Two pieces of advice:
For passive investors in ETFs, check out canadiancouchpotato.com. While it's Canadian in name, it offers lots of advice that is relevant to Americans and its model portfolios use Vanguard, for example, which is also listed in the U.S., often at cheaper MERs. I'm 25, 100% equity portfolio.
Personally, I invest with wealthsimple.com, a robo-advisor, and I would recommend it to anyone who thinks/acts irrationally with their money. Having the chief value investor at UofT's Rotman School selecting my funds is worth a slightly higher MER to me. There are a number of robo-advisors in the U.S.
What I discovered reading canadiancouchpotato.com was that while ETF investing is simple in principle, there is a lot of nuance that I didn't fully understand. Unless you have a portfolio that has been vetted by someone with a good deal of knowledge, I would be wary of moving forward. ETFs can have all sorts of weird structures, fees, and hedging that can mess up your allocations and risk profiles.
Here's my portfolio:
17.4 VTI
14.9 IEFA
14.2 PHE.B
13.9 PDF
10.4 IEMG
9.5 XIC
9.2 PBD
8.8 PHR
1.7% CASH
Bonus advice: set up automatic contributions from your crediting account into your investing account. I transfer $25 weekly. And make sure to maximize contributions into your most tax-efficient accounts first. In Canada, that's the TFSA.
For passive investors in ETFs, check out canadiancouchpotato.com. While it's Canadian in name, it offers lots of advice that is relevant to Americans and its model portfolios use Vanguard, for example, which is also listed in the U.S., often at cheaper MERs. I'm 25, 100% equity portfolio.
Personally, I invest with wealthsimple.com, a robo-advisor, and I would recommend it to anyone who thinks/acts irrationally with their money. Having the chief value investor at UofT's Rotman School selecting my funds is worth a slightly higher MER to me. There are a number of robo-advisors in the U.S.
What I discovered reading canadiancouchpotato.com was that while ETF investing is simple in principle, there is a lot of nuance that I didn't fully understand. Unless you have a portfolio that has been vetted by someone with a good deal of knowledge, I would be wary of moving forward. ETFs can have all sorts of weird structures, fees, and hedging that can mess up your allocations and risk profiles.
Here's my portfolio:
17.4 VTI
14.9 IEFA
14.2 PHE.B
13.9 PDF
10.4 IEMG
9.5 XIC
9.2 PBD
8.8 PHR
1.7% CASH
Bonus advice: set up automatic contributions from your crediting account into your investing account. I transfer $25 weekly. And make sure to maximize contributions into your most tax-efficient accounts first. In Canada, that's the TFSA.