My strategy combines ETFs for dividends and growth, including JEPI, DIVO, QYLD, SCHD, and JEPQ. Last year, my dividends totaled $102K. but not sure how to mitigate risk thus far for this year.
I agree with you. As an early investor in NVDA, AVGO, ANSS, and LRCX, my financial advisor's advice was incredibly helpful. Over the past 7 years, she has helped me find stocks that did 10x multiple times. With her help, I've grown my portfolio to over a million dollars.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look her up.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
Yieldmax has grown my portfolio over 50% with these dividends. I have one for each week. I do have a stop loss on all of them though but ya have made me lots of $'s but I don't use it as income , thanks for the vid
The biggest improvement with ymax has been prior they used to announce their distribution a week prior, then a whole bunch of people would buy in and they'd be force to pay out much more than they made. Now with smaller payments closer to their declaration date they're not getting wrecked each payment
@ottohumpmachine8958 yes, but they used have declaration date a week ahead of the ex date. Now it's 1 day prior. So people used to see the big monthly dividend and swarm in to capture the dividend. They'd sell millions of extra shares some months. All extra payments they'd have to take out of the nav to make. That's why there used to be a really giant dip on ex day and now it's marginal
Actually, I think YMAX could be an enhancement to a retirement account. If you intend to withdraw all of the weekly distributions then that’s a bad plan … but if you only withdraw 10-15% and reinvest the rest you can do this very comfortably. My monthly distributions on YMAX now averages about $12,000 per month. Still reinvesting all distributions at this point. In about 5 years the monthly distribution will be about $50,000 per month. Taking $10,000 per month (or less) it would make for a VERY comfortable retirement when this is added to my pension and Social Security.
I am currently doing just that with this fund. It makes up 10% of my portfolio. I take 50% of all my distributions for my income and reinvest in more conservative etfs. So far the nav depletion has been acceptable.
Great job so far but you seem to be assuming steady dividend payments in the future. Declining NAV means declining dividend payments (or a rising yield, which won't be the case). So you may want to at least plan for that.
The best way to utilize these is to buy in half of the shares you want to hold then wait until you have paid off your capital before you start pocketing the funds. That way you have free money and you've paid off your investment. As long as you hold those shares, you will be paid the dividend for that distribution. These are less about what the value of your investment is and more about the number of shares you hold to create a steady paycheck.
I've just begun learning about value investing, and I've found that many good stocks are undervalued despite their intrinsic value. If you had $200,000 to create a strong investment portfolio, which stocks would you choose for better returns?
I agree with you. As an early investor in NVDA, AVGO, ANSS, and LRCX, my financial advisor's advice was incredibly helpful. Over the past 7 years, she has helped me find stocks that did 10x multiple times. With her help, I've grown my portfolio to over a million dollars.
I just looked up her website on google and I would say she really has an impressive background in investing. I have sent her an email hope she gets back to me soon. Thanks
I have gotten NAV appreciation with NVDY plus around 58% yield , AMZY has done well also, I see CONY going back up again eventually. I try to put half the dividends back into my yieldmax funds and the rest goes into more stable things like SCHD, KO, IBM , even QYLD.
@@mrjsanchez1 TBH I used to talk all kinds of smack about the YieldMax funds, but then it occurred to me to do this same thing - put half of the dividends back into the fund and then put the other half into something more stable that I already have like SCHD, SPYI, IDVO, PFFA, etc. So yesterday when I saw CONY take that 10% dip, I picked up a couple hundred shares. How it's gonna do? IDK but if you run the risk of losing capital in a fund that has a 💩 dividend yield ALSO, then at least you're getting SOME return out of it regardless. Besides, it's only a couple hundred shares so it's not a HUGE chunk of my portfolio anyways. If I can have enough there where it's paying out the same amount that I'm already depositing into the account on my own, then for however long it lasts I'm effectively halving the amount of time I need to put in to growing my portfolio. Who cares if I lose out on my initial investment of a couple thousand, if the returns I get from dividends are more than the buy-in was?
question: In worst case, let's say the share prices goes to $5 eventually, do the dividend per share stays the same? If the dividend goes down then it's the issue. But let's say I have set the option to reinvest automatically, and if the dividend stays same, wouldn't it buy more shares? and hence the more dividend eventually? Tell me bluntly if I'm day-dreaming!
I'm a reverse split situation, your shares get cut in half, your average cost price doubles and your dividend gets cut in half. Go look at TSLY as the example. I lost half my shares and over half the dividend. I am down $70 K on a $100 K investment. YieldMax is a capital destruction model @@jigneshnakrani9585
@ . I have some invested in TSLY, which had gone down quite a bit, the dividends for the most part stayed, high so I was able to buy more shares, CONY was a similar story, it was paying big dividends even when it went down to around 11.50 a share it is back above 15.00 again, TSLY has been going back up again also. I have found how the underlying stock performs strongly affects the yieldmax etf’s Another thing to consider is yieldmax did do a reverse split on TSLY last year when it went down to around 9,00 a share due to Tesla’s stock cratering at one point.
If we are to survive in this economic crisis we need assistance right away. The ETF and stock markets are still quite volatile, just like the property market. I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $300k stock portfolio
Many people are still getting fantastic returns on their investments during this time. Simply maintain a strong sense of reality or ask for professional assistance.
Due to my demanding job, I lack the time to thoroughly assess my investments and analyze individual stocks. Consequently, for the past seven years, I have enlisted the services of a fiduciary who actively manages my portfolio to adapt to the current market conditions. This strategy has allowed me to navigate the financial landscape successfully, making informed decisions on when to buy and sell. Perhaps you should consider a similar approach.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
Finding financial advisors like Melissa Terri Swayne who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
Thanks for your coverage on these funds I’m have been an investor from the beginning and have extensive experience with these funds…these funds are not for everyone they should be held by traders only because of their volatility…but when done correctly extremely profitable…handle this package with care 😂😂😂
I do agree with your YMAX ETF recommendation. Keep in mind that the funds pay according to volatility, not whether there is a bull or a bear market. Stocks go up even in a bear market--it isn't just straight down.
IMHO, you are being overly cautious. If you buy these funds in a dip it’s quite easy to get outsized returns. Same as any other high dividend stock. Don’t drip, deliberately buy. If you would hold the underlying stock, Apple, Amazon, Tesla, MSTR, etc, you should feel safe holding the corresponding Yeildmax fund
Love this, this exactly what i do, i bought at a good price and dca 1 dollar every day into it. It has made me 30% returns JUST in dividends already not including any potential capital growth
I have 30% allocated to Yieldmax. The monthly premiums vary Zero erosion of capital. 45.25% ytd cumulative return 1 year cumulative 60% at the high The portfolio managers are on UA-cam all the time. This is meant for people who understand technicals and stochastics.. Its for sophisticated investors who understand options
I sometimes use my ETFs to buy dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same place. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
Hearing from an experienced investor who has survived the crisis and prospered is always comforting. It could be worrisome when your portfolio goes from green to red, but if you have invested in strong firms, you should just keep growing them and stick to your goal.
I’m a contractor, and my job doesn’t permit me the time to properly analyze my holdings/evaluate stocks myself, so I’ve had a fiduciary actively restructuring my portfolio for the past 7 years now to match the present market condition and that’s how I’ve been able to stay afloat, knowing when to buy and sell…
A lot of news have been going on about a rally after the election, urging investors to watch out for stocks that would be experiencing significant growth. Any idea which stocks to put on my watchlist? I just sold my home in the Boca Grande area and I’m looking to remunerate a lump sum into the stock market for regular income, but not sure of the right picks.
excellent share. curiously inputted Karen Lynne Chess on the web, spotted her consulting page and was able to schedule a call session, no sweat. Ive seen commentaries about advisors but not one looks this phenomenal
What are you talking about? The fund managers are LITERALLY listed at the bottom of the screen you showed. Zega Financial and Tidal Investments. And Forside distributes the funds on pay days.
I've heard that index funds and ETFs provide diversified stock market exposure while spreading risk. I have over $800K in savings; What's the most effective strategy to allocate funds in my portfolio and generate profits?
Yes, there are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy situation, but such execution is usually carried out by an investment specialist
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financial future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?
I'm careful about giving specific recommendations since everyone's situation is different, but I've worked with Stacy Lynn Staples for years and highly recommend her. Look her up online to see if she's a good fit for you.
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
4:58 Actually, they DO hold shares of their own bitcoin fund: CONY. It's right below the block you highlighted. It's not OPTIONS on bitcoin, which is the YBIT ETF you mentioned, but it's still bitcoin. Is it weird they're not using their own fund for this? Yes, but not to the point where I wouldn't trust it. For individuals, we're CONSTANTLY told to diversify for safety, and that's smart. But why say you want more diversity from the company, then have a problem when they diversify so much that they spread the risk tolerance to other companies as well? Isn't that like saying, "JUUUUUST in case we're wrong, we're not gonna put ALL our eggs in one basket?"
I have over $200k ready to be invested; however, I am having trouble trying to find out what investments would be best during this present economy. Heard index funds and ETFs provide diversified stock market exposure while spreading risk. How true?
A lot of folks downplay the role of advisors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember a couple of summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to soar my business; hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation from $450k to nearly $2.7M as of today.
I've shuffled through a few professionals in the past but settled with Sophia Verdekal O'neal. You'd most likely find her basic info on the internet. She's well-established with over two decades of experience.
I've shuffled through a few advisors in the past but settled with Sophia Verdekal O'neal. She has a great deal of expertise and her qualifications speak for themselves. You'd most likely find her basic info on the internet. She's well established.
Gold, BTC, quality global stocks, yes, however not property, if the U.S. dollar gets hyperinflation everything becomes worthless in that country, only global assets survive. Yes assets will go up against the U.S. dollar, however the U.S. dollar would become worthless compared to other currencies or global assets. As for property in the U.S, property is a national fiat asset, it would go up in value against the U.S. dollar, however not in other currencies or global assets. .. Anyone feeling the impact of these economic shifts should consider Crypto long-term trading strategies to protect their assets. My advice to anyone feeling the heat in this inflation, just trade long term more than ever, I have made over 520k from day trading with Aldona Šabanienė in few weeks, this is one of the best medium to backup your assets incase it goes bearish..
So impressed knowing how much people talk good about Aldona Sabaniene daily signals .. she also helped me and my friends to trade profitably with her signals.
love Yieldmax funds they are 50% of my portfolio and brings in on avg of $11000 a month and the other 50% are my older funds such as QYLD PDI GOF CRF . My yieldmax funds since inception I Have NVDY 3000 shares MSTY 3000 shares with both I bought at $20 TSLY 3000 shares I bought at $14.65 Presplit which I sold off 3 months ago to buy YMAG I now own 9000 shares of and I bought 2000 shares of CRSH because TSLA will come back to earth and will swing trade it and collect distributions. NO REGRETS
Actually, despite their significant variability, every since YieldMax ETF has realized a resistant point beyond which it will not decrease beyond, except for TRES which was eliminated. So, despite the trending down phenomenon, there is a point in which they are bounce up, thus far to date.
I lost so much with TSLY and QQQY. The nav erosion is so bad with drip. I wish I could turn back time. Only thing green is NVDY for now. JEPI/JEPQ/SPYI has been solid for me so far. Or just vanguard it and VTSAX/VMFXX. Total market or money market. Don't chase the gains and dump it soon. fml.
Ever since the Weekly payments Defiance reduced their Daily Goals from 0.25% to 0.15%. Hence the low Yields the last few weeks, but hopefully that means minimal Erosion. Combined with more, smaller payments, and the dips aren't painful anymore.
Yieldmax is a dividend trap. You cant count on their dividend for gaining and make income for retirement. You will lose more on spending money in their etf than benefit from their dividend. I've lost all my high yield cash interested pay out and their dividend when i bought their stock. the more you put money in their share, the more their share going down.
@monsterenergyaxe A couple days ago I caved and switched from QQQY to RDTE. I now understand Total Returns, and not only does Roundhill have better Total Returns than Defiance, RDTE has the highest Total Return and Dividend Yield both with Roundhill. Hopefully it stays that way, I'm trying to live off them.
Great video, Alan, the coverage is appreciated. I personally use funds like YMAX (love the weekly change) and MSTY as boosters. Defiance and YM provide the punch while the anchors are more conservative, but all still yield over 13% Your coverage is great - thanks.
Oh, cool. I know Cornerstone, Pimco, and Guggenheim have Drip Discounts, and I know one guy who sells almost all the shares just before the Rights Offering, and then after the price drop he just buys in again. Alas, I use Robinhood, no CEFs for me. Robinhood has fantastic Margin Rates and low Margin Maintenance, though, that makes up for it.
Yieldmax has too many junk funds so YMAG (the magnificent seven) is a better recommendation than YMAX. I mean, who in their right mind would want an income fund that includes Moderna?
1) Jay has a decades-long career in options he sort of wrote the "Bible" on options, and from the beginning he has been transparent in his interviews. 2) I invest a lot in the funds, take part distributions for expenses, and reinvest the rest. You have to understand ***each*** fund and have a different strategy for each fund. The math will tell you how to trade them, not opinion.
Recently got into MSTY and CONY since they are in a dip. I will look to add more after the election. My portfolio as a whole is very safe and conservative so I felt comfortable adding a couple of high risk positions.
Excellent post, & i can see using a smaller portion of your portfolio in something like MSTY that pays quite a bit per share to push it's earnings into a more stable dividend ETF like SCHD, but the timing is very bad to do so right now.
Easy to budget....just use the average over time or use the smaller amount....anything over budget is just extra spending money.YMAX, ULTY and OARK are the ones I hold...I personally would not hold the 'single stock' ones.
Right now, i'm attempting to grow my yield max, so the dividends grow my stake and split the dividend payment between growing and feeding other more stable dividend payers. Use it to grow your stable holdings in the short term but continue feeding it as well, so it stays alive.
As of last month I was trading my self I lost almost everything, now it just makes no sense, i have to choose if I'm a trader or face my job so i chose my job, now I'm confused of what etfs to store my funds for long term, maybe a little aggressive ones
Hey buddy! Don't be seduced by large dividends. Concentrate on total return. There is no sense in collecting large dividends if your overall investment is going down however I’d say SPYI, JEPQ, QQI and IWMI. But do your research. Personally I put down 1.3m$ on few ETFs, still diversifying. Earning season is around the corner, It was this time last year I made a huge break through with 200k. Handed it to a firm here in Texas, I get weekly pay out which I put back on long term ETF's. IWM will probably crush it this quarter
Helpful analysis. Staying far away from these funds. Yield traps for sure. Hard pass on anything with eroding NAV, especially in a year when the market is up bigly.
Covered Call strategies is hardly a yield trap. Understanding that will go a long way for your. Some of the single stock tickers with high yields are absolutely yield traps.
@ if the NAV is eroding, I be unloading. 🙅🏻♂️ You get almost all the downside with substantially capped upside (in markets that are up 7.5 out of 10 years). Plus massive tax drag, even in negative years. Plus absurdly high fees that you pay whether the fund performs well or not. Nah man, not for me. Some options strategies make sense in some cases, but none of these YieldMax funds are smart long term investments.
@CalmerThanYouAre1 True indeed.. nothing long term. Just income vehicles for me. I treat them like my rental property and TBH, these are a little better... 😂🤣😂
NAV is way up for my MSTY shares. With these distributions I’m only a few months away from playing with the house’s money. I like free money that keeps printing free money. 🎉
@trippvanmunch since the inception of MSTY, it has returned 156% while MSTR, the underlying holding, has returned 222%. Not only did you underperform, you paid lots of taxes and high fees to do so. And somehow you think you made a smart move. 🤦🏻♂️ You could have taken your original investment off the and been playing with the house’s money long ago if you’d just bought MSTR instead. You’ve essentially underperformed the underlying holding by 30-40% net of taxes and fees while holding the majority of the downside risk anyway and think you’re taking a victory lap. Wake up dude! Before you start adding zeroes to the end of the amount of wealth you’re sacrificing.
Bought 700 shares of Nvdy at 21.78 in January…. I’m averaging 790 a month right in divys.. all I hear is “nav erosion” it’s an extremely volatile ETF\stock so yeah it will go up and down. When it drops below 25 buy it. I’m 52 and building up for retirement and would never use YM in retirement.
Even if the nav erodes, I honestly don't care at all. In this type of high paying investment it's just a bonus if the nav stays flat or increases. As long as you get your initial investment back through dividend payments, eventually, then every dividend payment after that is just free money.
Why not recommend it for roth ria? Since it rely pretty much on dividend and roth ira is tax free. It sounds a better option for roth ira than brokage account.
It's basically paying someone to trade for you if you don't know how, that's why there's no diversification. It's just funding an account. I like it and they're doing good, but I understand you should be wary of this company in case something goes south
Just as an experiment I invested a fraction of one percent of my portfolio into NVDY. A very small sum just to see what happens. It seems to have both positive price return as well as a big total return compared to the other YieldMax funds. But in all honesty I am scratching my head wondering what is the purpose of these ETF's? Even if you get a colossal dividend & that gets you to a point where you break even if the underlying stocks crash you're paying taxes on essentially getting your principal paid back to you. There is no long-term benefit to any of these really. Why purchase an income producing asset that suffers severe depreciation? What's the endgame here?
Very well done sir …your correct and to the point …it’s possible to just end up flat with no real returns…only experienced traders should be in these funds …only they know how to manage their volatility…
I have NVDY AMDY YMAG YMAX CONY APLY MSTY TSLY I don’t do the drip option. At least one in each group plus YMAX/YMAG are now weekly. I use the dividends to buy other things like crypto and growth stocks. Started with nothing. Up 37% on the year
Just got into NVDY and plan to get into AMDY end of the month. Just to boost my income and help snowball all my dividend stocks. Also in SPYT, and QYLD.
Great content, as always! A bit off-topic, but I wanted to ask: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). What's the best way to send them to Binance?
question: In worst case, let's say the share prices goes to $5 eventually, do the dividend per share stays the same? If the dividend goes down then it's the issue. But let's say I have set the option to reinvest automatically, and if the dividend stays same, wouldn't it buy more shares? and hence the more dividend eventually? Tell me bluntly if I'm day-dreaming!
The "extreme high yield / who cares NAV" ETFs from YieldMax and Defiance are: 1) Not all the same. MSTY and NVDY are success stories that should continue to be in the future. 2) Perfect to temporarily invest into in order to generate cash for a big purchase (vacation, car, etc) and then invest out of into DGR or tax-friendly high yield ETFs (SPYI, etc). 3) Perfect if in the final years of your life. They're like a reverse mortgage, such that you don't care if the NAV goes down over time because you're trying to leave a nice nest egg when you die, and not a massive one.
They're likely going to sell call spreads going into earnings or other important dates - that's when these funds get hit hard on their upside caps. Like when nVidia or Tesla has its earnings and they go up by 10%, all that upside gets lost. Thanks for the video!
Am I missing something? For example if I put $1,000 into Cony and the Nav erodes to the point where it is literally showing zero value why would this even matter? Wait it out and get paid in dividends until you regain your initial investment of $1,000. Every dividend after this is free money. I dont care if they do reverse split after reverse split. Who cares because although you may have half the shares each time they reverse split the dividend payment per shar doubles. They can reverse split until the end of the world and I wouldn't care. It has no effect on my dividend payments.
The 2008 crash is what spurred the creation of cryptocurrency. If a similar event were to happen today, selling options on crypto based companies like Coinbase would be a boon for investors holding FIAT / CONY.
I held a couple of these for over a year. My total ROI for their combined stock was barely 1%. Did I end up making a couple of dollars? Yes. Could I have made a lot more investing in better stocks? Absolutely. I can't advise people what to do with their money but my actual experience was that I can make more money investing in other stocks than Yieldmax products.
I had 1400 shares of tsly for a year and lost 1,000 after distributions. Not the worst experience in the world. I tested my same buys as NVDY and I would've been +7k
The S&P 500 finished down 20% in 2022. This means long term investors have a great starting point in 2023. Here are 4 very popular ETF’s: $VOO- S&P 500 fund $VTI- Total US stock market $QQQ- High growth, tech $SCHD- Growth + Dividends| I just tallied my dividends for the year;$167k Blessed and grateful, disciplined and focused.
My "boring" index funds just paid me over $6,000 in dividends last month. This is money that i can choose to spend without having to sell any of my shares. But for now i have it all set to reinvest to buy me even more index funds.
Anyone have recommendations for a reliable monthly investment? I hope to ultimately supplement my income from work with a monthly income from investments. I will still make long-term investments, but it would be wonderful to have a little additional money each month.
Until the Fed clamps down even further I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now with financial markets will be best you seek a fin-professional with fiduciary responsibilities who knows about mortgage-backed securities for proper guidance.
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
These yieldmax are good for income…. Don’t even try to deny it . Lots of people making more money monthly out of this than the dealing schd
My strategy combines ETFs for dividends and growth, including JEPI, DIVO, QYLD, SCHD, and JEPQ. Last year, my dividends totaled $102K. but not sure how to mitigate risk thus far for this year.
investors like you should be cautious of the bull run, its best you connect with a well-qualified adviser to meet your growth goals and avoid blunder.
I agree with you. As an early investor in NVDA, AVGO, ANSS, and LRCX, my financial advisor's advice was incredibly helpful. Over the past 7 years, she has helped me find stocks that did 10x multiple times. With her help, I've grown my portfolio to over a million dollars.
Well it seems like a lot of your interest is riding on your source, I could really get well accustomed to your viewpoint, get me involved.
There are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’’ for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive. She’s quite known in her field, look her up.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
Yieldmax has grown my portfolio over 50% with these dividends. I have one for each week. I do have a stop loss on all of them though but ya have made me lots of $'s but I don't use it as income , thanks for the vid
Yieldmax CEO is Jay Pestrichelli, of ZEGA Financial LLC
The biggest improvement with ymax has been prior they used to announce their distribution a week prior, then a whole bunch of people would buy in and they'd be force to pay out much more than they made. Now with smaller payments closer to their declaration date they're not getting wrecked each payment
But you have to own the shares on ex date to get the payment
@ottohumpmachine8958 yes, but they used have declaration date a week ahead of the ex date. Now it's 1 day prior. So people used to see the big monthly dividend and swarm in to capture the dividend. They'd sell millions of extra shares some months. All extra payments they'd have to take out of the nav to make. That's why there used to be a really giant dip on ex day and now it's marginal
@@delbomb3131 I agree. The new pay schedule discourages “distribution tourists”.
Actually, I think YMAX could be an enhancement to a retirement account. If you intend to withdraw all of the weekly distributions then that’s a bad plan … but if you only withdraw 10-15% and reinvest the rest you can do this very comfortably. My monthly distributions on YMAX now averages about $12,000 per month. Still reinvesting all distributions at this point. In about 5 years the monthly distribution will be about $50,000 per month. Taking $10,000 per month (or less) it would make for a VERY comfortable retirement when this is added to my pension and Social Security.
I am currently doing just that with this fund. It makes up 10% of my portfolio. I take 50% of all my distributions for my income and reinvest in more conservative etfs. So far the nav depletion has been acceptable.
12k a month? Awesome - good for you.
@ thank you!
Great job so far but you seem to be assuming steady dividend payments in the future. Declining NAV means declining dividend payments (or a rising yield, which won't be the case). So you may want to at least plan for that.
The best way to utilize these is to buy in half of the shares you want to hold then wait until you have paid off your capital before you start pocketing the funds. That way you have free money and you've paid off your investment.
As long as you hold those shares, you will be paid the dividend for that distribution. These are less about what the value of your investment is and more about the number of shares you hold to create a steady paycheck.
I've just begun learning about value investing, and I've found that many good stocks are undervalued despite their intrinsic value. If you had $200,000 to create a strong investment portfolio, which stocks would you choose for better returns?
The importance of mitigating risks might be why many investors are turning to advisors for guidance.
I agree with you. As an early investor in NVDA, AVGO, ANSS, and LRCX, my financial advisor's advice was incredibly helpful. Over the past 7 years, she has helped me find stocks that did 10x multiple times. With her help, I've grown my portfolio to over a million dollars.
Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
I just looked up her website on google and I would say she really has an impressive background in investing. I have sent her an email hope she gets back to me soon. Thanks
I have gotten NAV appreciation with NVDY plus around 58% yield , AMZY has done well also, I see CONY going back up again eventually. I try to put half the dividends back into my yieldmax funds and the rest goes into more stable things like SCHD, KO, IBM , even QYLD.
@@mrjsanchez1 TBH I used to talk all kinds of smack about the YieldMax funds, but then it occurred to me to do this same thing - put half of the dividends back into the fund and then put the other half into something more stable that I already have like SCHD, SPYI, IDVO, PFFA, etc. So yesterday when I saw CONY take that 10% dip, I picked up a couple hundred shares. How it's gonna do? IDK but if you run the risk of losing capital in a fund that has a 💩 dividend yield ALSO, then at least you're getting SOME return out of it regardless. Besides, it's only a couple hundred shares so it's not a HUGE chunk of my portfolio anyways. If I can have enough there where it's paying out the same amount that I'm already depositing into the account on my own, then for however long it lasts I'm effectively halving the amount of time I need to put in to growing my portfolio. Who cares if I lose out on my initial investment of a couple thousand, if the returns I get from dividends are more than the buy-in was?
Yeah I buy nvdy and Amzy and have done so well
question: In worst case, let's say the share prices goes to $5 eventually, do the dividend per share stays the same? If the dividend goes down then it's the issue. But let's say I have set the option to reinvest automatically, and if the dividend stays same, wouldn't it buy more shares? and hence the more dividend eventually? Tell me bluntly if I'm day-dreaming!
I'm a reverse split situation, your shares get cut in half, your average cost price doubles and your dividend gets cut in half. Go look at TSLY as the example. I lost half my shares and over half the dividend. I am down $70 K on a $100 K investment. YieldMax is a capital destruction model @@jigneshnakrani9585
@ . I have some invested in TSLY, which had gone down quite a bit, the dividends for the most part stayed, high so I was able to buy more shares, CONY was a similar story, it was paying big dividends even when it went down to around 11.50 a share it is back above 15.00 again, TSLY has been going back up again also. I have found how the underlying stock performs strongly affects the yieldmax etf’s Another thing to consider is yieldmax did do a reverse split on TSLY last year when it went down to around 9,00 a share due to Tesla’s stock cratering at one point.
If we are to survive in this economic crisis we need assistance right away. The ETF and stock markets are still quite volatile, just like the property market. I'm still at a crossroads deciding if to liquidate my $300k stock portfolio
Many people are still getting fantastic returns on their investments during this time. Simply maintain a strong sense of reality or ask for professional assistance.
Due to my demanding job, I lack the time to thoroughly assess my investments and analyze individual stocks. Consequently, for the past seven years, I have enlisted the services of a fiduciary who actively manages my portfolio to adapt to the current market conditions. This strategy has allowed me to navigate the financial landscape successfully, making informed decisions on when to buy and sell. Perhaps you should consider a similar approach.
this is definitely considerable! think you could suggest any professional/advisors i can get on the phone with? i'm in dire need of proper portfolio allocation
Finding financial advisors like Melissa Terri Swayne who can assist you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.
She appears to be well-educated and well-read. I ran a Google search on her name and came across her website… thank you for sharing.
I would use them as a turbo booster to buy safer stocks
Thanks for your coverage on these funds I’m have been an investor from the beginning and have extensive experience with these funds…these funds are not for everyone they should be held by traders only because of their volatility…but when done correctly extremely profitable…handle this package with care 😂😂😂
I do agree with your YMAX ETF recommendation. Keep in mind that the funds pay according to volatility, not whether there is a bull or a bear market. Stocks go up even in a bear market--it isn't just straight down.
IMHO, you are being overly cautious. If you buy these funds in a dip it’s quite easy to get outsized returns. Same as any other high dividend stock. Don’t drip, deliberately buy. If you would hold the underlying stock, Apple, Amazon, Tesla, MSTR, etc, you should feel safe holding the corresponding Yeildmax fund
Love this, this exactly what i do, i bought at a good price and dca 1 dollar every day into it. It has made me 30% returns JUST in dividends already not including any potential capital growth
@@InfamousTiitan thats an interesting idea, DCAing one dollar every day into them. I may have to try that, rather than buying chunks all at once.
I have 30% allocated to Yieldmax. The monthly premiums vary
Zero erosion of capital.
45.25% ytd cumulative return 1 year cumulative 60% at the high
The portfolio managers are on UA-cam all the time.
This is meant for people who understand technicals and stochastics.. Its for sophisticated investors who understand options
I sometimes use my ETFs to buy dividend and growth stocks for diversification instead of reinvesting in the same place. To each their own methods though. The good thing is that you’re investing in the first place and that’s what’s important. Salute for the content!
Hearing from an experienced investor who has survived the crisis and prospered is always comforting. It could be worrisome when your portfolio goes from green to red, but if you have invested in strong firms, you should just keep growing them and stick to your goal.
I’m a contractor, and my job doesn’t permit me the time to properly analyze my holdings/evaluate stocks myself, so I’ve had a fiduciary actively restructuring my portfolio for the past 7 years now to match the present market condition and that’s how I’ve been able to stay afloat, knowing when to buy and sell…
Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
Her name is ‘’Aileen Gertrude Tippy’ can't divulge much. Most likely, the internet should have her basic info, you can research if you like
Thank you for this Pointer. It was easy to find your handler, She seems very proficient and flexible. I booked a call session with her.
A lot of news have been going on about a rally after the election, urging investors to watch out for stocks that would be experiencing significant growth. Any idea which stocks to put on my watchlist? I just sold my home in the Boca Grande area and I’m looking to remunerate a lump sum into the stock market for regular income, but not sure of the right picks.
excellent share. curiously inputted Karen Lynne Chess on the web, spotted her consulting page and was able to schedule a call session, no sweat. Ive seen commentaries about advisors but not one looks this phenomenal
What are you talking about? The fund managers are LITERALLY listed at the bottom of the screen you showed. Zega Financial and Tidal Investments. And Forside distributes the funds on pay days.
I've heard that index funds and ETFs provide diversified stock market exposure while spreading risk. I have over $800K in savings; What's the most effective strategy to allocate funds in my portfolio and generate profits?
Yes, there are strategies that could be put in place for solid gains regardless of economy situation, but such execution is usually carried out by an investment specialist
Even with the right strategies and appropriate assets, investment returns can differ among investors. Recognizing the vital role of experience in investment success is crucial. Personally, I understood this significance and sought guidance from a market analyst, significantly growing my account to nearly a million. Strategically withdrawing profits just before the market correction, I'm now seizing buying opportunities once again.
How can I participate in this? I sincerely aspire to establish a secure financial future and am eager to participate. Who is the driving force behind your success?
I'm careful about giving specific recommendations since everyone's situation is different, but I've worked with Stacy Lynn Staples for years and highly recommend her. Look her up online to see if she's a good fit for you.
I appreciate it. After searching her name online and reviewing her credentials, I'm quite impressed. I've contacted her as I could use all the help I can get. A call has been scheduled.
4:58 Actually, they DO hold shares of their own bitcoin fund: CONY. It's right below the block you highlighted. It's not OPTIONS on bitcoin, which is the YBIT ETF you mentioned, but it's still bitcoin. Is it weird they're not using their own fund for this? Yes, but not to the point where I wouldn't trust it. For individuals, we're CONSTANTLY told to diversify for safety, and that's smart. But why say you want more diversity from the company, then have a problem when they diversify so much that they spread the risk tolerance to other companies as well? Isn't that like saying, "JUUUUUST in case we're wrong, we're not gonna put ALL our eggs in one basket?"
The synthetics on BITO are the holdings in YBIT. For whatever reason, they're listed out individually.
I have over $200k ready to be invested; however, I am having trouble trying to find out what investments would be best during this present economy. Heard index funds and ETFs provide diversified stock market exposure while spreading risk. How true?
On my own part, I believe these things are better handled by the professionals
A lot of folks downplay the role of advisors until being burnt by their own emotions. I remember a couple of summers back, after my lengthy divorce, I needed a good boost to soar my business; hence I researched for licensed advisors and came across someone of utmost qualifications. She's helped grow my reserve notwithstanding inflation from $450k to nearly $2.7M as of today.
@@AlbertiniCaputi interesting numbers, please who is the professional guiding you?
I've shuffled through a few professionals in the past but settled with Sophia Verdekal O'neal. You'd most likely find her basic info on the internet. She's well-established with over two decades of experience.
I've shuffled through a few advisors in the past but settled with Sophia Verdekal O'neal. She has a great deal of expertise and her qualifications speak for themselves. You'd most likely find her basic info on the internet. She's well established.
First. And great video to watch it seems because the Yieldmax funds have always caught my eye...
Gold, BTC, quality global stocks, yes, however not property, if the U.S. dollar gets hyperinflation everything becomes worthless in that country, only global assets survive. Yes assets will go up against the U.S. dollar, however the U.S. dollar would become worthless compared to other currencies or global assets. As for property in the U.S, property is a national fiat asset, it would go up in value against the U.S. dollar, however not in other currencies or global assets. .. Anyone feeling the impact of these economic shifts should consider Crypto long-term trading strategies to protect their assets. My advice to anyone feeling the heat in this inflation, just trade long term more than ever, I have made over 520k from day trading with Aldona Šabanienė in few weeks, this is one of the best medium to backup your assets incase it goes bearish..
How do I reach your Coach/mentor.
She mostly interacts on Telegrams, using the user-name.
@AldonaSabaniene.
So impressed knowing how much people talk good about Aldona Sabaniene daily signals .. she also helped me and my friends to trade profitably with her signals.
Absolutely I desire to be successful which give me the reason to invest in bitcoin
Small point, Jay does not work for YieldMax, Jay Pestrichelli is co-founder and managing director of ZEGA Financial.
Covered call etf's are not more risky than holding the actual long shares themselves. The delta risk is less with the call sold against the stock.
love Yieldmax funds they are 50% of my portfolio and brings in on avg of $11000 a month and the other 50% are my older funds such as QYLD PDI GOF CRF .
My yieldmax funds since inception I Have NVDY 3000 shares MSTY 3000 shares with both I bought at $20 TSLY 3000 shares I bought at $14.65 Presplit which I sold off 3 months ago to buy YMAG I now own 9000 shares of and I bought 2000 shares of CRSH because TSLA will come back to earth and will swing trade it and collect distributions.
NO REGRETS
Yeah... sticking with SPYI.
@@DuffyJ1111 nothing wrong with that … 12% year end, year out😎
Good video,I’ve made so much with MSTY NVDY and CONY also YMAG is very good and holds nav pretty good.im very happy with YM
Actually, despite their significant variability, every since YieldMax ETF has realized a resistant point beyond which it will not decrease beyond, except for TRES which was eliminated. So, despite the trending down phenomenon, there is a point in which they are bounce up, thus far to date.
ever, not every
Excellent info, thanks...
I lost so much with TSLY and QQQY. The nav erosion is so bad with drip. I wish I could turn back time. Only thing green is NVDY for now. JEPI/JEPQ/SPYI has been solid for me so far. Or just vanguard it and VTSAX/VMFXX. Total market or money market. Don't chase the gains and dump it soon. fml.
Ever since the Weekly payments Defiance reduced their Daily Goals from 0.25% to 0.15%. Hence the low Yields the last few weeks, but hopefully that means minimal Erosion. Combined with more, smaller payments, and the dips aren't painful anymore.
Yieldmax is a dividend trap. You cant count on their dividend for gaining and make income for retirement. You will lose more on spending money in their etf than benefit from their dividend. I've lost all my high yield cash interested pay out and their dividend when i bought their stock. the more you put money in their share, the more their share going down.
@monsterenergyaxe A couple days ago I caved and switched from QQQY to RDTE. I now understand Total Returns, and not only does Roundhill have better Total Returns than Defiance, RDTE has the highest Total Return and Dividend Yield both with Roundhill. Hopefully it stays that way, I'm trying to live off them.
Great video, Alan, the coverage is appreciated. I personally use funds like YMAX (love the weekly change) and MSTY as boosters. Defiance and YM provide the punch while the anchors are more conservative, but all still yield over 13% Your coverage is great - thanks.
MSTY is kicking ass.
I just have 200 shares in YMAX but that's it, most my other income is from CEFs and other CC ETFs
@@Truck--kun 200? With that little what's even the point? You're getting like 2 bucks a week.
@ 200 shares I meant
@@Truck--kun fair
Oh, cool. I know Cornerstone, Pimco, and Guggenheim have Drip Discounts, and I know one guy who sells almost all the shares just before the Rights Offering, and then after the price drop he just buys in again. Alas, I use Robinhood, no CEFs for me. Robinhood has fantastic Margin Rates and low Margin Maintenance, though, that makes up for it.
Great info.. Thanks..
Yieldmax has too many junk funds so YMAG (the magnificent seven) is a better recommendation than YMAX. I mean, who in their right mind would want an income fund that includes Moderna?
1) Jay has a decades-long career in options he sort of wrote the "Bible" on options, and from the beginning he has been transparent in his interviews. 2) I invest a lot in the funds, take part distributions for expenses, and reinvest the rest. You have to understand ***each*** fund and have a different strategy for each fund. The math will tell you how to trade them, not opinion.
Recently got into MSTY and CONY since they are in a dip. I will look to add more after the election. My portfolio as a whole is very safe and conservative so I felt comfortable adding a couple of high risk positions.
Excellent post, & i can see using a smaller portion of your portfolio in something like MSTY that pays quite a bit per share to push it's earnings into a more stable dividend ETF like SCHD, but the timing is very bad to do so right now.
Your comment section is literally all bots lol
I've been wondering about this for a few weeks. Thanks for providing some input on this to make a better decision
Whoever runs it, it works ! It's better than crypto scam..lol
What are your thoughts about YMAG, based on 7 mag stocks. Would you consider it more stable than any other YM funds?
Why would an 08 crash wipe out these funds. One month dividend would be low. Next few months with rebound will come back up…
I very much appreciate the heads up on YMAX. It fills a dividend hole caused by my tax harvesting strategy.
Easy to budget....just use the average over time or use the smaller amount....anything over budget is just extra spending money.YMAX, ULTY and OARK are the ones I hold...I personally would not hold the 'single stock' ones.
Right now, i'm attempting to grow my yield max, so the dividends grow my stake and split the dividend payment between growing and feeding other more stable dividend payers. Use it to grow your stable holdings in the short term but continue feeding it as well, so it stays alive.
This is my strategy too. I'm growing my portfolio for retirement so I split my divs between reinvestments and investing in more stable stocks.
As of last month I was trading my self I lost almost everything, now it just makes no sense, i have to choose if I'm a trader or face my job so i chose my job, now I'm confused of what etfs to store my funds for long term, maybe a little aggressive ones
Hey buddy! Don't be seduced by large dividends. Concentrate on total return. There is no sense in collecting large dividends if your overall investment is going down however I’d say SPYI, JEPQ, QQI and IWMI. But do your research.
Personally I put down 1.3m$ on few ETFs, still diversifying. Earning season is around the corner, It was this time last year I made a huge break through with 200k. Handed it to a firm here in Texas, I get weekly pay out which I put back on long term ETF's. IWM will probably crush it this quarter
Please can I look up this firm, thank you.
Yeah, Jennifer Kristie Taylor use her name to look her up
SPY, QQQ, IWM, and currently TLT. I only have 4. Jennifer’s firm grows a good portion of my diversification, I live in Connecticut.
Buy on the ex dividend date or the day after. That way you avoid most of the nav erosion
Never buy and avoid all of the NAV erosion.
What is the best dividend portfolio? Tsly cony NVDy msty ?
Can you please cover this vs YMAG vs QDTE which is your favorite/best of the super high yielders? Or would you go with FEPI
I have NVDY and YMAX and do not drip on either.
Great video. 👍
Aipi has it been covered in video?
Helpful analysis. Staying far away from these funds. Yield traps for sure. Hard pass on anything with eroding NAV, especially in a year when the market is up bigly.
Covered Call strategies is hardly a yield trap. Understanding that will go a long way for your. Some of the single stock tickers with high yields are absolutely yield traps.
@ if the NAV is eroding, I be unloading. 🙅🏻♂️
You get almost all the downside with substantially capped upside (in markets that are up 7.5 out of 10 years). Plus massive tax drag, even in negative years. Plus absurdly high fees that you pay whether the fund performs well or not.
Nah man, not for me. Some options strategies make sense in some cases, but none of these YieldMax funds are smart long term investments.
@CalmerThanYouAre1 True indeed.. nothing long term. Just income vehicles for me. I treat them like my rental property and TBH, these are a little better... 😂🤣😂
NAV is way up for my MSTY shares. With these distributions I’m only a few months away from playing with the house’s money. I like free money that keeps printing free money. 🎉
@trippvanmunch since the inception of MSTY, it has returned 156% while MSTR, the underlying holding, has returned 222%.
Not only did you underperform, you paid lots of taxes and high fees to do so. And somehow you think you made a smart move. 🤦🏻♂️
You could have taken your original investment off the and been playing with the house’s money long ago if you’d just bought MSTR instead. You’ve essentially underperformed the underlying holding by 30-40% net of taxes and fees while holding the majority of the downside risk anyway and think you’re taking a victory lap. Wake up dude! Before you start adding zeroes to the end of the amount of wealth you’re sacrificing.
Bought 700 shares of Nvdy at 21.78 in January…. I’m averaging 790 a month right in divys.. all I hear is “nav erosion” it’s an extremely volatile ETF\stock so yeah it will go up and down. When it drops below 25 buy it. I’m 52 and building up for retirement and would never use YM in retirement.
Even if the nav erodes, I honestly don't care at all. In this type of high paying investment it's just a bonus if the nav stays flat or increases. As long as you get your initial investment back through dividend payments, eventually, then every dividend payment after that is just free money.
Why not recommend it for roth ria? Since it rely pretty much on dividend and roth ira is tax free. It sounds a better option for roth ira than brokage account.
What about these short ones as a hedge for the underlying stock?
Where are the High Yield Dibadend Warrioras?
Here.
Here
Here
Somewhere else, with my investments.
What you doing here ? Good podcasts😊
It's basically paying someone to trade for you if you don't know how, that's why there's no diversification. It's just funding an account. I like it and they're doing good, but I understand you should be wary of this company in case something goes south
Just as an experiment I invested a fraction of one percent of my portfolio into NVDY. A very small sum just to see what happens. It seems to have both positive price return as well as a big total return compared to the other YieldMax funds. But in all honesty I am scratching my head wondering what is the purpose of these ETF's? Even if you get a colossal dividend & that gets you to a point where you break even if the underlying stocks crash you're paying taxes on essentially getting your principal paid back to you. There is no long-term benefit to any of these really. Why purchase an income producing asset that suffers severe depreciation? What's the endgame here?
Very well done sir …your correct and to the point …it’s possible to just end up flat with no real returns…only experienced traders should be in these funds …only they know how to manage their volatility…
I have
NVDY
AMDY
YMAG
YMAX
CONY
APLY
MSTY
TSLY
I don’t do the drip option. At least one in each group plus YMAX/YMAG are now weekly. I use the dividends to buy other things like crypto and growth stocks. Started with nothing. Up 37% on the year
Just got into NVDY and plan to get into AMDY end of the month. Just to boost my income and help snowball all my dividend stocks. Also in SPYT, and QYLD.
@@thebes118 I would be careful with AMDY. NAV Erosion has hit it hard. I would go more CONY in group C
Make a video about Kurv
I am new to investing so I am wondering are there any stocks or ETFs that won't get obliterated if the market crashes?
Great content, as always! A bit off-topic, but I wanted to ask: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). What's the best way to send them to Binance?
Interesting, so how do you really feel about YieldMax ?
Doesn't that say they may "sell a call credit spread", not a bull debit spread ?
Just buy and hold, do not buy until the dividens pay your initial investment
question: In worst case, let's say the share prices goes to $5 eventually, do the dividend per share stays the same? If the dividend goes down then it's the issue. But let's say I have set the option to reinvest automatically, and if the dividend stays same, wouldn't it buy more shares? and hence the more dividend eventually? Tell me bluntly if I'm day-dreaming!
The "extreme high yield / who cares NAV" ETFs from YieldMax and Defiance are:
1) Not all the same. MSTY and NVDY are success stories that should continue to be in the future.
2) Perfect to temporarily invest into in order to generate cash for a big purchase (vacation, car, etc) and then invest out of into DGR or tax-friendly high yield ETFs (SPYI, etc).
3) Perfect if in the final years of your life. They're like a reverse mortgage, such that you don't care if the NAV goes down over time because you're trying to leave a nice nest egg when you die, and not a massive one.
Not for retirement income but if i just want to make a passive income besides of my job, dont you think its a good idea?
I'm buying YMAG & YMAX, can't pass up those weekly dividends. insane amount of dividends.
Wow, anyone who passes on yieldmax doesn't need/want $$$$
They're likely going to sell call spreads going into earnings or other important dates - that's when these funds get hit hard on their upside caps. Like when nVidia or Tesla has its earnings and they go up by 10%, all that upside gets lost. Thanks for the video!
you sell call spreads when you think the stock is gonna go down
If an etf is down they can sell and tax harvest, and use oprions to replicate that position.
I have $100k in stocks I’m 25. How much should I reinvest into Yield max etfs and which ones are the best ?
The AI voice grates on my nerves - Teslaahhhh
What is your opinion on $ULTY? Could you make a video talking about what you think of him now and prospects for the future?
Now they have YMAG!
What do u like better about YMAG?
It a tad little bit diversified and distributions are weekly. YMAX could be better though.
Still looks like a YieldTrap
You completely miss the point of these funds.
they all suck
lol They are insane
nvdy pays out 78%, no way they can sustain that, if nvidia ever had some issues and that stock price falls this fund is going with it., just too risky
I'd rather sell calls on double leveraged silver than this.
Everyone knows Jay Diddy runs the trades
Am I missing something?
For example if I put $1,000 into Cony and the Nav erodes to the point where it is literally showing zero value why would this even matter? Wait it out and get paid in dividends until you regain your initial investment of $1,000. Every dividend after this is free money. I dont care if they do reverse split after reverse split. Who cares because although you may have half the shares each time they reverse split the dividend payment per shar doubles. They can reverse split until the end of the world and I wouldn't care. It has no effect on my dividend payments.
Yes it absolutely does effect the payout after the reverse split
Like in casino never play with big money. Good luck
I've made tons of $, what's not to like
The 2008 crash is what spurred the creation of cryptocurrency. If a similar event were to happen today, selling options on crypto based companies like Coinbase would be a boon for investors holding FIAT / CONY.
Funds go down and back up
I held a couple of these for over a year. My total ROI for their combined stock was barely 1%. Did I end up making a couple of dollars? Yes. Could I have made a lot more investing in better stocks? Absolutely. I can't advise people what to do with their money but my actual experience was that I can make more money investing in other stocks than Yieldmax products.
I'll stick with BST
Bst will expire in 2032..
@@imemine2925 no bstz does but it has extension if they want
@imemine2925 no bstz will BST does not have a termination date
Wait until after the election.
Many of the have massive nav erosion…And high fees
Lmaooo
1%+ expense ratios on average. No thanks. If your investing goal is to make fund managers rich, go for it
If you want to lose buy these ETFs. I sold all and only wish all of you the best. Yes I'm getting monthly less but I'm not killing my NAV. GOOD LUCK
So you’re not better off then. Keep looking, Sir.
NAV erosion is really bad with this ETFs . Not recommend to anyone.
Lol
Just out of curiosity I was wondering if you also do any investing in tech stocks or another non dividend stocks?
They're BS! The drop in NAV cancels out any distribution.
I had 1400 shares of tsly for a year and lost 1,000 after distributions. Not the worst experience in the world. I tested my same buys as NVDY and I would've been +7k
Yes players play the players until the players being the players become the played. Cycle of life.
Lol its a spac company lol
The S&P 500 finished down 20% in 2022. This means long term investors have a great starting point in 2023. Here are 4 very popular ETF’s: $VOO- S&P 500 fund $VTI- Total US stock market $QQQ- High growth, tech $SCHD- Growth + Dividends| I just tallied my dividends for the year;$167k Blessed and grateful, disciplined and focused.
My "boring" index funds just paid me over $6,000 in dividends last month. This is money that i can choose to spend without having to sell any of my shares. But for now i have it all set to reinvest to buy me even more index funds.
Anyone have recommendations for a reliable monthly investment? I hope to ultimately supplement my income from work with a monthly income from investments. I will still make long-term investments, but it would be wonderful to have a little additional money each month.
Until the Fed clamps down even further I think we're going to see hysteria due to rampant inflation. If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now with financial markets will be best you seek a fin-professional with fiduciary responsibilities who knows about mortgage-backed securities for proper guidance.
please who is the consultant that assist you with your investment and if you don't mind, how do I get in touch with them?
'Carol Vivian Constable, a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and serves as a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.