January brings out the resolutions, and not just about the gym. It's also the time when portfolios deserve a hard look. After a year where a handful of stocks drove most of the gains and the rest of the market felt like an afterthought, the question isn't really "what should I own?" It's more like "how much of what am I actually holding?"
ETFs are particularly well-suited for this kind of thinking. They let you tinker with allocation, spread risk around, and diversify without having to pick individual winners. Instead of betting on the next big thing, investors have increasingly turned to ETFs as portfolio management tools, and that trend deserves to carry into the new year. Whether you're building a portfolio from scratch or hitting the reset button, here are some ETFs worth considering.
All-In-One ETFs: Balance Without the Busywork
If you'd rather not constantly adjust your portfolio, asset allocation ETFs do the heavy lifting for you. The iShares Core 60/40 Balanced Allocation ETF (AOR), iShares Core 40/60 Moderate Allocation ETF (AOM), and iShares Core 30/70 Conservative Allocation ETF (AOK) combine equity and fixed-income ETFs into single products designed for different risk appetites.
What makes these funds useful is that they rebalance automatically, maintaining their target allocations over time. If you're more interested in deciding how much risk you're comfortable with rather than which assets will outperform, these provide a straightforward framework. The trade-off is obvious: less flexibility. But the upside is discipline, which matters more than most people want to admit.
Equal-Weight ETFs and the Concentration Problem
Here's something worth thinking about: market-cap-weighted indices naturally pile more money into bigger companies. That sounds fine until you realize it means your portfolio might be riding on the performance of just a few mega-cap stocks.
Equal-weight ETFs flip that script. The Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (RSP) spreads exposure evenly across all holdings instead of letting the giants dominate. This typically means more exposure to mid-sized companies and less dependence on whether the biggest names keep rallying. It can also mean higher turnover and more volatility compared to traditional benchmarks, but that's the price of avoiding concentration risk.
Bond ETFs as Portfolio Anchors
Fixed income isn't glamorous, but it still matters for building a portfolio that can handle different market environments. Broad-based bond ETFs like the Vanguard Total Bond Market ETF (BND) and iShares Core U.S. Aggregate Bond ETF (AGG) deliver diversified exposure across government, corporate, and mortgage-backed securities.
Some investors also lean on shorter-duration bond ETFs to reduce interest-rate sensitivity while still generating income. The results depend more on what's happening in the broader market than on any particular calendar date, but the structural role remains consistent.
| ETF | Focus | Expense Ratio |
|---|---|---|
| AOR | Growth-oriented asset allocation | 0.15% |
| AOM | Moderate asset allocation | 0.15% |
| AOK | Conservative asset allocation | 0.15% |
| RSP | S&P 500 equal-weight equities | 0.20% |
| BND | Broad U.S. bond market | 0.03% |
| AGG | U.S. aggregate bonds | 0.03% |
As the year kicks off, the smart money might be less focused on making bold calls and more interested in getting the structure right. For a lot of investors, the real New Year reset isn't about loading up on more risk. It's about figuring out how that risk is actually distributed across the portfolio.




