I’ve made allocations and choices based on the posts in the forum and advise in the wiki. I would greatly appreciate it if you can sanity check my portfolio and provide any advice / comments / suggestions.
Emergency Funds – 100K (~14% allocation)
I am aware that the emergency fund is higher for my age and needs – but this helps me sleep well at night.
Held in Short Term Treasury Bill ETFs (50k in TFLO and 50k in SGOV) paying 4%+ dividends and exempt from CA state income taxes. Monthly dividends are used to re-balance with contributions (see table below) in taxable account.
Debt – $0
Tax Filing Status – Single
Tax Rate – 27.28% Federal, 8.63% State
State of Residence – California
I was fortunate enough to find a high paying job in big tech last year – my rent is ~$3,500 but housing is too expensive here and I don't see myself living here for 10+ years.
Age – 37
Desired Asset Allocation – 90% Stock, 10% Bonds
Overall Portfolio Size – 740K
Current Retirement Assets:
401K - ~500K (~68% of the portfolio)
100% allocation to Vanguard 2065 TDF (90% stocks, 10% bonds)
I have been able to take advantage of the mega-backdoor Roth contribution through current employer and will be maxing out the entire $70,000 in 2025.
Roth IRA – 80K (~11% of the portfolio)
100% allocated to Vanguard Mega Cap Growth Index Fund ETF (MGK)
Maxed out $7,000 for 2025 already through backdoor contributions.
I am aware that this is a very US, Large Cap, tech heavy and goes against Bogleheads advice. I plan on moving this to 2065 TDF fund as well, but I might not do it for another 2-3 years.
HSA – 18K (~2.5% of the portfolio)
100% allocated to BRK.B – This is due to my laziness. California treats HSA accounts as a taxable account; Berkshire Hathaway doesn’t pay any dividends and is diverse enough. Helps me save some time during tax season.
Taxable Account – 40K (~5% of the portfolio and growing)
Code: Select all
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| Asset Class | Target Allocation | Primary ETF | Tax Loss Partner | Note |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| U.S. Large-Cap Growth | 25% | VUG (0.04%) | SCHG (0.04%) | Split SP500 into Growth + Value for |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+ better tax loss harvesting opportunities. |
| U.S. Large-Cap Value | 25% | VTV (0.04%) | SCHV (0.04%) | |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| U.S. Small-Cap | 20% | AVUV (0.25%) | DFSV (0.31%) | |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+-------------------------------------------+
| Int'l Developed Market | 20% | VEA (0.06%) | SCHF (0.06%) | Split VXUS into Developed + Emerging for |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+ better tax loss harvesting opportunities |
| Int'l Emerging Market | 10% | VWO (0.08%) | SCHE (0.11%) | |
+------------------------+-------------------+--------------+------------------+-------------------------------------------+
I typically re-balance with contributions every month and harvest the losses once a year during December (or significant market event).
Checking Account - ~5k (FDLXX – Fidelity Treasury Money Market fund)
Pay stub lands in Fidelity Cash account that I manually convert into treasury money market. I’ve been receiving 4%+ dividends, and it’s exempt from California taxes.
Questions:
- Does the taxable allocation look good or am I making it too complex? (I enjoy doing it and don’t find it as a chore.)
- Am I missing something/overlooking obvious?
- Should I be doing anything else, say to optimize my portfolio, update allocation, tax situation etc.?