2Année·

As some of you may have noticed, I want to restructure my portfolio and finally give it a consistent and sensible strategy. After some discussions I have my rough structure, which I shared a few days ago with you, now concretized in a portfolio / dashboard and I'm looking forward to your feedback and your shitposts again.


The shared portfolio / dashboard is hypothetical and should be implemented so in the short to medium term. The absolute values are fictitious and only serve to make the distribution clearer. They correspond to the distribution of my savings amounts. Currently I do not plan to rebalance (but who knows what the future will bring). This is only my ETF and stock portfolio. All other investments such as crypto are deliberately excluded here.


For those who want to read a lot, here is an explanation why the portfolio looks the way it does (the rest of you just jump directly to my dashboard):


The goal is financial independence sometime within the next 30 years without asset depletion. I would like to achieve this partly via dividends and partly via sales that are offset by price gains. The more generated via dividends, the better.


Since it makes no sense with the investment horizon to bet on stocks with very high dividends already today, but at the same time I want to use dividends "in old age" without paying great taxes on reallocations, I prefer the distributing variants of my ETF. I hope to get good value and dividend growth from my portfolio allocation. Distributions are reinvested directly, the partial foregoing of the tax deferral effect is consciously accepted. Should my opinion change at some point, I will continue to invest in the reinvestors instead of the distributors.


CORE

A world portfolio with overweighted dividends / USA share, which will ideally remain in my portfolio until the bitter end.


40% $VGWL (+0,18 %) FTSE All World Distributing for global equity market participation without focus on dividends

15% $SPYD (-0,29 %) SPDR S&P US Dividend Aristocrats Distributing for dividend focus without sacrificing growth. I don't like the resulting overweight to the US, but I'm missing the alternative here.

5% $IUSN (+0,52 %) Small Caps to give the small ones a chance and to profit from their growth.


As expected, there is no overlap in the core between the small caps and FTSE All World. Also to be expected is the overlap of the US Dividend Aristocrats with the other two ETFs in the core. However, due to the focus on dividend growth, these are deliberately accepted. Nevertheless, the top 10 individual positions in the core account for less than 13%, and the top 3 together account for less than 7%. From my point of view diversification enough.


SATELLITE

The satellites in my portfolio consist of industry and sector ETFs and are probably weighted a bit higher than in many core sattelite strategies. Yes, I think I'm God and I imagine I can beat the market with this. Yes, I'm also a realist and know that I probably won't succeed. But investing should also be a bit of fun, and that's why a bit of gambling is part of it for me. I would simply be too bored to invest in an ordinary world portfolio.


The Sattelite positions should of course be held as long as possible, but the probability is quite high that these will be replaced at some point.


10% $AYEW (+0,46 %) MSCI World Information Technology Distributing. In IT and Tech lies the present & future. But what about all the trending topics? Surely cybersecurity, AI, cloud, semiconductors, ... are growing much faster? Why not a more specific ETF? All true, but I honestly couldn't choose one of the trend themes, also don't know which one will grow the most in the near future and which one will enter a weak phase first, if necessary. The MSCI World Information Technology offers large and small companies from all IT sectors, including the hype themes. Therefore, it seems to me to be the best option for a broad exposure to tech themes. Only the weighting of the top positions and their overlap with my core bothers me a bit. But there is no way around these top companies at the moment, so the weighting is probably fair and you don't have to buy additional individual shares of these companies.


10% $CBUF (-0,17 %) MSCI World Health Care Distributing.

Healthcare will always be important, already offers a lot of stability and can grow excellently in the future due to new developments. Yes, but can't we be a bit more disruptive? Why not Biotech or at least Innovative Health Care? The MSCI World Health Care does contain companies that can also be found in Biotech and Innovative Health Care. At the same time, there are also established companies that are already earning a lot of money today and give the ETF some stability.


5% $LVNG (+0,22 %) Environmental Impact.

Sustainability and addressing the climate crisis are important. There are plenty of ETFs on the market for this, specializing in Clean Energy or Battery Value Chain, for example. This ETF focuses on companies from various sectors such as clean water, renewable energy, electric vehicles, but also waste and recycling management. It is exactly this composition that makes it so attractive to me. The ETF is unfortunately very small and was only launched in 2021, but it is only 5% and YOLO.


5% $3SUE MSCI World Consumer Staples Distributing.

Boring, I know. Consumer staples always go though, haven't done so well in the last few years and add some stability to the portfolio with lots of defensive stocks, which may be needed in the next few years due to the high weighting of the largest tech stocks.


Among the satellites, there are just 3 overlaps. The overlaps to the core are of course numerous but the overweighting is of course the purpose at this point.


Here are a few more facts about the ETF part:

00.28% TER

01.30% Dividend

18.45 P/E RATIO

03.27 KBV


70.66% North America

15.86% Europe

10.97% Asia


21.75% Tech

18.26% Health Care

11.25% Industrial

11.11% Consumer Staples

10.78% Financial


Top 3 stocks are

3.88% Apple

3.41% Microsoft

1.07% Nvidia


The top 10 positions take up about 13% of the portfolio.


SHARES

Did I mention that I also want to have a little fun? Accordingly, equities account for about 10%. These 10% are companies from industries that largely fall short in my ETF portfolio and that I am convinced of for various reasons.


Whoever has made it this far, reacts to the post, leaves a valuable comment or a shitpost and starts it with the codeword DonkeyInvestor (gladly also with @ in front), gets my follow.


Thank you very much!

Jetez un coup d'œil à mon Tableau de bord maintenant !
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74 Commentaires

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@DonkeyInvestor can be done. You say you don't want to access the money for 30 years. I wouldn't invest in distributing ETFs now, if you start in 15 years it will be enough. Besides, you don't need to reallocate later. You can simply sell your ETFs piece by piece? 🤷‍♂️ I would always rely on the mathematics when investing, and an accumulating ETF is now better 🤔
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Stable plan Donkey 💪😁 Would bet on distributing ETF, gives to this beautiful proverb "Better the bird in the hand, than the pigeon on the roof."☺️👍
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@DonkeyInvestor Wow so much text and a respectable depot. And I thought you are only responsible for the shitposts here.
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@DonkeyInvestor sounds like a very mature strategy 💪🏽 I also see potential in the individual stocks. Did you then at some point shift from other positions into the $SPYD to increase dividends?
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@DonkeyInvestor Seems like you even really thought about it. I like it. And it's not even really boring. I'm stolz❤️ How do I get the follow if you're already following me? 👉👈
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Where Crypto?💸 No, seriously, I think the distribution is quite okay. The idea sounds good in any case. I for me just need (much) dividend for the psyche. But you're right. At 30 years you do not need that now theoretically.
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Sounds coherent and well-considered. With regard to ETFs, I'm focusing more on the accumulating variants - I'd like to generate cash for reinvestment via individual dividend stocks. 👍
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2Année
@DonkeyInvestor Good thing, I have a similar opinion. The enumeration together gives 100%, how does that look in relation to Crypto? Do you just run that uninfluenced next to the ETF portfolio? Deposits still planned? Also plan next year to take at least one individual share in the portfolio. Kind of belongs here, I think 😁
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2Année
@DonkeyInvestor
So, I've read through your post a few times now (because I find the strategy interesting) and I have to say: Basically, I find the ideas really good, well thought out and especially on the aspect of the different market phases seen also relatively "safe", but I just do not understand the timing completely. In my opinion, this strategy is ideal for the last 5 years, but not if you still want to invest for so long. In my opinion, you skip points and COULD deny yourself some growth returns. Of course you can never tell beforehand, but you don't have to be able to as long as you have enough years ahead of you. But the important thing is anyway that you feel comfortable with it and if now is the right time for this strategy --- good luck! I will definitely follow the whole thing!
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I like it very much @DonkeyInvestor We are pursuing a similar strategy. I also had the problem with the overlaps that you don't like about the Information Tech etf. I opted for the HanETF Tech Megatrends here - but only 5%, it's a bit more speculative.

Question: Why no emerging markets in it? I personally think that this is where the music will be played in the future

I've now built the core as msci world and msci em imi + msci world quality dividend - I'm happy with that for now

Otherwise, good luck :)
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