
TSE:VUN
(Market Call Minute.) US indices or ETF’s makes sense, depending on the size of your portfolio. If you are a newer investor or have a smaller amount of capital to invest, this is a great way to do it because of the low cost. If you have enough capital to diversify property, you are better off cherry picking and building a portfolio that is diversified in individual US stocks.
(A Top Pick Dec 18/14. Up 19.16%.) This is the small and mid-cap US market. It is unhedged. The reason it has done so well is because of the currency. Having exposure to the total market versus one sector gives you more exposure to small companies in particular. Historically small and mid-cap markets have outperformed the large cap market.
Continues to look at the US market in a bullish sense. We have low energy costs and low interest rates. What is not to like out there. He is Bullish on the US and sees that there will be wage demands and a little bit of inflation. That recovery is going to continue throughout the economy. This also drills down into mid-caps and small-caps, so it is a much more broad coverage.
Vanguard US Total Market (VUN-T) versus Vanguard FTSE Emerging Markets (VEE-T)? You are dealing with apples and oranges. One is emerging markets and the other is total market cap US. If you were buying emerging markets, which he is not, he would be buying the VEE. Regarding this one, there is nothing wrong with it. He has been riding the large cap wave for a couple of years.
This is the total market for the US. It is much broader than the Canadian market. It is not just the S&P, it has 3600 different stocks in it.