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This is probably not the strongest strategy/plan. But any plan is better than none. I was just visiting my younger cousin and to use a meme, he actually has tears in his eyes 24/7 that there's not enough money and is afflicted by this bias of not being able to save. That's nonsense, of course. I recommended to him: The Richest Man in Babylon by G. C. Clarson as a first step and called a spade a spade: ETF savings plan, even with a small amount (time is leverage). He has probably forgotten it again and will never invest. Therefore, even a supposedly weak plan is a good plan. Weak is an exaggeration, but you know what I mean.
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@Iwamoto With your cousin, however, the problem doesn't seem to be strategy or a plan, but a lack of impulse control (when making purchases), a lack of will to save or simply too little income...
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@KevinE one way or another. That's why any plan is better than no plan.
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@Iwamoto Thank you for your message and your feedback. Why do you think my plan is weak and what would be a good strategy for you?
LG Max
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@Max095 weak is a big exaggeration, sorry. I am not convinced by the first ETF.
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@Iwamoto Okay thanks for your feedback 😊 which ETF would be your favorite and why are you not 100% convinced by Fidelity?
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@Max095 When I made my comparisons, the Fidelity simply didn't work. Yes, of course, past performance is no indicator of future performance. My favorite dividend ETF besides the normal world ETFs is this one $EXH5