Qqq is great if you’re day trading, taking a short term position, or need to write options on it Does that make sens to hold those two from a diversification perspective as all those stock are in the us only For most buy and hold investors, qqqm makes more sense
Kimmy Kimochi aka KimmyKimochi aka kimmy_kimochi aka yummykimmy Nude
If your qqq is in a taxable account, just leave it
Instead, buy qqqm for your next purchase.
Context most of the content on the web would have comments on qqq that fall into the following two category qqq is heavily tilted toward large growth stocks and you should look for ways to diversify. Be aware the broader us stock market (any s&p 500 fund or any total us stock market index fund) is already close to 30% concentrated in the tech sector The overlap and correlation between voo and qqq are already very high I believe in tech and i am thinking of only investing in qqq, as i anticipate the historical trend of more good than bad years to persist
In challenging times, voo's resilience provides a cushion, but qqq shines even brighter. Will spy, voo, qqq, etc ever do stocks splits This might be a dumb question but is there a possibility that these etf’s might ever do a stock split Markets are still reaching all time highs and these stocks are getting more and more expensive to purchase
There's no requirement about what sort of company is on the index, other than that.
I am just starting now to understand how to invest my money better and i wanted to know more about etfs as they seem to be better for the long term (i talk about 5 to 10 years as i'm still young) I've looked around and it seems that both qqq and voo are pretty good Are etfs actually good for the long term Should i invest in both or just one of them
Even though qqq seems to be more tech driven, vti has pretty much all of the qqq stocks Does that mean that does two are significantly overlapping