When we last left our heroine, we had given Chris some information on the Roth IRA, which appears to be her best choice for the $5,000 she has set aside. We also discussed asset allocation and diversification, and gave her some idea of what percentage of her money she might want in domestic stocks, international stocks, and high quality domestic bonds. We also gave her some ideas about where she might want to open this Roth IRA and discussed issues of risk, which not only include market exposure but also the risk of not keeping up with inflation by being too conservative.

It would be easy to put together this portfolio with three no load index funds, and in many cases that would be the thing to do. However, it’s often difficult for the beginning investor to do that because funds often have minimum investments in the thousands of dollars. Instead, since this Roth IRA will be opened with a discount broker, we’ll use a great alternative: exchange traded funds, also known as ETFs.

ETFs are mutual funds that trade like stocks. ETFs have very low expense ratios and low barriers to entry versus mutual funds that require minimum investments often in the thousands of dollars. We discussed one ETF not long ago when we talked about how to get the performance of the entire S&P 500 in a single share of an ETF; we’ll look at three others to make this portfolio happen. To meet this asset allocation, I would suggest using the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (VTI) for domestic stocks, Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (BND) for domestic bonds, and Vanguard FTSE All-World ETF (VEU) for international stocks.

After figuring out how many shares would make up each allocation, one will realize that it’s about impossible to get the allocation perfect in real terms, leaving a little bit of cash in the account to pay for those $6.95 trading fees. Also remember that these pay dividends and you likely want to reinvest (buy more shares of the fund that paid the dividend). You may also want to consider rebalancing the asset allocation once a year or so.

So, there we have it. In three low cost ETFs with low barriers to entry, we have diversification, asset allocation, and market matching performance with low costs and tremendous tax advantages for Chris to start her retirement account. A simple portfolio that’s poised to pay big dividends over the next thirty or so years while Chris works toward retirement. Good luck!

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