$50,000 In SVOL ETF Will Allow You To QUIT Your Job!

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$50,000 In SVOL ETF Will Allow You To QUIT Your Job!

*I am not a financial advisor, I make these videos for fun! This communication/content is for informational purposes only and is not intended as personalized investment advice, tax, accounting or legal advice, as an offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell, or as an endorsement of any company, security, fund, or other securities or non-securities offering. This communication should not be relied upon for purposes of transacting in securities or other investment vehicles.

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#Dividends #dividendinvesting #SVOL
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I have a 3 fund portfolio consisting of 33% S&P, 33% Total stock, and 33% international. I feel a need to focus on complete growth so I went 100% stocks, but does the SP500 and TSM overlap too much to make sense holding both? However I’ve been in the red for a month now. I work hard for my money, so investing is making me a nervous sad wreck. I don’t know if I should sell everything, sit and just wait but watching my portfolio dwindle away is such an eye -sore.

AshtonGrace
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My spouse and I are diversifying our long-term investment portfolio by adding various stocks and ETFs. We've allocated $220k to begin with, focusing on inflation-indexed bonds and companies with strong cash flows. I think the current market presents a good opportunity for long-term gains, but I'm also interested in learning ways to make short-term profits.

azieltobias
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Not sure I did it correctly but, if VIX futures are trading at 17 and explodes to 50, that means if only 25% of AUM is exposed to VIX, then that could be a 200% loss or 75% loss to the AUM. The reason I chose 50 as the price of VIX during a crash is that is where the long calls are bought. There is gamma that can help offset the loss when VIX is crashing towards 50. Also, if the VIX futures to long call spread is ratio'd, then that will help as well. Volatility products need to be viewed with a lot of caution (e.g., Feb. 2018)

Trader_D
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The price and dividends will both erode over time, doesn't mean it won't give you a decent total return but you have to factor it in. I'm going to sit this out for a couple years but will keep watching and learning what to expect from this and the yield max funds. The yields are attractive as long as the capital doesn't erode at too fast a rate.

seanmcbride
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I use SVOL like an Annuity to cover my expenses. I realize over time the "Price" will decline but with the very high yield covering my expenses, SVOL is what an Annuity should be. Very High payments with some slow decline of principle.

sdrsa
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I’m a huge fan of svol. We have 10k invested. We 1000% reinvest all docs of the etf back into arbor realty, ares cap, O and schd. This etf is an atm machine but I’m not sold on its long term approach. Time will tell and as long as the stock stays over 20 and the divs stay over .30 I’m in

shaneomack
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I have a handful. I wouldn't go all out in it as there do seem like some risks. But, if you need (or want) income, it seems like a pretty smart choice.

AnyangU
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I have SVOL as a secondary position in my ROTH IRA and taxable brokerage account. I'll continue to evaluate over time and hoard those juicy dividends.

steamroller
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Remember to factor in taxes on the dividends. You could be paying 15%-37% income taxes on the dividends. Maybe use a Roth IRA, not a retail brokerage account. There are no taxes on gains or withdrawals (with exceptions) on interest and dividend income or capital gains. See a tax specialist for your situation.

stephenhobbs
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9.2% annual total return over life, no retirement here

joemeyer
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You can buffer your downside exposure by buying/selling call VIX options along side of the SVOL strategy.

urayys
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I mean, i only need 13.5k per year to cover my expenses since i own my home outright so 80, 000$ in svol would technically allow me to become fianacially free in a sense but id still have to work for things i want like a new vehicle or vacation and so on.

johnybravo
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try having an up to date SVOL total returns as this is not +16% my friend its more -3% YoY

PureEvolution
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Can you try to test this: svol vs schd (dividends plus withdrawl of 2% of fund value at january first every year??)

brunomanco
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What? Let's look at this simply. Svol pays 17 percent. 50 000 dollars invested in svol would be 8 1/2 thousand in dividends per year. There is also risk associated with svol, a loss it could not recover from, and the risk goes up if the ETF is held long term.

davidh
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$50k only buy you 2200 shares and Svol is paying. .30 cent dividend a month so you only retiring on $660 a month

thepersistenttrader
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Too risky for me. It would surprise me if after 5 or 10 years the investor wouldn´t have had a major loss on the share price of
Let some office REITs fall really hard and then we all should be able to buy juicy dividends backed by real hard assets !!!
But I understand SVOL is very time will tell us if this ETF is a good or bad bet !!!

doktorpt
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Click bait title as usual. Should say “$50k in SVOL will allow you to QUIT your job…….in 30 years…..”

Ilikecheese
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clickbait! Svol pays 17%, so 50, 000l will give you 8500 per year in dividends. That's hardly enough to retire on.

davidh
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