3Mês·

Inspiration needed

Hello everyone,


I have cleaned up my portfolio a bit and trimmed it to 30 positions (please ignore the very small positions, it is more expensive to sell them than to keep them). The different ETFs on msci, msci em, dax and NASDAQ are due to historical reasons (sub. Deposits, change from synth. To physical replication, too many taxes with complete change). At the end of the year I will sell the 2 DWS old funds and then have the tax refunded promptly --> grandfathering. I just don't know where to switch to.


I am currently saving:

$TDIV (+0,17%) 250/m

$IWDA (+0,01%) 600/m

$IEMA (-0,89%) 250/m

$EQAC (-0,35%) 250/m


$ALV (+2,13%) 50/w

$KO (+0,17%) 50/w

$PEP (+0,17%) 50/w

$UNH (-0,01%) 50/w

$V (+0,51%) 50/w

$ULVR (+1,38%) 50/w


And I reinvest the dividends from $O (+0,58%) and $MAIN (+0,3%) monthly


I try to have all positions that I want to hold long-term at 2-4 percent (exceptions: ETFs, $EWG2 (-1,51%) and $BRK.B (+0,09%) )


At the moment semiconductors ($AMD (-0,78%)
$PLTR (+1,88%)
$MU (+0,99%) and $MPWR (-0,78%) ) are my "yield positions", which I would like to sell if the price continues to rise.


But at the moment I'm lacking inspiration. What is my portfolio missing in the long term? Which themes could I "play" to achieve short-term returns. Or just leave everything as it is.


I would be grateful for any opinions.


Greetings 👋

38Posições
€ 453.732,59
49,26%
10
14 Comentários

imagem de perfil
If you are interested in dividends, I would invest more in the UK, Germany and Australia - at least if the US stocks only pay a 3-4% dividend. 15% is always lost in taxes, so you can also take reasonably good, cheap stocks such as telecoms etc. that have similar dividends - without any taxes. In fact, "growth" stocks with 3-4% dividends (e.g. Linde, Allianz, Siemens) - general insurance companies and utilities - are both quite stable in price and have good dividends. In my view, such shares have a better overall return in the long term.
4
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imagem de perfil
I have two questions: have you really been on the stock market since 1995? And is the 4 per year return correct?
1
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Mega. Finally a portfolio that goes back a very long time and where you can see various crashes. One of the best here!
1
@Divident_e staying power pays off!
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