DGI For The DIY - Printable Version +- Dividend Growth Forum (http://DividendGrowthForum.com) +-- Forum: Dividend Growth Investing (http://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=15) +--- Forum: My Portfolio (http://DividendGrowthForum.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=14) +--- Thread: DGI For The DIY (/showthread.php?tid=260) |
RE: DGI For The DIY - fenders53 - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 09:21 AM)EricL Wrote:And you should respect that fear because at some point it will happen. It's good they will sell a few shares off. They need to enjoy some of your inheritance while they have their health.(04-13-2021, 09:05 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Hi Eric, On a side note I tell my daughter I am leaving her a sizeable portfolio. What year she can legally access it depend a lot on how she manages her personal finances. I will make good on that threat. I tell her the "Cat Foundation" is always looking for donations if she doesn't heed my warnings lol. Now I need to find an actual Cat charity and will them $1K so I don't wreck a good 20 year joke. She isn't all that fond of cats lol. RE: DGI For The DIY - ken-do-nim - 04-13-2021 Granted I have never built a retirement portfolio, but my understanding is that 5% can still be allocated to growth. I think there is a huge difference between ARKW and gambling in Vegas, but there has to be an acceptable ETF that grows nicely. VGT perhaps? (Vanguard Information Technology) RE: DGI For The DIY - EricL - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 10:14 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Granted I have never built a retirement portfolio, but my understanding is that 5% can still be allocated to growth. I think there is a huge difference between ARKW and gambling in Vegas, but there has to be an acceptable ETF that grows nicely. VGT perhaps? (Vanguard Information Technology) XLK and XLV are the two funds I included to add a growth component to the portfolio. They've both produced better than double-digit annual returns over the last decade. XLK top holdings: AAPL, MSFT, V, NVDA, MA, PYPL, INTC, ADBE, CRM, AVGO I own six of the ten personally, and am comfortable with this list for my parents. XLV top holdings: JNJ, UNH, ABT, ABBV, PFE, MRK, TMO, LLY, MDT, DHR I own five of the ten, and again am quite comfortable with the list. With a dad that is more worried about capital preservation than capital gains, I'm not interested in any more speculation than this. RE: DGI For The DIY - EricL - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 09:23 AM)fenders53 Wrote: I assume your parents are just a little older than I am. I am trying to think how this looks in two years. I like almost all the names you've chosen. I guess the thoughts that come to mind after a quick look are these. 1. I have redundancy because I am buying the individual stocks for a bit of an income boost, but I'm not confident enough in XOM and T to put it all solely in them for the sector. 2. MMM still yields 3%, and I see it as a safe yield. 3. I'm guessing this would be bought out over the course of 6-12 months. I don't think they'd be comfortable doing it in one fell swoop. 4. I'm thinking they'll keep $50k in cash, with this $100k going into brokerage that will be invested over several months. 5. I don't think we will drip or reinvest dividends in anything. Just let them pool over time for withdrawal. I want to keep accounting as simple as possible for tax purposes since this would be a taxable account. RE: DGI For The DIY - fenders53 - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 10:30 AM)EricL Wrote:I like this plan. I'd let you manage my money and I consider that a high compliment. I am glad you are averaging in. Doesn't even matter if it turns out to be wrong. It's appropriate risk management for this portfolio, at this time in market history.(04-13-2021, 09:23 AM)fenders53 Wrote: I assume your parents are just a little older than I am. I am trying to think how this looks in two years. I like almost all the names you've chosen. I guess the thoughts that come to mind after a quick look are these. RE: DGI For The DIY - fenders53 - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 10:14 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Granted I have never built a retirement portfolio, but my understanding is that 5% can still be allocated to growth. I think there is a huge difference between ARKW and gambling in Vegas, but there has to be an acceptable ETF that grows nicely. VGT perhaps? (Vanguard Information Technology)The only flaw in your ARKW advice is it's not appropriate for this "customer". Investing 5% in insanely overvalued companies by most any measure is better left for somebody midway in the accrual stage. VGT is way down on the risk scale. I have owned it. IN any event Eric knows how to put a modest amount of growth into this port. RE: DGI For The DIY - ken-do-nim - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 10:25 AM)EricL Wrote:(04-13-2021, 10:14 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Granted I have never built a retirement portfolio, but my understanding is that 5% can still be allocated to growth. I think there is a huge difference between ARKW and gambling in Vegas, but there has to be an acceptable ETF that grows nicely. VGT perhaps? (Vanguard Information Technology) I'm embarrassed that I completely missed seeing those two when I looked through the portfolio. It's funny how when you don't recognize something, sometimes you mentally discount it. Yes, those are great. Well done. RE: DGI For The DIY - fenders53 - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 11:15 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote:I am just making conversation here.(04-13-2021, 10:25 AM)EricL Wrote:(04-13-2021, 10:14 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Granted I have never built a retirement portfolio, but my understanding is that 5% can still be allocated to growth. I think there is a huge difference between ARKW and gambling in Vegas, but there has to be an acceptable ETF that grows nicely. VGT perhaps? (Vanguard Information Technology) It would take hours to look at a portfolio like this and give sound advice. He threw it out here for discussion over the course of days. I give plenty of portfolio advice to others. I try to be mindful what's appropriate for person who is putting their skin in the game. We are all different risk bands. On a scale Level #1 is a US treasury. A safe and balanced ETF is a #3. JNJ as in individual stock is a #4/5 still subject to a serious capital pullback in a bad market. AVGO/AAPL is #6/7. Triple leveraged and buying options is Level #10. ARKW is right up there based on their holdings. You seem comfortable with level 9/10 risk, at least when the bull is running. I enjoyed some early retirement years because I stayed invested at level 7 with real money and most of the time my level 9/10 blew up on me eventually. I may come off as very conservative but I am still invested at 5/6 risk level with just a bit of #8 thrown in. My mother is at level 1. She would stress losing any of her capital. Eric should honestly assess where his parents are. The overall port mix should not significantly exceed their risk tolerance. This is supposed to be easy at retirement age but bonds checked out of the game and it will likely be years before they make good sense. Averaging in makes sense because the ability to buy into some higher yields on a correction will take the sting out of some temporary capital loss. But sector ETFs are prone to dip 30% with very little reasoning, and stay there for a year or more. XLK is plenty of risk. The upper limit for this port. I think it will work out fine but we never know. RE: DGI For The DIY - ken-do-nim - 04-13-2021 Great point about the lack of bond alternatives. The problem with level 1 investing is that it is generally below the inflation rate, so it's actually in my opinion high risk - it is guaranteed to lose money. I'm honestly not sure what I'd be invested in now if I were retired. Probably a large amount in AT&T. It's a shame Disney no longer has a dividend. Oh, and btw I don't think all triple-leveraged funds have the same amount of risk. CURE for instance isn't very volatile compared to say NAIL. RE: DGI For The DIY - fenders53 - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 11:56 AM)ken-do-nim Wrote: Great point about the lack of bond alternatives. The problem with level 1 investing is that it is generally below the inflation rate, so it's actually in my opinion high risk - it is guaranteed to lose money.I do understand all 3X is not the same. I think you know I meant SOXL or TQQQ. You have some balance in the total port that I often fail to acknowledge. I am just averse to excessive leverage. If the average 80yr old loses 10% they run back to the safety of level #1 where they will never get their money back. That's a bad ending so just avoid it. At least they won't lose anymore capital is their thought. People bail from their 401K equities on every market crash in mass. There is nowhere to hide and slowly get it back now. I am 18 months from the time I can retire for real. You can watch it play out in real-time lol. Maybe I'll keep selling doors at HD for a few more years and pay my taxes. Or maybe I won't if the market runs another 20%? I better go by some SOXL on the next dip lol. RE: DGI For The DIY - ChadR - 04-13-2021 (04-13-2021, 09:48 AM)fenders53 Wrote: [quote pid='25240' dateline='1618323714'] [/quote] On a side note I tell my daughter I am leaving her a sizeable portfolio. What year she can legally access it depend a lot on how she manages her personal finances. I will make good on that threat. I tell her the "Cat Foundation" is always looking for donations if she doesn't heed my warnings lol. Now I need to find an actual Cat charity and will them $1K so I don't wreck a good 20 year joke. She isn't all that fond of cats lol. [/quote] Stardust Kitten Club is a cat charity that you can give to so you don't have to wreck the good joke. RE: DGI For The DIY - ken-do-nim - 04-13-2021 My daughter is 15 and I can't get her to care to learn about finances yet either. |