That is what's happening under the hood. Apple is trading at $250 so if you invest €100 in a pie it will buy some small % of one share in Apple.There are some online brokers who allow fractional share purchases. This would solve the issue of a young investor needing to diversify small amounts.
But for new/young investors just starting out with a few hundred euro per month, it's impractical and costly to split small sums between many different companies. It would take many years to buy 50 companies if buying one per month.
You can find this out since there is also an equal-weight S&P500 index:What will your strategy yield? So what has an equal distribution among the top 20/25 companies yielded historically? Is it more or less than the S&P500 index? If you don’t know, why have you come to your conclusion?
You can find this out since there is also an equal-weight S&P500 index:
S&P Equal Weight vs. Cap Weight
Looks more or less the same in the graphs on that page?Very interesting.
And I assume that the Equal Weight is less volatile?
I stand corrected, I am surprised that the equal weighted index tracks the cap weighted one so closely, albeit not so much recently due to the AI bubble (did I say that out loud?!).You can find this out since there is also an equal-weight S&P500 index:
S&P Equal Weight vs. Cap Weight
I tried similar with the Trading 212 practice account by taking the top 15 from the S&P, top 15 from emerging markets etf and top 15 from EU. Currently this practice pie is returning 27% after a single bulk payment of pretend money about 9 months ago. The FTSE All World is returning 25.25% YTD.Hard to say any one method is the best, depends.
For me, I want to be risk averse and am quite content with matching the return of the big indices. The best solution to do so is typically ETFs, but they are taxed awkwardly and unfairly in Ireland. So, I set up a pie on 212 that mimics the top 50 or so of the S&P index with the weightings adjusted accordingly. So for example, if Apple are say 12% of the S&P 500, I give them 12 divided by the sum of the top 50 weightings, thus they come out at about 13%, which is what I set them to in my pie.
Do this for all of the top 50 and you have a diversified portfolio that closely mimics the returns of the S&P500 and ETFs that track it, with just 33% plain old CGT on disposal to worry about.
You can set the pie to always try to rebalance to your given weightings, or to continually split your future inputs as per the weightings each time. I go with the former as I believe that best aligns with the tracked index, although I’m not sure it matters much.
You're not timing the market when you allocate more to the underweight stocks in your portfolio. You're restoring the same diversification level that you set at the outset, and reducing the volatility that comes from being overly concentrated in the stocks that have increased in value.you can only rebalance via future investments without triggering tax payments and this approach encourges constant tinkering and market timing which can cost in the long run.
the problem is it doesn't keep up over time, as old and new companies change in the s and p right?Hard to say any one method is the best, depends.
For me, I want to be risk averse and am quite content with matching the return of the big indices. The best solution to do so is typically ETFs, but they are taxed awkwardly and unfairly in Ireland. So, I set up a pie on 212 that mimics the top 50 or so of the S&P index with the weightings adjusted accordingly. So for example, if Apple are say 12% of the S&P 500, I give them 12 divided by the sum of the top 50 weightings, thus they come out at about 13%, which is what I set them to in my pie.
Do this for all of the top 50 and you have a diversified portfolio that closely mimics the returns of the S&P500 and ETFs that track it, with just 33% plain old CGT on disposal to worry about.
You can set the pie to always try to rebalance to your given weightings, or to continually split your future inputs as per the weightings each time. I go with the former as I believe that best aligns with the tracked index, although I’m not sure it matters much.
exactly the issue is over time your pie will become more and more out of date or you'll be forced to sell/tinker aboutI tried similar with the Trading 212 practice account by taking the top 15 from the S&P, top 15 from emerging markets etf and top 15 from EU. Currently this practice pie is returning 27% after a single bulk payment of pretend money about 9 months ago. The FTSE All World is returning 25.25% YTD.
But I opted to buy ETFs directly in the hope, rather than the expectation, a future gov will reduce the tax and scrap the DD. The pies are capped at around 50 stocks, you can only rebalance via future investments without triggering tax payments and this approach encourges constant tinkering and market timing which can cost in the long run.
Rebalancing using the Trading212 pie feature would likely trigger a taxable event funds are surely bought and sold? I've never used it for this reason.
Also T212 does not currently let you transfer, so they could in theory wack up the fees and you're a sitting duckHonestly I can’t think of any significant downsides. I don’t think other brokers offer it; I was previously using Trade Republic and actually switched to 212 because of this “pie” feature.
Not sure about that. Even set to “rebalance”, it states that this feature adds less of your payments in to over-weighted stocks and adds more to under-weighted. So it is only buying, not selling, thus CGT on disposals don’t come into it. You can then only dispose manually when desired.
Nevertheless, as long as an app gives me the ability to export all transactions to excel, I can work my magic.
It's quite a nightmare to transfer out of Trade Republic too I believe?Also T212 does not currently let you transfer, so they could in theory wack up the fees and you're a sitting duck
As a broker that's a considerable disadvantage compared to IBKR/Trade republic/degiro and so on
My T212 app has an option for transfering the portfolio.Also T212 does not currently let you transfer, so they could in theory wack up the fees and you're a sitting duck
As a broker that's a considerable disadvantage compared to IBKR/Trade republic/degiro and so on
Is it possible to transfer fractions of shares from one broker to another?
Another reason for holding fewer shares in your portfolio. Transferring 10 is a lot less work than transferring 50 , unless it's automated.
You can only transfer whole shares, fractional share transfers aren't supported. If you want to move the remaining fractional shares value, you will need to sell and withdraw the cash.
What is a portfolio transfer?
This is a feature that allows you to transfer your shares to and from other brokers without having to close your positions. Notes 90% of all users have the feature available. The full release...helpcentre.trading212.com
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