Mid-Year Adjustment
As we are approaching the half-year mark, do you plan to do any adjustment of your portfolio?
I usually don’t make any change on our investments in the middle of the year. Any rebalancing will happen when the full year ends as I always feel the stock markets will do better in the second half of the year than in the first six months. Waiting till the end of the year will allow me to have a better assessment of performance of each individual investment and the overall asset allocation. This year, while most of investments will remain intact, there’s one change I want to make, though it doesn’t have to be at this particular time. My target is PowerShares HighYield Dividend Achievers (PEY).
I started investing in PEY in December 2004 and currently have about 500 shares in my Firstrade account. At that time, the only alternative was iShares Dow Jones Select Dividend Index (DVY). Eventually, I chose PEY over DVY as the two had similar performance, though PEY was more expensive to own. For a while, I was quite pleased with PEY’s performance and increased my purchases after it shifted from quarterly distribution to a monthly based scheme. However, the fund wasn’t able to keep pace with larger rival DVY since 2006 and now has lagged the benchmark significantly.
Actually, I have considered this change for a while and it seems the time has finally come to pull the trigger. But I am not jumping on DVY. The replacement will be Vanguard High Dividend Yield Index (VYM). The fund has a slightly lower yield than PEY, but the 0.25% expense ratio is the absolute bottom.
The following plot is the YTD performance comparison of PEY, VYM, and S&P 500 index, which clearly shows how PEY is performing poorly against its rival.

Related Articles You Don't Want To Miss
- U.S. November Home Prices Fell 18.2% Year-over-Year: Chart of the Day
- Mutual Fund Year-end Distributions
- 2006 Year-End Review III: Net Worth
- Year-to-Date Net Worth Change by Category and Passive Income Update
- Mutual Funds Year-end Distributions
- Lastest 4-Week T-Bill Rate at 5.243%, Highest of the Year
- 2006 Year-End Review I: Financial Moves
- 2007 Year End Review (I): Financial Moves
Trackbacks & Pingbacks
- Pingback by Friday Finance Findings for June 29th : Generation X Finance on June 29, 2007 @ 11:22 am
- Pingback by » Make A Wish Weekly Roundup on Blueprint for Financial Prosperity on June 30, 2007 @ 2:51 pm
- Pingback by Blue Collar Assets » Blog Archive » Make A Wish Weekly Roundup on July 16, 2007 @ 2:07 pm
- Trackback by loan in canada on April 9, 2008 @ 5:03 am
Tweetbacks
6 Comments
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.
Recent Entries
- optionsXpress Platinum Visa Card Offers 12-month 0% Balance Transfer
- Ally Bank Accounts Fully Functional, But …
- A Look at OptionsHouse for Stocks and Options Trading
- ShareBuilder $25 Bonus Promotion Code
- A New Day, A New Job
- Pre-Order Windows 7 and Save
- Learn Options Trading with TradeKing’s Options Playbook
- Quicken Promotion Codes
- Ally Bank Online Savings Account Opened
- What Can You Expect to See on Your Credit Reports?
- I Hate IGoBanking
- Friday Deal: Amazon Flip HD Camcorder Sale
- Alternatives to MS Money
- Did TurboTax Mis-calculate My Recovery Rebate Credit?
- Where Is Gold Heading to?
- American Express Online Savings Account 2% APY
- Free Online Money Management Tools That Make Your Life Easier
- House and Job Update
- New PineCone Research Sign Up Link
- Strep, House, and Job
- Chase Introduces Ultimate Rewards
- Ally Bank Made Significant Rate Changes
- EverBank Raises Money Market Account Bonus Rate to 3.01%
- 20 Years Ago
- May 2009 Score Card — Part I: Net Worth








Hi – Why are you restricting yourself to these choices? How about PID or DOO. They have both done rather well
Just one question, why does VYM almost exactly tracks the S&P 500 but with only lower returns? If there is a real correlation, shouldn’t you just buy the S&P 500 index ETF?