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The Smartest Vanguard ETF to Buy With $1,000 Right Now

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If you are just starting out looking to invest and have a limited amount of money, you may be wondering where the best place is to start. Instead of investing in individual stocks, I'd suggest beginning with an exchange-traded fund (ETF). ETFs are a portfolio of investments, so they give you instant diversity as opposed to investing in a single company.

For beginner investors and seasoned ones too, I like ETFs from investment company Vanguard. It is the king of index funds and has long been known for its low fees. Since ETFs include a portfolio of companies, they have expense ratios attached to them that the investment company charges for its services. These fees are deducted daily and reflected in the performance of the ETFs.

Even a seemingly low expense ratio of 1% can have a major impact on returns over time. In a study by the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) study, a $100,000 investment with a 4% annual return that is reduced by a 1% expense ratio returns around $30,000 less than an investment with a 0.25% expense ratio over a 20-year period.

While 1% of $1,000 is only $10, as you invest more into the ETF and the value grows, it can start to add up quickly. Fortunately, Vanguard has some of the lowest fees around, especially for its index ETFs.

Artist rendering of ETF trading board.
Image source: Getty Images

The Vanguard Growth ETF

One of my favorite ETFs is the Vanguard Growth ETF (NYSEMKT: VUG). The ETF has an expense ratio of just 0.04% compared to an average expense ratio of other similar growth funds of 0.94%, according to Vanguard based on Morningstar data. This means that investors get to keep nearly all the returns of the underlying index.

One of the big reasons I like the Vanguard Growth ETF is that it is focused on large-cap growth stocks, especially those in the technology sector. The ETF tracks the performance of the CRSP US Large Cap Growth Index, which is essentially the growth-oriented half of the S&P 500. Nearly 60% of the ETF's holdings are stocks in the technology sector, while another nearly 20% are classified as consumer discretionary. However, some tech-oriented companies get pushed into the consumer discretionary category, such as Amazon, which is the largest cloud-computing company in the world and designs its own semiconductors, and Tesla, which is pushing into autonomous driving and robots.

Overall, the Vanguard Growth ETF gives investors a heavy concentration of some of the leading technology companies in the world. Its top 10 holdings as of the end of 2024 were the following:

Company

Weighting

 

Company

Weighting

Apple

13.4%

 

Meta Platforms

4.5%

Microsoft

11.1%

 

Tesla

3.9%

Nvidia

11%

 

Eli Lilly

2.3%

Amazon

7.3%

 

Broadcom

1.9%

Alphabet

5.5%

 

Visa

1.9%

Source: Vanguard