TrendPulse Logo

If I Were 25 With $300 a Month to Invest, I'd Skip Picking Stocks and Buy These 2 ETFs

Source: nasdaq FinanceView Original
financeApril 14, 2026

AAPL

TSLA

AMZN

META

AMD

NVDA

PEP

COST

ADBE

GOOG

AMGN

HON

INTC

INTU

NFLX

ADP

SBUX

MRNA

AAPL

TSLA

AMZN

META

AMD

NVDA

PEP

COST

ADBE

GOOG

AMGN

HON

INTC

INTU

NFLX

ADP

SBUX

MRNA

AAPL

TSLA

AMZN

META

AMD

NVDA

PEP

COST

ADBE

GOOG

AMGN

HON

INTC

INTU

NFLX

ADP

SBUX

MRNA

Markets

VGT

If I Were 25 With $300 a Month to Invest, I'd Skip Picking Stocks and Buy These 2 ETFs

April 13, 2026 — 11:50 pm EDT

Written by

David Dierking for

The Motley Fool->

-

-

-

-

-

Key Points

- With decades to build their portfolios, investors can take on higher-risk, higher-return opportunities.

- Short-term volatility may be higher, but if you're willing to ride it out, better returns are often captured over time.

- I would target two simple ETFs -- one investing in tech stocks and one investing in growth stocks.

- 10 stocks we like better than Vanguard Information Technology ETF ›

I'm going to turn 52 later this year, which means I've been investing for about 35 years. Over that time, I've owned savings bonds, mutual funds, and exchange-traded funds (ETFs). I trade stocks every so often. I dabbled in options briefly (which didn't go well). All the while, I learned a lot about what I should and shouldn't be doing.

Looking back over those decades, I'd do a few things differently. I've always invested more on the conservative side, which I don't regret, but I do feel like I missed out on some bigger growth opportunities along the way. Even though I enjoy stock picking and trying to identify winners, I don't think that's the way I would go about it if I had it to do over again. I've had enough hit-and-miss results to know that I have no more aptitude for it than anyone else.

Will AI create the world's first trillionaire? Our team just released a report on the one little-known company, called an "Indispensable Monopoly" providing the critical technology Nvidia and Intel both need. Continue »

What I'd do is target simple, higher-risk, higher-growth opportunities using ETFs. No picking single stocks. Just buying the theme at the lowest price possible. That leads me to a pair of Vanguard funds that even a modest $300-per-month investment could turn into six figures or more.

Image source: Getty Images.

VGT: The pure-tech play

The Vanguard Information Technology ETF (NYSEMKT: VGT) would help target companies on the cutting edge of innovation. This is the sector with some of the highest risk and highest volatility. But as we've seen with the internet and artificial intelligence (AI) booms, it has the highest upside.

With decades to work with, there's plenty of time to ride out the highs and lows. Even with the tech bubble to deal with, buy-and-hold investors would have enjoyed strong returns over the past quarter-century. This is exactly the type of upside play I should have targeted more in my portfolio when I was younger. A tech fund would have helped me invest in the theme rather than trying to pick individual winners.

VUG: Growth opportunities across the whole market

The logic behind owning the Vanguard Growth ETF (NYSEMKT: VUG) is pretty similar. A mix of value and growth stocks makes sense in a portfolio, but tilting toward higher-growth names would likely have delivered bigger returns over the long term.

The Vanguard Growth ETF doesn't rely solely on the tech sector either (though it's definitely a big part of it). It includes growth companies across the entire U.S. economy. It's modestly more diversified and can perform relatively well when tech isn't necessarily leading the market higher.

The argument for investing in growth is largely the same as the one for investing in tech. Ride out the short term in pursuit of better long-term returns over the course of years and years.

VGT and VUG: A comparison

Metric

VUG

VGT

Coverage

U.S. large-cap growth

U.S. tech sector

Holdings

151

318

Expense ratio

0.03%

0.09%

10-year avg. annual return

16.4%

21.9%

Sector concentration

Tech-heavy

Technology only

Volatility

High

High

Best use case

Diversified core growth

Tech sector upside

Source: Vanguard

To be clear, there is a lot of overlap between these two funds. These two funds are probably best-suited as part of a larger portfolio built around something like the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF or the Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF.

But if you're a younger investor, I think it makes sense to allocate more to the Vanguard Growth ETF and the Vanguard Information Technology ETF in your portfolio. The higher growth potential is worth the short-term volatility.

It's advice I wish I had followed years ago.

Should you buy stock in Vanguard Information Technology ETF right now?

Before you buy stock in Vanguard Information Technology ETF, consider this:

The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the 10 best stocks for investors to buy now… and Vanguard Information Technology ETF wasn’t one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut cou