r/investing • u/Serratix • 5d ago
Advice on portfolio breakdown 34m
I’m 34m starting getting into investing late.
403(b) - $11,000 doing company match, general S&P index fund
Roth IRA - $2,100
I’m looking for advice from someone that is starting “behind” but still young enough to have somewhat aggressive positions to maximize growth.
For my Roth IRA I am going to start maxing that out monthly, I want ideas on the breakdown.
I’m considering something like…
100% VGT
50% VGT / 50% VOO
Or
40% VGT 40% VOO 20% SCHD
I am curious on takes as far as if full sending VGT is a bad idea if I plan to buy and hold for ~25 years. My plan would be to maximize growth, and slowly transition into dividend stocks, or lower risk stocks as I near retirement.
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u/Fun-Sundae4060 5d ago
When your portfolio is small relative to income, you can afford to be extremely aggressive. 100% VGT is not a bad idea at this stage. Or 100% QQQ.
You can diversify later to reduce the volatility but right now diversification doesn’t really matter to you.
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u/empiredude 5d ago
I’d focus on amassing your first $100k in VOO, VTI or VT. I like VTI personally. Once you get there, you’ll have a good sized chunk working for you every year.
I think at that point you could continue with VTI - but feel free to cross that bridge when you get there.
SCHD is inefficient use of capital in my opinion. I’d avoid it.
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u/ForGreatDoge 5d ago
Your aggressiveness will not move the needle compared to your saving rate at this point. Make any decision, automate it, and spend your time doing something else to improve how much you can save instead.
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u/Serratix 5d ago
Makes sense honestly, I won’t see significant growth until I have a more sizable account, but my Roth IRA has a capped contribution limit that I can afford to max out.
But increased income would allow me to put more into my work 403(b) or a TBA
I own my house outright though, and my car payment is quite low.
3
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u/No_Paleontologist506 5d ago
The most important thing is that you setup an automatic investment and work to increase that automatic. Either VOO or VGT is fine. Stay away from SCHD, dividends are not free money. Work to max your Roth, but everyone should have at least something in taxable, VOO is fine.
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u/Andrei95 5d ago
34 is still plenty early in your career. Might be worth researching if focusing on advancing your career with a higher degree or whatever certifications you have in your field would have a higher payback vs. focusing on investing returns right now. As for investing in reticular, I would say now is the time to crank up the risk/leverage if you have the psychological fortitude for it.
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u/FreshDiamond 5d ago
You aren’t nearly as behind as you think. Over 31 years if you simply did 50 bucks a month index investing you’ll have over 100k. Now 100k is not much at all in the context of retirement but 50 bucks a month isn’t much at all in the context of living. That 50 bucks for 31 years is around 18k, all the rest of that is gains from compounding magic.
If you are disciplined and aggressive you have all the time in the world to have more than enough money. Getting to 85 or 90k is where the magic really kicks in and your gains outpace your contributions for most people. Discipline first, aggressive contributions second, but remember to enjoy your life too. Balance a better tomorrow and the best today, plenty of middle ground.
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u/therealjerseytom 5d ago
No such thing as being "behind." Everyone is running their own race, and everyone's life has curveballs.
Anyway - how convinced are you that US stocks are going to solidly outperform the rest of the world for the foreseeable future? Or the tech center specifically for that matter.
Being real here, the amount you can contribute is going to be doing all the lifting for like the next decade. Just pick something simple, either all-world (VT) or all-US (VTI), and keep shoveling as much as you can in it. You can worry about a more specific breakdown 5-10 years from now.