M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (2024)

M1 Pies, M1 Finance’s portfolio tool, allows you to follow in the footsteps of some of the heaviest hitters in finance today. It is a completely human, hands-off fund manager. Not only does this give you the tools necessary to step up your market game, but it also gives you a nuanced advantage in specialized investing.

With M1 Pies, the M1 Finance team has taken decades of market evaluation and combined the past with the present to help give you the future you desire from your portfolio with M1 Pies.

Table Of Contents

  1. What Are M1 Pies
  2. Why Use a Portfolio or M1 Pie Based Approach To Investing
  3. Friends of ChooseFI M1 Pies
    • JL Collins' Simple Path to Wealth
    • Paul Merriman's Ultimate Buy and Hold Strategy
    • Paula Pant's Afford Anything Portfolio
    • Jillian Johnsrud's Hands Off Approach
    • Frank Vasquez Diversification Play
  4. Dividends and Market Allocation
    • A Hybrid Approach to Dividend Investing
    • A Starter Dividend Pie to Consider
  5. Taxable, Traditional, or Roth IRA: Which Investing Vehicle To Choose?
  6. Advanced Investing Strategies With M1 Pies
    • Dollar-Cost Averaging
    • Smart Transfers: Investing With M1 Spend
  7. The Bottom Line

What Are M1 Pies

M1 Pie-based investing allows investors to create an investment portfolio made up of “pies”, where each asset is one slice. Those slices can be stocks, bonds, or ETFs. If you wanted to, you could even make another pie, a slice of a bigger pie, nesting one within the other like Russian nesting dolls.

M1 will automatically balance each slice each time you invest to match your investing strategy and allocation.

M1 Finance pies allow you to maintain your portfolio’s asset allocation in pie form. You simply add slices to your investment pie and define its size (as a percentage), allowing for easy management.

Plus, you can see a visual representation of your pie, and slices shrink and grow based on whether you are underweight or overweight against your target allocation.

You can either build your own pie or use one of M1’s Expert pies. We get to these later.

Why Use a Portfolio or M1 Pie Based Approach To Investing

We think M1 Finance’s pie-based approach to investing is a great hybrid for those of us in the FI community. Here’s why:

  1. You get the ease of use, with great dashboards and visual representations, but you also get the algorithms that are built into every M1 Pie to make sure your investment strategy is automatically adjusted. The charts and graphs make it easy to have a clear overview of the portfolio. At the same time, the bot part of the pie is there to keep the portfolio in line with your investment objectives. Every time you add more funds to the pie (such as with a direct deposit or reinvesting dividends), it automatically allocates the fresh funds in a way that would adjust the equities within that pie to bring them back into the allocation that you have decided on. This is one effective way of rebalancing your portfolio, unlike the traditional (and potentially rarely used) way of actually selling your winners to buy the losers.
  2. You get the set-it-and-forget-it feature that is the hallmark of long-term investors. We should spend most of our time mapping out our investment strategies and then letting automation do its thing over time. Viewed with the Pareto Principle in mind, we should spend 80% of our investing time ensuring we have a plan that will help boost our path to FI and 20% of our time executing and maintaining that plan.
  3. You can get as granular as you want, or you can take the ideas of others who have been on the podcast, like JL Collins and Paul Merriman, and put them together as an M1 Pie portfolio. Then, we can take a hybrid approach to decide the right fit for each of us.

Friends of ChooseFI M1 Pies

M1 Finance offers expert pies, which make investing with M1 easy. Some examples of Expert pies include:

  • General Investing
  • Plan for retirement
  • Responsible investing
  • Income earners
  • Stocks & bonds

To access these, you would have to create a free account with M1 Finance.

But we thought it would be interesting to create a few M1 investment pies that would mirror the investing philosophies of some of our friends, including:

  • JL Collins
    • Episode 019 – JL Collins from jlcollinsnh | The Stock Series Part 1
    • Episode 034 – The Stock Series Part 2
    • Episode 284 – What is The Simple Path to Wealth?
  • Paul Merriman
    • Episode 130 – The Ultimate Buy And Hold Portfolio
    • Episode 290 – The Problem With Cap-Weighted Indexes
  • Paula Pant
    • Episode 105 – You Can Afford Anything But Not Everything
    • Episode 142 – Real Estate Investing Strategies
    • Episode 145 – Turn Key Real Estate Investing And How To Build A Team
    • Episode 247 – Households of FI-Zach and Marilyn Talk Real Estate Investing With Paula Pant
  • Jillian Johnsrud
    • Episode 84 – Montana Money Adventures
    • Episode 300 – Relationships and Money
    • Episode 301 – Money and Relationships | Part 2
  • Frank Vasquez
    • Episode 194 – The Role Of Bonds In A Portfolio
    • Episode 313 – Are You as Diversified as You Think You Are?

Let’s have a look at these M1 pies.

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (1)

JL Collins’ Simple Path to Wealth

JL Collins is best known to the FI community for his Stock Series and as the author of The Simple Path To Wealth. In the spirit of simplicity, the pies we created using his approach comprise mainly the Vanguard Total Stock Market Index Fund ETF and the Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund ETF in various proportions.

  • Wealth Accumulation
  • Wealth Preservation

This Wealth Preservation pie is a simple blend of 3-1 blend of equities in the form of VTI and Vanguard’s Bond Index ETF (BND)

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (4)

Paul Merriman’s Ultimate Buy and Hold Strategy

Like JL, Paul Merriman believes in the power of consistent investing and time in the market. Unlike JL, Paul prefers some degree of complexity, and in addition to total stock market indices, he also likes small-cap and value stocks, real estate investment trusts, as well as equities from across the world.

  • 100% Equity in a Taxable Account
  • Lower Volatility with Bonds

The Ultimate Buy And Hold (UB&H) Worldwide 100% Equity in a Taxable Account portfolio is a tax-optimized version of the UB&H portfolio that omits some holdings with higher dividend payments (which are taxed in the year in which they are issued).

Not everyone’s risk tolerance can (or should) align with a 100% equity holding. With M1 Finance, your top level Pie (asset allocation) can include a holding of a bond fund (like Vanguard’s BND ETF) at whatever ratio fits your risk tolerance and the other slice of the pie can be the equity allocation you choose. This can be an UB&H like Paul’s, a Total Market Index fund like JL Collins, or an allocation of your own making.

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (6)

Paula Pant’s Afford Anything Portfolio

Paula is the host of the Afford Anything Podcast and a frequent guest of the show. Equally expert at all things FI and real estate investing, we thought it would be interesting to get a sense of how she invests the parts of her savings that aren’t directly invested in individual stocks, crypto, or real estate. As of February 2021, Paula says she has about a third of her investments in her Afford Anything Portfolio.

  • The Afford Anything Portfolio

The Afford Anything Portfolio is a 100% equity portfolio with a 15% foreign stock component and a slight tilt towards small cap and value.

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (8)

Jillian Johnsrud’s Hands Off Approach

Jillian is the host of the Everyday Courage podcast and a progress coach. She has a busy work and home life, so she keeps her investing simple by using Vanguard Target Date Funds.

The general idea of target date funds is that the funds are automatically rebalanced into more conservative holdings as the target date gets closer:

  • Vanguard Target Retirement 2035 Fund (VTTHX)
  • Vanguard Target Retirement 2040 Fund (VFORX)
  • Vanguard Target Retirement 2045 Fund (VTIVX)

Because the Target Date Funds that Jillian prefers are not available within M1 as standalone pies, we will lean on Paul Merriman again, this time for his “Years to Retirement” pies.

These pies are not designed to replicate the Vanguard Target Date Funds that Jillian uses, but to give you alternatives within the M1 eco-system that have similar timelines.

As you get closer to your target date, you should switch from pies that have more time on the clock, to the next pie with a shorter time horizon. Unlike the Vanguard funds, Paul’s pies include other sectors of the equity market such as small-cap, emerging markets, and real estate.

Alternative: Paul Merriman’s “Years to Retirement” M1 Pies (alternative to Vanguard Target Date Funds)

  • 25 Years to Retirement – Aggressive
  • 25 Years to Retirement – Aggressive
  • 15 Years to Retirement – Aggressive

25 Years to Retirement Aggressive Target Date Tax-Deferred

20 Years to Retirement Aggressive Target Date Tax-Deferred

15 Years to Retirement Aggressive Target Date Tax-Deferred

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (12)

Frank Vasquez Diversification Play

Frank is a retired lawyer and veteran investor who values diversification in one’s investing approach. He has managed his own dynamic risk-parity style portfolio since 2016 based on the Golden Ratio and Risk Parity Ultimate portfolios.

  • Basic Accumulation
  • Golden Ratio
  • Risk Parity Lever

Basic Accumulation

Golden Ratio

Experimental Risk Parity Lever

Dividends and Market Allocation

Because your portfolio is like a large pie, an asset (say a stock) can be one slice, or you can bundle multiple assets together and make them their own slice. These slices can be stocks, bonds, dividends, or ETFs.

This works the other way around as well. Say you want to make one bundle of securities its own pie. You can do that too. M1 Pies makes it incredibly easy and intuitive to utilize dividend allocation.

You can also set these slices to bulk up automatically as you add funds (like ACH deposits) to your investment account. An M1 Pie does all the work for you: you set the thresholds by dollar amount, percentages, etc. M1 covers the rest. A similar option is when you are paid dividends in cash. You can have M1 “sweep” up these payouts when dispersed. They’ll take these allocations of funds and reinvest them into any M1 Pie you wish.

The ease of use and the bang for your buck with no fees and market expertise are incredible. An M1 Pie is a compelling visual representation of your investment pies. This allows you to make educated decisions on where you are strong and need to invest additional funds, or where you are weak and perhaps need to reallocate.

A Hybrid Approach to Dividend Investing

Individuals with a dividend-growth strategy are often faced with the problem of how to manage incoming dividends. Most brokerages offer a dividend reinvestment feature, but this means a dividend gets reinvested into the security that generated the dividend.

This can cause one’s portfolio to diverge from the defined asset allocation, as new money doesn’t build up the portfolio uniformly. Things like one-time special dividends can exacerbate this problem, leading to an undesired concentration in particular funds or securities.

The other common option is to collect dividends as cash until you either hit some threshold which triggers a reinvestment of the cash across the various securities that represent the portfolio or the cash is just accumulated until a scheduled rebalancing event occurs where the cash is added to whichever parts of the portfolio most under-represented according to the plan.

Neither is ideal, which is why M1 Finance offers a third option that represents a hybrid improvement that integrates the best of both of these classic strategies. It offers the ability to automatically put incoming dividends immediately back to work buying new shares to speed the compounding effects, but breaking out of the mold that a dividend can only be reallocated to the security that generated it.

M1 allows your incoming dividend stream to be applied to whatever portion of your portfolio is most under-represented according to your asset allocation. It’s similar to the periodic manual rebalancing effort, where your cash on hand is used to buy the securities that might be in a temporary low cycle regardless of which security generated the cash dividend. M1 Finance eliminates the headache of managing a portfolio of dividend payers by ensuring your cash dividends are reinvested quickly and according to your defined asset allocation. This effectively puts your portfolio into a state of constant cash flow rebalancing.

A Starter Dividend Pie to Consider

Now that we’ve discussed the way M1 Finance manages the reinvestment of paid dividends, let’s look at a Starter Dividend Pie that we’ve put together. The companies in this list were selected for having paid out 4% or more in dividends over the last 5 years.

This is not meant to be an ideal basket of companies because market conditions WILL change. Rather, the intention is for you to add it to your own M1 account, then pick and choose which companies you like from the following sectors:

  • Technology
  • Finance
  • Healthcare
  • Pharmaceuticals
  • Real estate
  • Oil & Gas
  • Tobacco

If you don’t like some of the stocks in the Starter Dividend Pie – say, tobacco, for instance, you can easily remove that specific company from your own M1 pie.

Taxable, Traditional, or Roth IRA: Which Investing Vehicle To Choose?

It all depends on the investment objectives and income levels of the investor. Higher-income earners who still qualify for a Traditional IRA, and who are more focused on capital appreciation, might want to use that investment vehicle rather than a Roth IRA. That way, they shelter as much of their earned income today, and potentially, take the tax hit upon decumulation with an expectation that their earned income in the future would be significantly lower.

Conversely, if they are having a year where their earned income is going to be fairly low and want to focus on pies that earn them dividends or interest payments, they should go for a Roth IRA instead so that the gains accumulate free of taxes.

In essence, a Traditional IRA is a good option for those closer to retirement age AND has a tax liability that can be significantly lowered by contributing to the fund, since funds are pre-tax and lower your tax liability. If you are younger and have a relatively small tax liability (especially compared to later in life) then a post-tax funded Roth IRA is for you.

When the IRA options are maxed out, it’s time to open a regular taxable investing account.

Advanced Investing Strategies With M1 Pies

You have several options in determining how you’d like to fund your M1 Pie investment. From interval dollar-cost averaging to taking out a low percentage loan funded by M1, we’ve got you covered. Also, be creative in how you want to use your excess funds sitting stagnant in stray accounts. M1 makes it easier than ever to invest $100 or $1,000,000.

Dollar-Cost Averaging

M1 Finance creates a perfect example of how dollar-cost averaging and M1 Pies live in a happy marriage:

“If you’re a fan of movies, music, or TV, you probably subscribe to a streaming service. Every month, you pay a set amount of money to subscribe. Now imagine your investments as a service. Have you considered subscribing? This idea is called dollar-cost averaging, and it’s a popular investment strategy among long-term investors. Much like a subscription, you invest the same amount of money on a regular schedule, no matter the stock price or market conditions. And [with M1 Pies] fractional shares, you can purchase fractional shares to keep your portfolio balanced.”

M1 Finance Blog

So, what M1 has stated is that you can take a set interval of money each week, month, etc…and invest that into your M1 Pie (or Pies – depending on your decision-making process). This way you don’t need to time the market. You can take your emotional bias out of the equation of investing and combine human automation with machine automation. Ensure you always make the “correct” decisions based on data, not your heart or mind.

For more information regarding dollar-cost averaging, be sure to check out our Investing 101 Ultimate Guide here.

Smart Transfers: Investing With M1 Spend

Do you want to create an automated rule set that regulates how each dollar of your money is allocated? Thresholds that trigger a sweep of funds between investment accounts? M1 has you covered here as well with Smart Transfers with M1 Spend.

First off, what is M1 Spend? M1 Spend is your checking account for M1. These funds are the ones that you’ll use to debit your account when making purchases and house where you’ll receive ACH deposits. So, how can we use M1 Spend to our advantage in making smart investing moves regarding our M1 Pies?

M1 Spend Overbalance

Say that you want to max out your M1 Spend account at $20,000. Any excess (overbalance) funds (e.g. direct deposits, dividend payouts) will be “swept” into an M1 Pie that you’ve set up. This way you know you have funds on hand in case you need to access them, but you never have any excess funds dragging your potential earnings down.

The great thing about M1 Spend Overbalancing is that you control the maximum limitations to your M1 Spend account and where the excess funds flow to. It is intuitive, takes minutes to set up, and is a healthy disciplined tool to get your investing pies in order.

This may sound tricky at first, but you’ll certainly get the hang of it.

The Bottom Line

M1 Pies meets the gold standard here at Choose FI for not only its fee-free model but because it gives the end-user so many power tools to use. It is powerful enough for the savviest of investors but accessible for entry-level dabblers.

Have an extra $100 and think that investing that money in the market rather than in your pocket? Want a retirement vehicle that has numerous options to help it grow? Have a million-dollar portfolio, but want to diversify outside of what your current brick-and-mortar brokerage firm can provide? M1 Pies solves all these issues and millions more.

We encourage you to take the next step and take a look at M1 Finance and experience for yourself the ease of use and the endless possibilities you can have on the platform. It doesn’t take very long to set up and it is an excellent way to “get your feet wet” trading securities in the market.

M1 Pies: Level Up Your Dividend Strategy and Optimize Your Portfolio Like a Pro (2024) | ChooseFI (2024)

FAQs

Is M1 good for dividend investing? ›

The best part in my opinion is that you can do this individually for each dividend stock or ETF that you own in your portfolio. Being a dividend investor just got a whole lot better investing with M1!

What are M1 pies? ›

What's an M1 Pie? Pies are the building blocks of M1 portfolios. They contain your stocks and funds, or crypto. Create a Pie, or groups of Pies, to help you visualize and drive toward long-term financial goals.

How to create pie in M1? ›

To create a Custom Pie:

Navigate to "My Pies" Select "Build a stock-and-fund Pie" or "Build a crypto Pie" Name your Pie and add an optional description. Choose the stocks and ETFs or coins you want included.

How do I reinvest dividends in M1? ›

Cash dividend payments of at least $1 will be automatically reinvested back into the investments that paid them, regardless of your investments' target percentage allocations. Dividends worth less than $1 will be added to your cash balance as described above.

What are the downsides of M1 Finance? ›

M1 Finance is a fee-free platform that combines investing, cash management, and borrowing under one roof. A drawback, however, is that it doesn't offer human advisor support or provide tax-loss harvesting. Instead, M1 Finance has a tax minimization feature to reduce investors' owed taxes.

Is M1 Finance good for beginners? ›

M1 Finance is ideal for beginning investors. The model portfolios or M1 Pies can easily get you set up and investing in the right way. The automatic rebalancing saves beginners investment management details.

Are pie investments safe? ›

While no investment is 100% safe, PIE term deposits fall into the category of 'low risk' (just as standard term deposits do). They also offer a guaranteed return – the interest rate is fixed for the term of the deposit. This differs from savings accounts where the interest rate can change at any time.

How does pie investment work? ›

When you invest in a portfolio investment entity (PIE), it'll pay tax on your behalf, using the prescribed investor rate (PIR) you have provided. PIE tax is generally a 'final' tax. This means you don't have to include your PIE taxable income in your income tax return – as long as you've provided the correct PIR.

Is M1 Finance a Roth IRA? ›

Types of IRAs, Funds at M1 Finance

Investors in the U.S. have access to several tax-advantaged saving plans, including 401(k)s, individual retirement accounts (IRAs), and Roth IRAs. Below, we take a closer look at a broad-based stock fund and a broad-based bond fund available to M1 Finance investors.

How many pies can you have in m1? ›

M1 is an investment app that offers pre-selected portfolios called “Pies.” Each Pie is made up of slices. These slices represent stocks, ETFs, or even other existing portfolios called Model Portfolios. Each account can hold five Pies, and each Pie can hold up to 100 slices.

How does M1 pay dividends? ›

Dividends on M1 | M1 Help Center. M1 automatically handles and processes your dividend payments. By default, cash dividends payments are paid to your account's cash balance and invested according to your Auto-invest settings. You may select alternative handling options by adjusting your dividend handling settings.

Do I pay tax on dividends if I reinvest? ›

Don't assume that your return from a fund is all 'capital gain' rather than income because you are not actually receiving it. You do have to pay income tax on reinvested dividends.

When should you not reinvest dividends? ›

Another case for not reinvesting dividends would be if you already have a large position in a stock or fund and don't want to buy more of the same security. Not reinvesting dividends (and using them to invest in something else instead) can help improve a portfolio's diversification over time.

What is the dividend yield for M1 Finance? ›

Fund your Pie with dividend income. Grow dividends at 5.00% APY1 in a High-Yield Cash Account.

Do millionaires invest in dividend stocks? ›

They buy dividend-paying stocks because they know that companies committed to returning a portion of earnings to shareholders tend to outperform ones that don't. In the first three months of the year, billionaire hedge fund managers bought millions of shares of Pfizer (PFE 1.01%) and AT&T (T 0.71%).

Which fund pays highest dividends? ›

Top 100 Highest Dividend Yield ETFs
SymbolNameDividend Yield
CONYYieldMax COIN Option Income Strategy ETF143.26%
NVDGraniteShares 2x Short NVDA Daily ETF130.65%
MRNYYieldMax MRNA Option Income Strategy ETF84.84%
NVDYYieldMax NVDA Option Income Strategy ETF75.91%
93 more rows

Is M1 better than Robinhood? ›

Also, the platform's account types and investment options make M1 work better for the passive investor interested in long-term investing. Robinhood, on the other hand, works best for the active trader interested in day trading.

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