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10d06/30

State-managed equity funds and political risks

I'm actually a fan of ETF's and government equity funds such as. B. the Swedish pension fund. Now that Germany wants to put an admittedly small part of the pension into a fund, I asked myself what kind of dependency we will have on the USA in the future, since Trump has already shown where the journey could go with his “Big Beautiful Bill”. What actually prevents the USA from, e.g. B. threaten Sweden tomorrow in a hypothetical trade dispute,

Socialunclassifiedgermany · usa · europe
10d06/30

Struggling to invest monthly into World ETF at all-time high+ geopolitical risk… am I overthinking this?

Basically what the title says. I’ve been investing monthly into a World ETF, but right now it’s at all-time highs and with everything going on in the Middle East, I find it hard to keep putting money in. I know you’re not supposed to time the market, but psychologically it feels wrong to buy at these levels when a drop feels more than plausible. Hence, I ended up pausing my investments for the last 2 months because of this. Am I just falling into a classic bias here? Or is it somewhat reasonable

Socialunclassifiedeurope · middle-east
10d06/30

5k euro start

Hey, there. I'm a beginner to investing, 21, I know a bit about it but not as much. I'm very fortunate that my parents are willing to lend me cash at my own expense and learning. My wallet for investing is set to be 5000 euro. I am Lithuanian and therefore I need your help for a guide. I've searched quite a bit and noticed that people prefer global ETFs over a stock-picking strategy but as a man that can afford to "play around" with that money, what would be the go-to strategy? (Note: my father

Socialunclassifiedeurope
10d06/30

Sulaiman Ahmed predicting a stock market crash worse than 2008. Should covered ETF investors be worried?

https://www.youtube.com/live/rWN53Qu1Kq4?si=pvy0cV4OqIJlcPRy At the 34 minute mark. This was on his podcast with Larry Johnson. Guys, Im gonna be honest, all this talk of a crash is giving me severe anxiety. I have not really experienced a crash unless you count the 2020 market crash. I am mainly invested in covered call ETFs such as QDAY, BANK, PAYG. Like many others I am constantly hearing about incoming market crash, AI Bubble popping and its starting to get me worried like oh wait I dont eve

Socialunclassifiedusa
11d06/30

Friends are convinced they can beat the S&P. Is it really that easy?

I have a few friends who over the last 6 months or so have gotten bigger into investing. They don’t invest in ETFs and build their portfolio out with individual stocks. I know that analysts do this and often can beat the market but I am hesitant to follow some of their investments. Quite honestly I think they are going to get burned. One of them is literally putting the company that owns GTA 6 into his Roth. He bought like 5 shares.. the day after preorders were available. I do not work in finan

Socialunclassifiedusa
11d06/29

ELI5: Why would an ETF like VOO or SPY outperform the S&P500, if even for a single day?

I get the difference between indexes and ETFs, and understand things like small tracking errors, fees, tax implications of dividends, etc... But as of right now 11am EST on June 29, VOO and SPY are up a bit over 1% while the S&P500 index is tracking at about 0.60%. This isn't just a calculation quirk due to dividends being paid. EDIT: I don't think I can attach pictures, but as of 11:32am, SPX is up 0.74%, VOO is up 1.19%. submitted by /u/Boollish [link] [comments]

Socialunclassifiedusa
11d06/29

AI is not a sector it’s a capital rotation ladder from chips to apps (with ETFs for every layer)

I don’t really see AI as a single sector. To me, it’s more like a supply chain where money slowly rotates down the stack. It usually starts with compute, basically chips. That’s NVIDIA, AMD, Broadcom, Micron, names like that. This is the stage where sentiment is strongest and the market is mostly pricing in expectations. The ETFs here are usually SMH or SOXX. This is basically the first wave of the AI trade. Then the money tends to move into data centers. Stuff like SMCI, Dell, Equinix. At this

Socialunclassifiedusa
11d06/29

Credible EU charities/nonprofits?

This may not be 100% personal finance related, but the same way I do monthly ETF and retirement account investments, I'd like to regularly donate money to a good cause. I'd like this thread to be a list of credible EU charity or non-profit orgs that accept donations, and to perhaps inspire people here. What are some credible, transparent, heavily audited EU-based nonprofits that focus on issues such as environment, education, domestic abuse, healthcare (unusual diagnoses not covered by health in

Socialunclassifiedeurope
12d06/29

MY FIRE NUMBER 45M - invested in ETFs and individual stocks

I have been thinking about this over the past few days and for me its the number I need to be able to live comfortably and have optionalities. Nothing extravagant or over the top. I have a young family,I want to not be stressed about money and be able to provide everything they need and want in life as regular kids ( e.g. no ponies for them) My FIRE number is £1.5M at a 5% withdrew rate. I have around 300k in individual stocks and etfs in ISA stock & shares account. The way I am starting to look

Socialunclassifiedsocial-signal
12d06/28

Looking for ideas on an extra long-term investment account for our kids

My wife and I have two kids (ages 6 and 3). We contribute enough to both of their RESPs each year to receive the full CESG grant. We’re now thinking about saving some additional money for each of them beyond the RESP over the next 15–20 years. Most of our own investments are in TD e-Series following the Canadian Couch Potato model, and the RESPs are invested the same way. We’re considering either: Wealthsimple + XEQT with automatic recurring purchases. TD + TEQT (commission-free), although I’d h

Socialunclassifiedsocial-signal
12d06/28

Is it better to go 100% into ETFs or mix a rental property with monthly DCA?

I need some advice. I am 36 years old, a tax resident of Serbia (non-EU), and I have a 20–25 year investment horizon (with the possibility of Serbia joining the EU by then). I am investing solely for my own retirement, as I won't have any heirs. ​On top of my initial €100,000 capital, I can contribute an additional €150 per month from my salary to start (salaries in Serbia are relatively low), with the potential to increase this monthly amount in the future as things fall into place. ​This leave

Socialunclassifiedeurope · india
13d06/28war-conflict · 1/5

First long-term ETF portfolio

Hi everyone, I'm from Italy and I'm about to start investing for the long term. My current situation: - 28 years old - Stable full-time job as a software developer/engineer - Around €68k net worth, mostly in cash and fixed-rate savings products I keep most of my cash because I may buy a car and house in the next few years, and I'm still undecided about buying a house since I'm not sure I want to stay in Italy long term. For my long-term investments, I'm considering: - Initial lump sum: €2,400 -

Socialunclassifiedeurope
13d06/27

Is $DRAM the greatest ETF ever created objectively?

I think $DRAM has a legitimate case for being one of the most groundbreaking ETFs ever launched. I know it’s not guaranteed to outperform, but because it solved a problem investors couldn’t solve before. If you wanted AI memory exposure, your options were: Buy Micron and hope you picked the winner. Buy SMH/SOXX where memory is only a small allocation. Buy a South Korea ETF just to own SK Hynix and Samsung alongside dozens of unrelated companies. DRAM was the first ETF to offer targeted exposure

Socialunclassifiedkorea
13d06/27war-conflict · 2/5

Just moved my pensions from previous employers to trading212 SIPP

I'm currently investing in index funds in my personal ISA but now ive moved a large lump sum into my SIPP im thinking I want a slightlly higher risk tolerance to compound over the long term given I can't access it directly The ETF's are I have shortlisted for pension is: VFEG - Vanguard Emerging Markets EQGB - Nasdaq 100 NATP - Future of Defence RENG - Clean Energy JEDG - Space Innovators RBTX - Automation & Robotics Based on this if you had to give a opinion on the following: A) This is a wise

Socialunclassifiedusa
15d06/25

HKEX pushes deeper into index business as AI reshapes Hong Kong market

Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (HKEX) is expanding into the index business with plans to launch more proprietary benchmarks and related investment products, as traditional market gauges have lagged regional peers during the artificial intelligence-driven technology rally. The operator of Hong Kong’s stock exchange will debut the first exchange-traded fund (ETF) tracking its HKEX Tech 100 Index on Friday. The index, launched on December 9, tracks the 100 largest technology companies listed in..

unclassifiedchina · asia
15d06/25war-conflict · 1/5

Lost 70% on XRP. What would you do?

I’m a 25-year-old male software engineer. Most of my investments are in ETFs and stocks, but I wanted to try crypto with a portion of my portfolio. Unfortunately, I bought XRP close to the top and I’m currently down about 70% (~$6,000 loss). I’m trying to be rational about it and not let emotions decide for me. The remaining money isn’t life-changing, but it’s still a significant amount. If you were in my position, would you: Hold and wait for the next crypto cycle? Sell the remaining position a

Socialunclassifiedusa
15d06/25

Investing vs Buying a Nice Car? or Try to Do Both? I am Young, Worth It ?

Hey everyone, I’m in my 20s, currently investing $1,000/month into VT ETF, and working on growing my income with side gigs. Now I’m stuck between: continuing to invest all extra money, or buying a nice car I know the long-term value of investing early, but I also feel like this is the age to actually enjoy things a bit. For those who’ve been here: Did you go for the car, worth it or regret it? Or did you prioritize investing, happy you did? Anyone manage to balance both? Would love to hear real

Socialunclassifiedsocial-signal
15d06/25

Money market fund vs Blue chips vs all-world ETF

Goal is waiting for a good entry after yet another crash. So as far as I see it, my options are: Money fund for around 3% returns (Euro based one, I know the Dollar would be at 4%) Buy blue chip stocks (insurances, consumer goods, real estate), either directly for dividends or as CSPs for Theta All world ETF As far as I see it, the money fund is the preferable option if you have no idea what the next market crash might look like. China takes Taiwan, AI bubble, unexpected economy numbers, whateve

Socialunclassifiedeurope · china · taiwan
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