$SCHD
Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETFYear-end portfolio review — full breakdown and changes
Year-end changes: eliminated all individual stocks (was 25% of portfolio). Too much tracking for minimal benefit. New allocation is pure 3-fund. Simpler, cheaper, better.
Building a dividend portfolio from scratch today
O is my largest single stock position. Monthly payments, 30+ years of dividend increases. The 5.2% yield at my cost basis was hard to pass up.
My asset allocation glide path into retirement
Sequence of returns risk: two portfolios, same 30-year average return. Bad returns in years 1-5 vs 26-30. Portfolio A runs out of money. Portfolio B doesn't. Same average, different outcomes.
Monthly dividend portfolio update — Q1 2026
DRIP decision: I take cash now. At $2k/month in dividends, I prefer to deploy it strategically rather than auto-reinvest proportionally.
How long before I see meaningful gains?
Automatic investing tip: set it to invest every payday. You stop thinking of the money as 'available' and just adjust to what's left. Best financial hack I've found.
First $500k — sharing the allocation that got me here
High income, low NW: making $380k/year, net worth only $180k at 38. Lifestyle inflation destroyed the last decade. Now max every account, live on $90k, invest the rest.
New position in $O — my thesis
High yield traps I've fallen for: T before they cut, MO before pricing power eroded. Lesson: if yield is above 7%, there's usually a reason.
Portfolio at 55: am I on track for retirement at 65?
10-year 3-fund update: started with $12,000. Invested $1,500/month for 10 years. Current value: $378,000. Total contributions: $192,000. Market did $186,000 of the heavy lifting.
Should I use Robinhood, Fidelity, or Vanguard?
Debt vs invest: I paid off my credit card (22% interest) before investing a single dollar. That 22% guaranteed return beats anything the stock market offers.
The mega backdoor Roth — is your plan eligible?
Social Security delay math: breakeven from 62 to 70 is about age 80. If you expect to live past 85, delaying to 70 almost certainly wins. Plus survivor benefit matters if married.
401k vs IRA vs taxable — where to put extra savings
Sequence of returns risk: two portfolios, same 30-year average return. Bad returns in years 1-5 vs 26-30. Portfolio A runs out of money. Portfolio B doesn't. Same average, different outcomes.
Catch-up contributions: maximizing your last decade
Healthcare bridge 60-65: budgeting $1,200/month for ACA marketplace plan. Income management to stay under subsidy cliffs can save $8,000+/year in premiums.
The dividend snowball effect is real — my 10 year chart
DRIP decision: I take cash now. At $2k/month in dividends, I prefer to deploy it strategically rather than auto-reinvest proportionally.
The role of cash/stable value in early retirement
Backdoor Roth for high earners: contribute to traditional IRA → wait a few days → convert to Roth. Watch out for the pro-rata rule if you have other IRA balances.
Post-divorce financial rebuild — starting over at 41
Portfolio: 45% VTI, 20% VXUS, 15% BND, 10% individual stocks (AAPL, MSFT, NVDA), 10% alternatives. 34 years old. $320k invested. Planning to retire at 57. Am I on track?
Dividend aristocrats: still relevant in 2026?
DRIP decision: I take cash now. At $2k/month in dividends, I prefer to deploy it strategically rather than auto-reinvest proportionally.
DRIP strategy — reinvesting vs taking cash
SCHD is the cleanest dividend growth ETF. 10-year dividend CAGR of ~12%, low expense ratio, quality screen on underlying holdings.
SCHD vs VYM vs JEPI — which dividend ETF wins?
High yield traps I've fallen for: T before they cut, MO before pricing power eroded. Lesson: if yield is above 7%, there's usually a reason.
What does a good starter portfolio actually look like?
Started 6 months ago with $2,000, investing $400/month into VOO. Currently at $4,847. Compounding hasn't really kicked in yet but I understand the concept. Staying the course.
Made my first trade: bought $AAPL. Good or bad?
The thing that finally clicked for me: I'm not buying 'the stock market,' I'm buying ownership in thousands of companies. Market dips become sales, not disasters.
New position in $O — my thesis
High yield traps I've fallen for: T before they cut, MO before pricing power eroded. Lesson: if yield is above 7%, there's usually a reason.
My dividend income hit $2,000/month — full breakdown
SCHD is the cleanest dividend growth ETF. 10-year dividend CAGR of ~12%, low expense ratio, quality screen on underlying holdings.
RMD planning: strategies I'm using before 73
Sequence of returns risk: two portfolios, same 30-year average return. Bad returns in years 1-5 vs 26-30. Portfolio A runs out of money. Portfolio B doesn't. Same average, different outcomes.
High yield dividend traps to avoid — lessons learned
DRIP decision: I take cash now. At $2k/month in dividends, I prefer to deploy it strategically rather than auto-reinvest proportionally.
The mega backdoor Roth — is your plan eligible?
Social Security delay math: breakeven from 62 to 70 is about age 80. If you expect to live past 85, delaying to 70 almost certainly wins. Plus survivor benefit matters if married.
High income, low NW — fixing my allocation
Tech concentration reality check: I work at a tech company, own stock grants in tech, hold VOO (30% tech), and individual NVDA/MSFT. My financial life is incredibly correlated to tech.
My asset allocation glide path into retirement
Healthcare bridge 60-65: budgeting $1,200/month for ACA marketplace plan. Income management to stay under subsidy cliffs can save $8,000+/year in premiums.
Inherited $150k — how I'm thinking about deploying it
High income, low NW: making $380k/year, net worth only $180k at 38. Lifestyle inflation destroyed the last decade. Now max every account, live on $90k, invest the rest.
I have $5,000 to invest and zero experience — help
The thing that finally clicked for me: I'm not buying 'the stock market,' I'm buying ownership in thousands of companies. Market dips become sales, not disasters.
Portfolio at 55: am I on track for retirement at 65?
Tech concentration reality check: I work at a tech company, own stock grants in tech, hold VOO (30% tech), and individual NVDA/MSFT. My financial life is incredibly correlated to tech.