Anonymous wrote:VTI is more tax efficient.
Anonymous wrote:They are nearly identical. They are packaged differently. One is a mutual fund which is purchased once the price is set at the end of the day. The other is an ETF which can be bought anytime the stock market is open. Sometimes there are more fees for buying one over the other. My simple answer for you in this setting is not to worry too much about it. They are both good. An ETF is perhaps a better choice in terms of fees. In the end they will do the same thing at nearly the same cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why VTSAX vs VTI?
I suggest VTSAX for beginners because its nature as a mutual fund prevents you from “playing with it” i.e. you can’t intra-day trade it like a normal stock or ETF (like VTI).
OP is nowhere close to being a trader. Stay away from mutual funds. Get a good S and P 500 etf and leave it alone. OP, you have Roth maxxed, right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would do VTI if this is a normal brokerage account.
Can you explain why? Thanks
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. What is this VTI that people are mentioning?
OK. Fraud alert. This is a Vanguard salesperson. You could look it up and find an answer in 0.1 seconds.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. Ok I looked it up but I don’t understand how it’s different from VTSAX. As I said I’m a novice.
How would my risk be different in VRI vs VTSAX?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. What is this VTI that people are mentioning?