VTI
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VTI
What are the pros and cons of owning VTI verses SPY? Aren't they essentially the same thing. I have an extra 800 dollers and want to put it into my roth and then into a nice stock tracking index.
Thank You!
Thank You!
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Re: VTI
Was just scouring thru scottrade research..
Re: VTI
SPY tracks the S&P 500 index which contains, as the name suggests, 500 stocks.
VTI currently tracks the MSCI US Broad Market Index, which contains about 3,300 stocks. Basically, all of the 500 big stocks from above, plus some mid-cap stocks and lots of small-cap stocks.
Bob
VTI currently tracks the MSCI US Broad Market Index, which contains about 3,300 stocks. Basically, all of the 500 big stocks from above, plus some mid-cap stocks and lots of small-cap stocks.
Bob
- webslinger
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Re: VTI
Agree with the above posts.
A better Vanguard ETF comparison would be VOO which tracks the S&P500 as does SPY. VOO's ER is 3 basis points lower last I looked.
A better Vanguard ETF comparison would be VOO which tracks the S&P500 as does SPY. VOO's ER is 3 basis points lower last I looked.
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Re: VTI
I think the $800 would have a better home in an index fund over the ETF. No need to arbitrarily pick a limit price at which to purchase the shares. And you'll get the entire $800, since ETF shares can only be purchased in whole shares, which will leave some of that money in your sweep account.
- nisiprius
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Re: VTI
You should read the prospectus, but if you aren't going to do that, at the very least you should go to the descriptive web pages. You REALLY should take the time to do that much, really. I mean really. How much time would you spend on some other $800 purchase? I'm going to give you the links and some explanation, but PLEASE, take the time to click on them and poke around the websites a bit and get an idea of how companies go about describing their ETFs and mutual funds.
Read the descriptions for yourself. Don't let someone else (like me) do it for you. Would you let someone else test-drive a car for you, or try on shoes for you?
https://personal.vanguard.com/us/funds/ ... IntExt=INT
https://www.spdrs.com/product/fund.seam?ticker=spy
OK,here's the Cliff's Notes version. SPY is the biggest, oldest, and most popular ETF that tracks the S&P 500 index. There are many other ETFS and mutual funds that also track it. VOO is Vanguard's S&P 500 ETF. Schwab has an S&P 500 mutual fund, SWPPX, that you can buy with a $100 minimum purchase.
The S&P 500 is a cap-weighted index of 500 stocks, not exactly the 500 biggest, but 500 that S&P deems to be "leading companies in leading industries." For a very long time it has been taken as a proxy for "the stock market," and, by market capitalization (dollar value) it actually accounts for 80% of the stock market and actually is pretty close to the total stock market.
As interest in small companies grew, people wanted indexes that were more comprehensive than the S&P 500 and that really tried to track the total market, including the smaller companies. As electronic technology improved, it became possible to create such indexes, and then to create index funds that tracked them. One such index is the MSCI US Broad Market Index. Mutual funds and ETFs that track such indexes tend to be called "total stock market" funds. VTI is Vanguard's "total stock market" ETF.
SPY and VTI could be called fundamentally the same in the sense that they approximate the whole market and don't single out specific sectors or categories. But VTI is a closer approximation to the total market than SPY is.
Theoretically, the reason most investors would want to hold an S&P 500 fund or ETF is to hold "the stock market," and if that's the reason for wanting it, a total market fund or ETF like VTI does a better job. The S&P 500 funds and ETFs give you 80% of the market; VTI gives you 99.5%. In practice, though, the difference between the two has been amazingly small.
Any total stock market index ETF or mutual fund, or any S&P 500 ETF or mutual fund, would be a suitable "core" holding for the domestic stock portion of your portfolio, as long as the expense ratio isn't too high. But you should at least be thinking about holding international stocks and bonds as well--maybe not now, but someday.
Read the descriptions for yourself. Don't let someone else (like me) do it for you. Would you let someone else test-drive a car for you, or try on shoes for you?
https://personal.vanguard.com/us/funds/ ... IntExt=INT
https://www.spdrs.com/product/fund.seam?ticker=spy
OK,here's the Cliff's Notes version. SPY is the biggest, oldest, and most popular ETF that tracks the S&P 500 index. There are many other ETFS and mutual funds that also track it. VOO is Vanguard's S&P 500 ETF. Schwab has an S&P 500 mutual fund, SWPPX, that you can buy with a $100 minimum purchase.
The S&P 500 is a cap-weighted index of 500 stocks, not exactly the 500 biggest, but 500 that S&P deems to be "leading companies in leading industries." For a very long time it has been taken as a proxy for "the stock market," and, by market capitalization (dollar value) it actually accounts for 80% of the stock market and actually is pretty close to the total stock market.
As interest in small companies grew, people wanted indexes that were more comprehensive than the S&P 500 and that really tried to track the total market, including the smaller companies. As electronic technology improved, it became possible to create such indexes, and then to create index funds that tracked them. One such index is the MSCI US Broad Market Index. Mutual funds and ETFs that track such indexes tend to be called "total stock market" funds. VTI is Vanguard's "total stock market" ETF.
SPY and VTI could be called fundamentally the same in the sense that they approximate the whole market and don't single out specific sectors or categories. But VTI is a closer approximation to the total market than SPY is.
Theoretically, the reason most investors would want to hold an S&P 500 fund or ETF is to hold "the stock market," and if that's the reason for wanting it, a total market fund or ETF like VTI does a better job. The S&P 500 funds and ETFs give you 80% of the market; VTI gives you 99.5%. In practice, though, the difference between the two has been amazingly small.
Any total stock market index ETF or mutual fund, or any S&P 500 ETF or mutual fund, would be a suitable "core" holding for the domestic stock portion of your portfolio, as long as the expense ratio isn't too high. But you should at least be thinking about holding international stocks and bonds as well--maybe not now, but someday.
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- asset_chaos
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Re: VTI
UpstateNY86,
You're almost there. Look at all the investment decisions you've done right so far. You've had the discipline to save money: great, keep it up; you're ahead of the game. You've opened a Roth to put your savings into: again a smart decision. And you've figured out that the surest way to obtain the rewards of low term investment in businesses is to invest in the stock market is through a low-cost, highly diversified stock index fund; many sources can articulate the reasons for that better than I can. You're most of the way to a great savings/investment plan and eventual financial independence. Go the rest of the way and learn just enough about the particular index fund choices you face. The chief reason for this is, I believe, so that you sufficiently understand your investment and reason for making it that so that no matter when the stock market soars or stumbles, you'll be able to shrug your shoulders and stay the course.
I don't know where you are in life or what other assets you have outside the money you're putting into your Roth, but I'll go out on a limb and guess that you're somewhat early in life. In which case I'll also suggest investing in some bonds as well as the stocks. At some point in life everyone will need a significant allocation to bonds. I suggest that it's a good idea to have some bonds early in life to experience their performance over many market conditions in order to emotionally assimilate their use and misuse into one's core investing understanding. This may also aid in finally coming to understand one's own true risk tolerance. 10 or 20% at the very least, just to experience the full spectrum of investing.
You're almost there. Look at all the investment decisions you've done right so far. You've had the discipline to save money: great, keep it up; you're ahead of the game. You've opened a Roth to put your savings into: again a smart decision. And you've figured out that the surest way to obtain the rewards of low term investment in businesses is to invest in the stock market is through a low-cost, highly diversified stock index fund; many sources can articulate the reasons for that better than I can. You're most of the way to a great savings/investment plan and eventual financial independence. Go the rest of the way and learn just enough about the particular index fund choices you face. The chief reason for this is, I believe, so that you sufficiently understand your investment and reason for making it that so that no matter when the stock market soars or stumbles, you'll be able to shrug your shoulders and stay the course.
I don't know where you are in life or what other assets you have outside the money you're putting into your Roth, but I'll go out on a limb and guess that you're somewhat early in life. In which case I'll also suggest investing in some bonds as well as the stocks. At some point in life everyone will need a significant allocation to bonds. I suggest that it's a good idea to have some bonds early in life to experience their performance over many market conditions in order to emotionally assimilate their use and misuse into one's core investing understanding. This may also aid in finally coming to understand one's own true risk tolerance. 10 or 20% at the very least, just to experience the full spectrum of investing.
Regards, |
|
Guy
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Re: VTI
Thanks for the replies. I have done a lot of research within the last 16 hours and understand the difference. I think vti is the proper move for me. The question I ask myself is how do these other expensive mutual funds get any business? People just not caring or paying attention.
Re: VTI
UpstateNY86 wrote:Thanks for the replies. I have done a lot of research within the last 16 hours and understand the difference. I think vti is the proper move for me. The question I ask myself is how do these other expensive mutual funds get any business? People just not caring or paying attention.
Marketing dollars spent to exploit the human emotions of fear and greed. It really is that simple.
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Re: VTI
I know I want to help my uncles with this advice but do not want to look like I am prying. I know they both have at least 300k in funds. What a shame.
Re: VTI
There are quite a few books recommending low-cost index funds and ETFs (many you can no doubt find referenced in the Boglehead Wiki). Perhaps you might find one, peruse it, then pass it along to your uncles.UpstateNY86 wrote:I know I want to help my uncles with this advice but do not want to look like I am prying. I know they both have at least 300k in funds. What a shame.
Re: VTI
It is difficult to advise others unless they ask you for advice, but perhaps you could give them a book something like the "Bogleheads Guide" to investing or the one on retirement. That is as far as I would go. Each one must decide on their own.UpstateNY86 wrote:I know I want to help my uncles with this advice but do not want to look like I am prying. I know they both have at least 300k in funds. What a shame.
By the way, Vanguard has lots of low-cost mutual funds, and with $10,000 many cost the same as ETFs and I prefer them.
Re: VTI
And ignorance and peer pressure. There are plenty of people who fall like 9 pins when given a forceful "pitch". Especially when the pitch is from the grandson of your parent's best friends for 60+ years, and you live in a tight community where you buy CutCo knives and Avon products to "help so and so's newly graduated kid get a start in life." If you don't buy, it's gossip, gossip, gossip.STC wrote:
Marketing dollars spent to exploit the human emotions of fear and greed. It really is that simple.
I married into that, and if I hadn't, I would have never dreamed such situations existed. I particularly *love* it when the product being touted is from some respected mucky-muck at your church. Not.
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Re: VTI
I removed a contentious exchange from the thread. As a reminder,
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- Cocoa Beach Bum
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Re: VTI
Turns out OP would have achieved a higher return with lower risk (i.e. standard deviation) by choosing SPY over VTI at the end of 2012:
https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/fun ... 5g9iQkiBGA
https://www.portfoliovisualizer.com/fun ... 5g9iQkiBGA
“How did you go bankrupt?" "Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”
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Re: VTI
VTI tracks the CRSP US Total Market Index.CyberBob wrote: ↑Thu Dec 27, 2012 2:30 pm SPY tracks the S&P 500 index which contains, as the name suggests, 500 stocks.
VTI currently tracks the MSCI US Broad Market Index, which contains about 3,300 stocks. Basically, all of the 500 big stocks from above, plus some mid-cap stocks and lots of small-cap stocks.
Bob
Broad market indexes (or "indices" if we're into the original Latin plural) aren't total market indexes as they leave out many micro-cap stocks.
- Cocoa Beach Bum
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Re: VTI
I don't think there were any ETFs back in 2012, when the quoted post was made, which tracked your definition of "total market indexes".CloudConsulting wrote: ↑Tue Mar 05, 2024 8:52 amVTI tracks the CRSP US Total Market Index.CyberBob wrote: ↑Thu Dec 27, 2012 2:30 pm SPY tracks the S&P 500 index which contains, as the name suggests, 500 stocks.
VTI currently tracks the MSCI US Broad Market Index, which contains about 3,300 stocks. Basically, all of the 500 big stocks from above, plus some mid-cap stocks and lots of small-cap stocks.
Bob
Broad market indexes (or "indices" if we're into the original Latin plural) aren't total market indexes as they leave out many micro-cap stocks.
“How did you go bankrupt?" "Two ways. Gradually, then suddenly.”
- ruralavalon
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Re: VTI
They are very similar, and have had very similar performance. Portfolio Visualizer, 2002-2024UpstateNY86 wrote: ↑Thu Dec 27, 2012 2:21 pm What are the pros and cons of owning VTI verses SPY? Aren't they essentially the same thing. I have an extra 800 dollers and want to put it into my roth and then into a nice stock tracking index.
Thank You!
Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) ER 0.03% is more diversified and has a lower expense ratio than SPDR® S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) ER 0.095%.
"Everything should be as simple as it is, but not simpler." - Albert Einstein |
Wiki article link: Bogleheads® investment philosophy
Re: VTI
SPY was launched in 1993. It was the first ETF in the US.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SPDR_S%26P_500_Trust_ETF
VTI was launched in 2001.
Meet my pet, Peeve, who loves to convert non-acronyms into acronyms: FED, ROTH, CASH, IVY, ...
Re: VTI
If you look at a chart of their performance over the long-term, they are practically identical. Over 5 years, VTI up 79.07% SPY up 85.09%.Recently, SPY has been performing slightly better than VTI. I think that is because SPY has fractionally a larger exposure to the magnificent seven.
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Re: VTI
This topic has run it's course and is locked. Note that it was bumped from twelve years ago, and a contentious discussion has been removed.
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