My Top ETF to Buy for 2024 (and It's Not Even Close)

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When scanning the market for a top exchange-traded fund (ETF) to buy for the new year, choosing a beaten-down sector or theme is usually a great bet.

In 2022, the consumer discretionary sector, tech, and communications suffered steep sell-offs. And with so many quality names in those sectors, they were good picks for 2023.

But investors looking for value and income might find the market's high valuation of many growth-orientated sectors off-putting.

The more I look at the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust (NYSEMKT: DIA), the more it stands out as a balanced way to gain exposure to various industries and top companies. Here's why investing in the Dow Jones Industrial Average could work out well in 2024.

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Image source: Getty Images.

The Dow's known flaw is overplayed

The long-standing criticism of the Dow is that it is price-weighted. This means that the rather arbitrary price of a stock dictates its weight in the index, rather than the case with a market-cap-weighted index like the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq Composite, where Apple and Microsoft hold the highest weightings since they are the most valuable companies.

The price-weighted system isn't perfect. But it works itself out, as the Dow is much more balanced than it is often given credit for. The stocks that do well over time (assuming no stock split) hold a larger share of the index, while the ones that languish hold a smaller share.

The big exception is Apple, which would have been the largest stock in the Dow if it hadn't issued a stock split in 2020. But overall, the system works well.

About half the stocks in the Dow have between a 2% and 5% weighting. Six stocks have over a 5% weighting, and six stocks have below a 1% weighting. The stocks that are heavier weighted are probably the ones that most investors would rather have more of.

The six stocks with a weighting over 5% are UnitedHealth, Goldman Sachs Group, Microsoft, Home Depot, McDonald's, and Caterpillar -- all quality, dividend-paying companies with low to medium growth prospects.

The Dow has a unique blend of different industries, whereas the S&P 500, and especially the Nasdaq, are dominated by tech, consumer discretionary, and communications. Here's a look at the Dow's breakdown by sector compared to the S&P 500

Sector

SPDR Dow ETF

Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEMKT: VOO)

Financials

20.8%

12.9%

Information technology

19.3%

29.1%

Health care

18.7%

12.7%

Industrials

15.2%

8.3%

Consumer discretionary

13.4%

10.7%

Consumer staples

6.8%

6.3%

Energy

2.7%

4.1%

Communication services

2.3%

8.6%

Materials

1%

2.5%

Data sources: State Street Global Advisors, Vanguard.