Ma added another portion. It's a good time to get in.

iShares MSCI India ETF
Price
Discussione su QDV5
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66Core / Satellite growth stocks wanted
Good morning everyone,
In the past, the community has clearly demonstrated that together we are an absolute added value for 🤑🤑🤑.
That's why I'm asking for your help :-) I am looking for mid-/long-term growth stocks to complement my core around $IWDA (+0%)
$CSPX (-0,15%)
$MEUD (+0,3%)
$EIMI (-0,27%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%) to complement it.
Currently set are $NVDA (-0,74%)
$GOOGL (-2,18%)
$IBM (-2,38%)
$SOFI (+2,72%)
$IREN (-8,47%)
$LMND (+0,89%)
$RKLB (+3,91%)
$BTC (+1,95%) - DCA
What ideas do you have?
LG

Country bet India 🇮🇳 via ETF
As I received a few questions and comments with my country bet comment a few days ago, I'm linking you below to what I think is a very detailed article, which was one of the reasons why I decided to start a savings plan on the $QDV5 (-0,23%) at the time. I hope I haven't forgotten/overlooked anyone who got in touch.
I hope you enjoy reading it.
Aug 6 / Now India Must Pay
After Switzerland, Brazil and the EU, India has become the latest target of Donald Trump’s trade war fantasies. India now faces a tariff rate of up to 50% for purchasing oil from America’s legacy enemy Russia.
Why is President Trump doing this? Doesn’t it do more harm than good to his economy and global trade relations? Probably, but the truth is that the former businessman doesn’t seem to care much. By know, we know his tactic: Scare the enemy. No matter how mighty their economy may be, slap a ridiculously high tariff on them, then start negotiating.
While seasoned diplomats or old-school presidents might prefer to talk first, threaten later, if inevitable, Trump flips the script. In fact, he’s a bully, the greatest of them all. And the negative connotations of the word “bully” aside, his strategy seems to work. President Trump has a unique ability to force outcomes that favor his agenda.
We started the year with practically zero tariffs on major imports. Then came April 2nd, “Liberation Day”, where markets experienced a cold awakening. That day, everybody’s worst fears came true: exorbitant tariff rates on every country from Germany to the Easter Islands. No one was spared. And what was the cherry on top? The rates were based on a flawed formula not even his advisors seemed to fully grasp, though I doubt Peter Navarro could grasp the breakfast menu, let alone math. The man that managed to start a feud with everyone, from Elon Musk to John Doe.
Since then, several deals have been struck, with varying degrees of success. The EU, for instance now faces 15%, which is celebrated as a massive win, while forgetting that it’s 15% points more than before. And what did markets do? Nothing. Completely disconnected from fundamentals, equities marched higher setting fresh all-time highs.
While that’s largely due to the phenomenon of the “TACO-Trade”, what investors take lightly is the fact that tariffs remain elevated and significantly higher than last year. Yes, Trump tends to chicken out, but his plan is more calculated than it appears: The order of events is repetitive:
1. Look for a camera
2. Announce absurd tariffs, while markets collapse and WSJ’ journalists type their fingers sore
3. Extend the deadline a few days later
4. Strike a “historical”, though rather symbolic deal
5. Redistribute corporate profits into Treasury coffers
But enough criticism for now. In the end, only time will tell whether Trump’s strategy results in an economic boom and global investment into the U.S., or a lasting decline in American influence and global standing. Though I would bet on the latter.
$IWDA (+0%)
$EIMI (-0,27%)
$LYPS (-0,03%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%)
$VWRL (-0,08%)
$VWCE (+0,03%)
$MEUD (+0,3%)
$MEU (+0,26%)
$SEMI (-2,23%)
$CSNDX (-0,53%)
$AAPL (-0,8%)
$NVDA (-0,74%)
$AMZN (+0,27%)
$NOVO B (-1,79%)
$AMD (-2,49%)
$MU (-2,93%)
$ASML (-1,45%)
$TSLA (-6,12%)
In 3, 2, 1… Off you go, money 🚀 See you in 20+ years 👋🏼
Did the most scared thing ever with my money… but also the most exciting. I’ll (hopefully) thank myself for someday! 💸
While the first 33K is invested now, I’m just waiting for a ‘good’ moment to jump into Bitcoin for 45% of my portfolio.
$VWCE (+0,03%)
$CSNDX (-0,53%)
$IS3R (+0,35%)
$IGLN (+0,35%)
$ZPRV (+1,45%)
$WSML (+0,63%)
$CSEMUS (+0,38%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%)
Opinion??
Holding this ETF's 21 years old. Let me know what you think.
$TDIV (+0,53%)
$VWRL (-0,08%)
$JEGP (+1,07%)
$BTC (+1,95%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%)
$VUSA (-0,14%)
Portfolio Feedback | Long-Term Offensive Investor (28 y/o, €80k) 📈🚀
Hi everyone,
I’m 28 and planning to invest €80,000 with a long-term, offensive strategy. I’m aiming for broad global diversification, focused on both value and growth. I’m totally fine having 60–70% of my portfolio allocated to the U.S. and with exposure to emerging markets as well.
Here’s a rough outline of the allocation I have in mind:
30–40%
Nasdaq 100
$EQQQ (-0,63%)
$XNAS (-0,56%)
$CSNDX (-0,53%)
15–25%
S&P 500
$VUAG (-0,15%)
$CSPX (-0,15%)
$SPYL (-0,05%)
10%
World ex US
$WEXU (+0,02%)
$IE000R4ZNTN3 (-0,06%)
$EXUS (-0,12%)
10%
Small Cap US Value
$ZPRV (+1,45%)
5% Small Cap World $WSML (+0,63%)
$ZPRS (+0,49%)
5% Emerging Markets (EM)
$EIMI (-0,27%)
$XMME (-0,74%)
5%
EM Small Cap
$SPYX (-0,34%)
5–10%
India UCITS ETF
$FLXI (+0,59%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%)
Additionally (5-10%), I’m considering adding one or two of the following ETFs – would love your thoughts on which one(s) you’d choose and why (or not):
- $SMH (-1,91%) | VanEck Semiconductor UCITS ETF
- $RBOT (-0,35%) | iShares Automation & Robotics UCITS ETF
- $AIQG (-1,38%) | Global X Artificial Intelligence UCITS ETF USD Accumulating
- $XDWT (-0,91%) | Xtrackers MSCI World Information Technology UCITS ETF
Finally, I’m thinking of picking around 10 individual stocks as a satellite component. Any suggestions? 🚀
Curious to hear your feedback:
• What do you think of this ETF setup overall?
• Would you add or remove anything?
• Would you tweak the allocation? If yes, how and why?
I prefer accumulating ETFs only, and I plan to add €1,000–1,500 every month going forward.
Your thoughts are much appreciated! 🙏🏼😀
My journey on the stock market: from a child fascinated by money to a modern investor
Dear friends of Getquin,
I'm usually a silent reader, but if everyone just reads, eventually there's no more reading material, is there? So today I want to share my story with you.
The beginnings:
It's hard for me to say exactly when my journey began, but I do know that I developed a fascination with money as a child. My first "investment" was when I was about 7 or 8 years old, when I bought an ounce of gold with my own pocket money. At that time, no one in my family had anything to do with investments, but I had seen it in my mother's bank when I often accompanied her there. I was fascinated by the shiny coins and wanted to know how I could have a piece myself.
Then, around the turn of the millennium, I saw my father, together with a "great" bank advisor, invest the entire family savings in the middle of the dotcom bubble. The result: a massive loss within a few months. But my mother, who was at home at the time, fought hard and was miraculously able to recoup the losses. I was about 9 or 10 years old at the time and watched her sit in front of the PC every day and look at the figures. From that moment on, I was hooked! I started using an Excel spreadsheet to track which shares I would have bought at what price and watched the performance of my fictitious investments with great interest every day after school.
The first few years:
My mother stopped day trading after about a year and went back to work. However, shares were no longer an issue for me until I was 26.
Getting into real shares:
In 2018, in the summer, as a die-hard Juventus fan, I read about an article on the transfer of CR7 and how Juventus shares went through the roof. I was there again! At that time, however, I only had a small income as a working student. My father, who had failed with his investments in the past, gave me €2,000 - and I bought Juventus shares. However, he made me promise him that I would never invest in shares again. How did the story end? The "trade" with Juventus was a success, but I had to pay taxes for the first time - and I still hate that to this day.
The first losses:
After my Juventus adventure, I began to delve deeper into the matter. I tried out recommendations from "Aktionär" and repeatedly bet on individual shares for smaller trades. It was more of a game, but I generally remained profitable - sometimes a few percent profit, sometimes a few percent loss. Thanks to the profits and additional deposits, I built up my portfolio to €18,000 until I was hit by Wirecard. In the end, I had to accept a loss of around €6,000. It was painful, but not life-threatening - and I learned a lot from this mistake. In particular, I made the mistake of constantly buying more. If I had left it at the original position of € 1,500, the loss would probably not have been so dramatic.
Don't give up:
After the Wirecard debacle, I radically rethought my strategy. I increasingly focused on conservative companies, regular dividend payers and low growth. But here, too, I realized that I was underperforming the market. So I adapted my strategy further and took a long-term approach. I have since been able to slowly recoup my losses.
The clean cut - a new start:
In the summer of 2023, I needed all my assets for a private housing project and decided to make a real "fresh start". I sold all the positions in my portfolio and only kept my ETF savings plans with TradeRepublic.
The new era:
When the housing project was completed, I wanted to build up a new portfolio with the money I had left over - and here you can see the result. My aim is to find companies that are growing strongly and have a solid moat. Dividends are nice, but not a must. My portfolio also contains defensive, boring stocks as a healthy addition. At the same time, I try to further expand my ETF positions through one-off purchases - I stopped my regular ETF savings plans at the end of January 2025. I have also invested a little in crypto and gold on the side. I have made further investments in Lego (€500), Pokémon (€1,000) and Counterstrike cases (€3,000), but these are not part of the public list - that would be too costly for me.
Fun fact:
My cash ratio has never been higher than €3,000 since I first entered the stock market (2018). This is currently an exception because I want to build up a cash reserve for the next generation.
Goal:
I don't have a specific, set goal when it comes to my investments. It's more of a hobby for me. I just enjoy seeing how my portfolio grows and how I can accompany exciting companies and be a small part of them as they develop. For me, it feels a bit like collecting: I enjoy discovering interesting companies, investing in them and watching them develop over the long term.
Thank you:
A big thank you goes to Goldesel Investing and Markus Koch, who have been with me since my first stock market steps. Without you, the share culture in German-speaking countries would certainly not be as strong! And of course a big thank you to Getquin - I've always dreamed of a platform like this! 0% bullshit, 100% investments.
Please let me know if you liked my story!
A small note: My Bitpanda portfolio has a longer history, but I was too lazy to enter everything manually. I also didn't want to take over the history because, as I said, I wanted to start a new chapter in my investment history in November 2023. Overall, however, my crypto track is up €3000-4000.
$CSPX (-0,15%)
$ETH (+4,9%)
$BLK (+1%)
$GS (-0,39%)
$XDWD (+0,07%)
$V (-0,36%)
$MC (+1,89%)
$MS (-0,74%)
$QCOM (-1,77%)
$JNJ (-0,78%)
$ASML (-1,45%)
$RBOT (-0,35%)
$LOCK (-0,7%)
$MRK (+0,34%)
$UNP (+1,23%)
$NKE (-1,26%)
$QDV5 (-0,23%)
$MA (-0,32%)
$TGT (+2,03%)
$PEP (+0,25%)
$NU (-0,36%)
$AAPL (-0,8%)
$TSLA (-6,12%)
$DOGE (+1,91%)
$BTC (+1,95%)
$BRK.B (+1,08%)
$PEPE (-0,4%)
16,500 euros are looking for a home - special repayment is out, now the ETF roulette table can spin! 😄
We currently have just under EUR 16,500, which was originally earmarked for an unscheduled repayment of the property loan 🏠. Until recently, the money was in a Trade Republic account with 3.00% interest, which is now being reduced to 2.75%. Combined with the APR on the loan and inflation, however, this amounted to a zero-sum game. Not particularly smart - but since the money belongs to both me and my wife, you have to make compromises every now and then. 😄
But now we would like to invest the amount in an ETF. Our current portfolio, in which the monthly surpluses are invested, looks like this:
- 50 % in the $HMWO (+0,02%) (HSBC MSCI World ETF, distributing - until the exemption limit is reached, which will probably be soon 🫠 )
- 25 % in the $EQAC (-0,52%) (Invesco EQQQ NASDAQ-100 ETF, accumulating)
- 10 % in $EWG2 (+0,26%) (EUWAX Gold II, accumulating)
- 7,5 % in $EIMI (-0,27%) (iShares Core MSCI EM IMI ETF, accumulating)
- 7,5 % in $QDV5 (-0,23%) (iShares MSCI India ETF, accumulating)
In addition, my wife saves monthly in the $SPYI (+0,06%) (SPDR MSCI ACWI IMI ETF, accumulating) with 155.00 EURto build up reserves for her private health insurance when she retires.
In addition, some of our money flows into call money accounts as an emergency reserve, and there is also an amount in the $XEON (+0,02%) (Xtrackers II Overnight Rate Swap ETF C).
Now we are considering in which accumulating ETF we should invest the 16,500 euros and the future savings installment should be invested in. I would like to keep it as a separate or new position in one of the custody accounts, as the money will be invested in 17 years - after the fixed interest rate expires - to (partially) pay off the real estate loan. I'm also a fan of having different pots for different occasions. Each month I expect to have 250 to 500 euros in addition to the 16,500 euros.
Which accumulating ETF would be your favorite under these conditions?
Or simply, in one of our existing custody accounts additionally $SPYI (+0,06%) (SPDR MSCI ACWI IMI ETF) separately from my wife's savings plan, as a separate pot, because it's already a good ETF anyway?
I look forward to your opinion!

Titoli di tendenza
I migliori creatori della settimana

