What are Stocks?
A stock represents an ownership share in a company. Owning one share means you own a part of that company.
Characteristics of Stocks
| Characteristic | Description |
|---|---|
| Single Investment | Buy shares of one company |
| Active Management | You need to pick stocks yourself |
| Higher Volatility | A single company can surge or crash |
| Potential Return | Can achieve excess returns |
| Risk | Company bankruptcy can mean total loss |
What are ETFs?
An ETF (Exchange Traded Fund) is a basket of stocks or bonds that trades on an exchange like a stock.
Characteristics of ETFs
| Characteristic | Description |
|---|---|
| Diversified Investment | Buy multiple stocks at once |
| Passive Management | Tracks an index, no stock picking needed |
| Lower Volatility | Diversification reduces volatility |
| Low Fees | Management fees far lower than active funds |
| Risk | Follows the market, no explosive gains |
Stock vs ETF Comprehensive Comparison
| Comparison | Stock | ETF |
|---|---|---|
| Diversification | Low (single company) | High (multiple stocks) |
| Management Difficulty | High (need stock picking) | Low (tracks index) |
| Research Time | High (research each stock) | Low (understand the index) |
| Volatility | High | Medium-Low |
| Potential Return | Higher | Moderate |
| Risk | Higher | Lower |
| Fees | Low (trading fees only) | Low (management fee + trading fees) |
| Suitable for Beginners | Moderate difficulty | Very suitable |
Which is Better for New Graduates?
Recommendation: Start with ETFs
For new graduates, ETFs are the better entry point:
Reason 1: Effective diversification even with small capital
- $5,000 buying one stock = all capital in one company
- $5,000 buying an index ETF = diversified across dozens of companies
Reason 2: No stock picking ability required
- You do not need to spend大量 time researching individual stocks
- Indices trend upward over the long term, just follow the market
Reason 3: Less psychological pressure
- An index dropping 5% is normal fluctuation; a stock dropping 5% could mean company trouble
- Easier to hold long-term without panic selling
Advanced: ETF + Individual Stock Portfolio
After gaining experience, use a "Core + Satellite" allocation:
- Core (60-70%): Index ETFs (stable growth)
- Satellite (30-40%): Selected individual stocks (pursuing excess returns)
Common ETF Choices
| ETF Type | Example | Suitable For |
|---|---|---|
| Broad Market Index | S&P 500 ETF, Hang Seng Index ETF | Everyone |
| Sector ETF | Tech ETF, Healthcare ETF | Those bullish on specific sectors |
| Bond ETF | Treasury ETF, Corporate Bond ETF | Conservative investors |
Summary
Recommendations for new graduates:
- Start with index ETFs — lowest risk, best for learning
- Stick with DCA — use dollar-cost averaging to reduce risk
- Add individual stocks after gaining experience — do not challenge yourself with high difficulty from the start
- Use ETFs as core, stocks as satellite — balance stability and growth
Want data-driven stock selection? Visit our Stock Radar for real-time screening results, or explore the Strategy Center for systematic trading methods. For more beginner guides, see What Beginners Need to Know Before Buying Stocks and The Art of Building a Portfolio.