Stock-Market Portfolio Archives - Anthony Bradley's Trading Journal https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/tag/stock-market-portfolio/ Stock, Options, and Forex Analysis and Journal Tue, 08 Jul 2025 21:20:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.2 https://i0.wp.com/trade.anthonydbradley.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/cropped-Logo_Trading-Journal-ADB_3-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Stock-Market Portfolio Archives - Anthony Bradley's Trading Journal https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/tag/stock-market-portfolio/ 32 32 214149092 Market’s Caught Up — But Still Going Strong | Stock-Market ETF Portfolio Update, July 2025 https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/2025/07/03/portfolio/stock-market-etf-portfolio-update-july-2025/ Thu, 03 Jul 2025 19:08:00 +0000 https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/?p=3303 Welcome to another monthly analysis of my ETF portfolio. As the stock-market itself has been...

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Welcome to another monthly analysis of my ETF portfolio. As the stock-market itself has been rising over the last few weeks, my portfolio has been rising along with it. That said, at this point, I’m no longer out-pacing the indices.

I’m alright with that, though. The goal of this portfolio isn’t necessarily to be consistently beating the market right now. I hope to sustain downturns — as I have so far — while at the same time making plays that are designed to pay off years, decades from now.

So far, I’ll have to say I’m happy with how it’s performing.

Let’s get into the numbers. Here’s how my ETF portfolio has performed across three key periods: last month (June), year-to-date (July 1st), and since I first opened the portfolio in July of 2022.

June 2025: In Step with the Market

Let’s kick things off with June’s numbers:

While I technically lagged the market, I’d say I’m within the range of saying I’m pacing with it. The major indices had a pretty strong month, and edged me out slightly. But with a 4% gain, I’d say my portfolio held it’s own.

What drove this performance?

These ETFs were the primary factors in keeping June steady and strong. Even some of the more stagnant holdings (like the consumer staples ETF, PBJ & the autonomous vehicles ETF, IDRV) didn’t hold the portfolio back much at all:

All-in-all, while I’m starting to lag the indices overall, I’m happy with how this performed in June.

FYI: When talking about individual ETF performance, I’m showing the changes based on their ratios within the portfolio.

I don’t want to simply talk about the ETF’s price change — as that wouldn’t tell the story about how each ETF actually affected the portfolio itself.

Year-to-Date: Quietly Beating the Market

Now let’s zoom out to 2025 so far (through close on 6/30). And here, things start to get a little more fun:

On the year so far, I’m actually out-pacing the market — certainly the DOW. Granted, given my remarks on the monthly performance, I’m actually in lock-step with the market. Not beating it. But this time I’m up, so I’ll take the W.

The truth is, when the market is roaring, this portfolio has historically under-performed. So, as the market turns back up, this is expected.

At the same time, historically this portfolio never really crossed above the gains of the S&P. And since it’s largely sustained that on the year, who knows what’s going to happen going forward. It’s been good, and I’m hoping for more of the same.

Top contributors so far in 2025:

The only slight underperformer has been PSCT and XLV (which lost about 1/4 and 1/10 of a percent respectively), but that hasn’t derailed the broader portfolio’s momentum. Here’s the breakdown of each ETF and how they’ve affected the portfolio overall.

Each ETF does a different job. Some are slow and steady, some are long-term moonshots, and a few are quietly outperforming without making headlines.

Since Inception (July 2022)

Here’s how things stack up as it’s approaching it’s 3-year anniversary:

Despite the recent shake-ups, the S&P has been quite strong. And, given the fact that there was a slight dip in the markets overall the week I got in; it’s gains are even more pronounced. It’s making me look a little bad, but as I’ve mentioned before, it’s well within my expectations for this portfolio.

I didn’t build this portfolio to win every race. I built it to win the right ones.

I’m holding ETFs in sectors focused on things like electric/autonomous vehicles and robotics — sectors I don’t expect to fully take off for another 10–15 years. People always talk about what they would invest in if they had a time machine, so I took that thought process when picking some if the things I wanted to be invested in.

I’ve tried to consider what life will be like in a couple decades, and what sectors will be commonplace then, that seem farfetched now. Obviously, hoping to capitalize on what these industries will become once they mature.

Here’s the breakdown of the ETFs and their affect on the portfolio since I opened it:

So yes, the total return of 35.3% lags behind the major benchmarks. But that return was built with deliberate exposure to future-facing sectors, which haven’t paid off yet. Hopefully, when we look back a decade or so from now, I won’t be playing the “if I had a time machine game”.

Diversification of ETFs Thought-Process

I’ve mentioned it a bit here and there throughout this post, but wanted to give a bit more details about my thought process behind why I chose each ETF. This is a curated strategy, built around three pillars:

1. Controlled, Consistent Growth

I’m not looking for 40% months—or 40% crashes. I want a stock-market portfolio that grows steadily, and lets me live my life without watching CNBC every morning.

2. Future-Oriented Sectors

I’m early on purpose. Self-driving cars, robotics, and artificial intelligence are all sectors I’ve chosen to invest in via ETFs like IDRV and AIQ. I’m fully aware they won’t dominate my returns right now. But by the time they do, I’ll already be in the driver’s seat.

3. Resilience During Down-Turns

The inclusion of ETFs like PBJ (consumer staples) and PEJ (media and entertainment) keeps the portfolio grounded. These act as ballast when the flashier sectors get rocky. It’s largely what kept June strong, and what keeps the whole thing from turning into a rollercoaster.

June matched the market and 2025 YTD has outpaced it. Since inception we’re a bit behind; but the thesis is still strong, and the best is probably still ahead.

Thanks for reading! Let me know in the comments what your investing strategy is, and how your portfolio is doing. I’m always looking to learn more. And if you have any questions, be sure to leave those, too! Hope to see you back here for the next post

The post Market’s Caught Up — But Still Going Strong | Stock-Market ETF Portfolio Update, July 2025 appeared first on Anthony Bradley's Trading Journal.

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No Foolin’ Still Above the Market! | Stock-Market ETF Portfolio Update April 1st, 2025 https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/2025/04/01/portfolio/no-foolin-still-above-the-market-stock-market-etf-portfolio-update-april-1st-2025/ Tue, 01 Apr 2025 19:18:00 +0000 https://trade.anthonydbradley.com/?p=3271 Welcome back! And if you’re new here, this is where I share my moves in...

The post No Foolin’ Still Above the Market! | Stock-Market ETF Portfolio Update April 1st, 2025 appeared first on Anthony Bradley's Trading Journal.

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Welcome back! And if you’re new here, this is where I share my moves in the stock market. Lately, that’s been primarily stock and ETF buying/investing. I’ve been both a Forex trader and an options trader in the past (and have plans for the future) but after Covid, I had to take a step back.

I didn’t want to remain completely out of the markets, though, so I setup a passive portfolio in the stock-market. And even though I’m not in the exciting ups-and-downs of trading, I still wanted to share my portfolio and it’s results with you.

For this portfolio, I invested in 18 ETFs across various categories — with the goal of having the portfolio rise when the market does; not suffer too badly when the overall market drops (such as the major Indices like the S&P 500, DOW, or NASDAQ), and to hopefully make relatively outsized gains in the future.

As of right now, we’re currently achieving that goal! Read on to see how.

Year-to-Date Performance

Like I mentioned, one of the goals of this portfolio is to not suffer too badly during market down-turns, and that’s exactly where . On the year, while the DOW, S&P 500, and NASDAQ dropped 1%, 4%, and 9.5% respectively, my portfolio dropped less than 1/2 of a percent (0.39% to be exact).

There’s not much to call out here individually, PSCT lost a point, but that’s about it. Here’s how each of them performed:

Monthly Performance

Along with everything else, my stock-market portfolio dropped a decent amount on the month. From the open on March 3rd, to the close on March 31st it lost nearly 4%. It’s still outpacing the major Indices, though as the DOW, S&P 500, and NASDAQ all lost 5%, 6%, and 8%(!) respectively.

PEJ — the leisure and entertainment ETF, and PSCT — the small-cap tech ETF were the worst performers over the month, losing ~0.6% and 0.5%; and the only ETF to not lose money this month was XLE — the energy ETF. Here’s how each fund performed over the last month:

Updates

Given the fact that it’s a new quarter, I’m planning on buying more shares of some of the ETFs, in order to add to the portfolio. Given the dip we’ve seen, I’m able to buy a good amount this time around.

I’m more interested in maintaining the correct ratios in the fund, so that’s what I’m basing these purchases on. I’m not looking at how each ETF is doing individually. So, in order to maintain the ratios, I’m adding more AIQ, IDRV, PEJ, PSCT, PSI, ROBO, VNQ, XLE, XLF, and XLI.

Conclusion

Thanks for reading! How’s your stock portfolio doing right now? Let me know in the comments. And make sure to check back for more updates

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