Hey mate, loved the video! I'm pretty new to this stuff so i was just wondering if when you do the returns (1Y) or (5Y), are the dividends included in these yearly returns or is it an additional value?
Hey, glad you enjoyed it! The returns include the capital gains and the dividends, less the management/transaction fees associated with investing in the fund. I figured this gives a better representation of the "net" returns investors would have had. Hope this helps! The data is all over on the Vanguard website, I used the data as at 31 July - if you go to this webpage and change the graph to a table, the numbers should be the same for the High Growth Fund for example (sometimes they adjust in hindsight): www.vanguard.com.au/personal/invest-with-us/fund?portId=8134&tab=performance Below are the actual words from Vanguard on the returns: "Returns assume reinvestment of all income distributions, and do not take into account of any management cost rebates. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Returns for periods longer than 12 months are annualised. Total returns are calculated after allowing for management and transaction costs."
Hi Brent, love your videos. Would be great to see a video with the calculation of the amount of tax paid due to CGT passed on by ETFs. Interested in comparisons between U.S. and Australian ETFs for example NDQ vs VGT (Note: this is not capital gains related to selling but only the one triggered by the ETF themselves). Thank you!!!
Your comparison with Australian super is wrong, you should be comparing investment costs with their Australian Shares fund. Which costed 0.23% for the last financial year.
Heya! You're right, I should have been more specific in the video. I used a reference graph from AustralianSuper's website, based on the fixed and variable costs of their Balanced Investment Option. www.australiansuper.com/compare-us/fees-and-costs
Those that sold their Bitcoin at the lows didn't do their research. Those that sold don't know what Bitcoin is, What SHA256 is, How mining works, Seed words, Time stamps, The halving, Read the white paper, Seed words, Hot wallets, Cold wallets, Lightning network, The Bitcoin network, Or simply just what money is. Then compare Bitcoin to ETFs and you'll see that ETFs are trash.
Hi Brent , just an idea - please kill the gym club music- it’s really distracting - if you are listening via headphones…
Not only that , I have God dam ADHD , love to trade but I can't stop focusing on the music ....... Thank God for subtitles
Thanks for the feedback! I'll keep it in mind for future videos
@@BrentColeman don't mind the music but at a much lower volume, great content , and good information, been a sub for a while keep it up !
@@BrentColemanmay be lower music volume to -22 to -25
Your video is excellent and very informative
Thank you ❤
Agree! Can’t stand it. Unlistenable!
Hey mate, loved the video! I'm pretty new to this stuff so i was just wondering if when you do the returns (1Y) or (5Y), are the dividends included in these yearly returns or is it an additional value?
Hey, glad you enjoyed it! The returns include the capital gains and the dividends, less the management/transaction fees associated with investing in the fund. I figured this gives a better representation of the "net" returns investors would have had. Hope this helps! The data is all over on the Vanguard website, I used the data as at 31 July - if you go to this webpage and change the graph to a table, the numbers should be the same for the High Growth Fund for example (sometimes they adjust in hindsight): www.vanguard.com.au/personal/invest-with-us/fund?portId=8134&tab=performance
Below are the actual words from Vanguard on the returns:
"Returns assume reinvestment of all income distributions, and do not take into account of any management cost rebates. Past performance is not an indication of future performance. Returns for periods longer than 12 months are annualised. Total returns are calculated after allowing for management and transaction costs."
Most of my money is in ETFs. But I do have a small allocation to individual stocks that I have a strong conviction in. Strong foundation first.
Hi Brent, love your videos. Would be great to see a video with the calculation of the amount of tax paid due to CGT passed on by ETFs. Interested in comparisons between U.S. and Australian ETFs for example NDQ vs VGT (Note: this is not capital gains related to selling but only the one triggered by the ETF themselves). Thank you!!!
Thanks for watching! Will keep in mind for future video ideas!
Thanks
very good
Thank you! Cheers!
Your comparison with Australian super is wrong, you should be comparing investment costs with their Australian Shares fund. Which costed 0.23% for the last financial year.
Heya! You're right, I should have been more specific in the video. I used a reference graph from AustralianSuper's website, based on the fixed and variable costs of their Balanced Investment Option. www.australiansuper.com/compare-us/fees-and-costs
Buy Bitcoin, etfs are trash
All comes down to investor preference and risk tolerance. Many would have cut their losses on Bitcoin during the lows over the past couple years.
Those that sold their Bitcoin at the lows didn't do their research.
Those that sold don't know what Bitcoin is,
What SHA256 is,
How mining works,
Seed words,
Time stamps,
The halving,
Read the white paper,
Seed words,
Hot wallets,
Cold wallets,
Lightning network,
The Bitcoin network,
Or simply just what money is.
Then compare Bitcoin to ETFs and you'll see that ETFs are trash.