видео.html
VOO VUG VTI. ✌
Be aware of overlap between funds ;)
Does Robinhood charge any ETF fees?
We don't use brokers that push the riskiest products to their clients so we wouldn't know the answer to your question :)
Etf videos..... how am i supposed to yolo, 10 bagger, 0 dte otm with that?
You yolo first and then when you hit take 5 bags to diversify into etfs and the other 5 to degen some more of course
This is where you put the 10 bagger, come back and watch when you can play
@@SuperLeafyman ok boomer
@@SuperLeafyman what are you trying to say? I think half of your thought was left off the page
You make a great point here. I took my degen hat off for this video and now I'm wondering just what the hell was I thinking. (Palm hits forehead.) I'll try to do better.. err... worse going forward. Joe P.
❤
Thank you for the love!
@@NanalyzeThis video was very easy to understand. Thank you.
Really glad to hear that and thank you for letting me know. I was hoping it was but I can never tell :) Sometimes I think it's explained simply but the reality is I'm all over the place. It's only after we publish that I know based on feedback. Much appreciated. Joe P.
I live off dividends on ETFs.
Great to hear!
I’m quite disappointed, Joe, that you backpedaled after letting the cat out of the bag. Anyone who follows the most important investing gurus on RUclips is anecdotally aware that rocket ships and diamond hand emojis truly are the ultimate catalyst, especially when applied to stocks that will clearly be “the next NVDA.” Now we have clear and concise evidence to that end. I believe I am now thoroughly equipped to set my latest AI algorithm loose on the market. With those criteria alone, I should be able to buy a Lambo and start a new channel within a few weeks when my 0 DTE strategy moons. Thanks for all the help. I’ll apologize in advance for not following you in the future, but I see a rock and roll life style in my future and generational wealth accumulation that needs to be squandered. I’m wasting time. Gotta get to the car and speed boat dealers. Can anyone with experience in these matters tell me if the unnaturally shapely ladies in bikinis come with the boat or if you have to procure their presence through alternative means?
This is a completely underrated comment. You have an AI trading algorithm? Which 25-year-old guru did you buy it from because I'm having a hard time deciding which one to buy mine from. There are so many and they all create alpha so easily. There's never been an easier time to become rich. Also it's okay to just say you have a lambo a bit early. This is an effective tool to use when attacking those who criticize your new 0 DTE money printing machine.
So speaking from experience, the "unnaturally shapely" ladies in bikinis arrive *shortly after* your expensive goods do. But please be careful. If you lose your wealth - which will never happen because this has never happened in the history of the fintwat space - the "unatural shapes" move in the opposite direction. Due south. Thank you for the comment, and wen lambo #2? Joe P.
@Nanalyze I have no idea what I just read, but it was funny as hell 😅
@@rethinkyourself1 People love the humor and we love it too :)
Excellent education that you are providing. Thank you, Nanalyze.
You're very welcome. If we can teach people how to become better investors then they'll become our biggest supporters. That's the most efficient way to market our offering. :) Joe P.
I'm looking for a 3-fund portfolio to invest my savings that could pay 3 grand a month in dividends, and be somewhat stable.
Well the stability part should be covered, at least when compared to a benchmark, because you have fixed income and international equities providing asset class diversification. As for your 3 grand a month target, be wary of chasing yield. If you're following a three-fund approach that won't happen though, provided you stick with the strategy. What you might do is sub out the US stocks ETF with perhaps an SCHD for growing income. We use a Quantigence portfolio ;)
No VOO in your list???
The list is actually from the Boglehead community. The idea is that if you're going to invest in the U.S. you probably want to include more than just the largest 500 companies.
This is such an insighful episode.
That's just great to hear!
ARK Artificial Intelligence & Robotics UCITS ETF USD Accumulating
We've covered ARK's ETFs quite a bit. Here's our last piece on ARK's performance: ruclips.net/video/QCGW4HOKqq8/видео.html
2:30: Only 5 percent of active managers beat the index!
We always throw this stat around - 90 to 95% is typically cited. It's bad either way. When asking AI, "According to most investment research, the statement that "only 5% of active managers can beat an index" is generally considered accurate, with studies showing that a very small percentage of actively managed funds consistently outperform their respective market indexes, often cited as being around 5% or less, making it extremely difficult for most active managers to beat the market consistently."
@@Nanalyze I trust your channel because you're obviously not promoting funds that generate a commission or unnecessary expenses. All of our retirement funds are no-expense, or exceptionally low expense index equity funds.
@@CruiseDude1 You are taking the right approach. The number one predictor of a fund's ability to outperform other funds is - intuitively - low fees.
@@Nanalyze FNILX the rest in FZIPX. Last year we booked a cruise on Royal Caribbean where shareholders of 100 shares get onboard credit. I felt like a moron buying 100 shares just to get wifi covered, and lo and behold the stock went from $100 to $258 a share. God watches over babies and fools. Good night.
Asts catching strays smh
That company has more rabid Kool-Aid drinking apes posting emojis than any other name we cover by far. And the ASTS "community" has nobody to thank but themselves because they encourage people to attack anyone who doesn't join the circle jerk of constant praise they shower on a firm that has missed its revenue targets by a country mile and (checks notes) STILL doesn't have meaningful revenues. Joe P.
ETF investing feels like it’s full of traps! 😅 Low fees are the only thing I trust anymore. How do you guys pick the best ones?
You said it. Low fees.
VTI or VT is all you need. Set it and forget it.
Set it and forget it is right! VT gives you some international exposure too.
There is lack of good info for investments for Europeans in utube like this channel.
Yes, we have half our audience ex-USA so we try to cater to that as much as possible when able. Problem is that 50% comes from all over and they all have very unique rules and tax situations.
Thank you.
You're most welcome!