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- Category: Finance & Crypto
- Published: 2026-05-17 18:31:07
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Introduction
If you've followed the stock market in recent years, you might think tech stocks always win. The reality is more nuanced. While the tech-heavy Nasdaq-100 (tracked by QQQ) has beaten the S&P 500 (tracked by SPYM) in 7 of the last 10 years as of mid-2025, that doesn't mean loading up on tech is right for everyone. Many long-term investors may find a more balanced approach with an S&P 500 fund like SPYM. This step-by-step guide will help you decide which ETF suits your portfolio.

What You Need
- Access to a brokerage account (e.g., Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, Robinhood)
- Basic understanding of ETFs (exchange-traded funds)
- Your investment goals and risk tolerance (e.g., retirement timeline, income needs)
- Knowledge of sector concentration risks (tech vs. broad market)
- Optional: Historical performance data for QQQ and SPYM (available on Morningstar or brokerage platforms)
Step-by-Step Guide
- Step 1: Understand the Underlying Indices
QQQ tracks the Nasdaq-100, which contains the 100 largest non-financial companies on the Nasdaq exchange – heavily weighted toward technology (Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, etc.). SPYM follows the S&P 500, a diversified index of 500 large U.S. companies across all sectors, including tech, healthcare, finance, and industrials. Key fact: As of June 30, 2025, QQQ had outperformed the S&P 500 in 7 of the previous 10 years, but past performance doesn't guarantee future results.
- Step 2: Evaluate Your Risk Tolerance
Tech stocks are volatile. If you can stomach 30-50% drawdowns during bear markets (like the dot-com crash or 2022), QQQ might suit you. Conservative investors aiming for steady growth should lean toward SPYM, which has lower volatility due to sector diversification. Ask yourself: Can I sleep well at night knowing my portfolio is 40%+ tech?
- Step 3: Compare Performance and Sector Concentration
Using a tool like Morningstar, review historical returns. As noted, QQQ has outperformed recently, but look at periods like 2000-2002 when QQQ lost 80% while S&P 500 lost only 49%. Also check sector weights: QQQ is ~50%+ tech, while SPYM is ~30% tech (with larger allocations to healthcare, financials, etc.). Diversity reduces idiosyncratic risk.
- Step 4: Consider Dividend Yield
QQQ has a lower dividend yield (~0.6%) because tech companies reinvest earnings. SPYM yields around 1.2-1.5% due to inclusion of dividend-paying sectors like utilities and financials. If you rely on income, SPYM may be better. If you're reinvesting dividends for growth, the difference is small but worth noting.

Source: www.fool.com - Step 5: Analyze Fees and Expenses
Both are low-cost: SPYM has an expense ratio of 0.09%, and QQQ is 0.20%. While QQQ is slightly higher, the difference is minimal ($2 per $1,000 invested). However, over 30 years, compounding can add up. Use an ETF cost calculator to see long-term impact.
- Step 6: Decide Based on Your Time Horizon
For long-term horizons (10+ years), QQQ's growth potential may pay off, but it comes with higher risk. For shorter horizons (under 5 years) or during retirement, SPYM's stability is preferable. Consider blending: e.g., 70% SPYM and 30% QQQ for balanced exposure.
- Step 7: Review Market Outlook and Rebalance Annually
Stay informed about tech regulation, interest rates, and innovation cycles. No one can predict the next decade perfectly. Rebalance your portfolio once a year to maintain your target allocation – this prevents tech from dominating after a run-up.
Tips for Success
- Don't chase past performance – The fact that QQQ beat SPYM in 7 of the last 10 years doesn't mean it will continue. Use that data as a reminder of volatility, not a guarantee.
- Consider holding both – A core-satellite approach: SPYM as core (60-80%) and QQQ as satellite (20-40%) gives you growth potential with a diversified anchor.
- Automate your investments – Set up recurring buys into SPYM or QQQ to dollar-cost average and avoid emotional timing.
- Review sector overlap – If you already own individual tech stocks, adding QQQ may overconcentrate. SPYM can reduce that risk.
- Check your brokerage for commission-free trades – Most brokerages offer both ETFs without fees, so cost to trade isn't a factor.
- Revisit your choice annually – As your age, income, and goals change, your preference between SPYM and QQQ may shift. Stay flexible.