
Building a $150,000 ASX portfolio can sound like a huge task.
But I think it becomes far more achievable when investors stop thinking about the full amount and start thinking about the process.
The goal is not to find one perfect share. It is to build a habit, choose quality assets, and give compounding enough time to work.
Here is how I would approach it.
The first step is to build a core holding.
For many investors, I think that could mean starting with a broad exchange-traded fund (ETF) such as the Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF (ASX: VAS), iShares S&P 500 AUD ETF (ASX: IVV), or Vanguard MSCI Index International Shares ETF (ASX: VGS).
These ETFs can provide instant diversification across many companies, sectors, and geographies.
That is useful because beginners do not need to decide immediately whether a bank, miner, retailer, healthcare stock, or technology company will be the best performer.
They can own a broad basket and let the market do some of the work.
I would not overcomplicate this stage. A simple ETF core can give the portfolio a strong foundation while the investor keeps learning.
Once the core is in place, I would start adding individual ASX shares.
This is where investors can tilt the portfolio toward businesses they want to own for many years.
For me, the focus would be on quality. That means strong market positions, sensible balance sheets, reliable earnings, and long growth runways.
Examples could include companies such as Wesfarmers Ltd (ASX: WES), ResMed Inc (ASX: RMD), Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG), REA Group Ltd (ASX: REA), or Goodman Group (ASX: GMG).
I would not rush to buy everything at once.
A $150,000 portfolio can be built piece by piece. Buying periodically also reduces the pressure of trying to time the market perfectly.
Some purchases will look early. Some will look well timed. Over a decade, the bigger driver is usually whether the investor kept buying quality assets and stayed invested.
Dividends can make a big difference.
At first, they may not feel very exciting. A small portfolio might only generate a few dollars or a few hundred dollars of income each year.
But reinvested dividends can help buy more shares, which can then generate more dividends in future years.
That is one reason I like ASX shares for long-term wealth building. Many Australian companies have a strong dividend culture, and reinvesting those payments can quietly add to compounding.
A $150,000 portfolio will not be built overnight unless someone already has a large amount of capital.
But regular investing can get the job done.
For example, investing $500 a month at an average annual return of 9% would grow to around $150,000 in just over 13 years. That return is not guaranteed, and markets will not move in a straight line.
Still, the maths shows why consistency is so powerful.
The key is to keep going through good markets and bad ones.
I think building a $150,000 ASX portfolio is less about doing something dramatic and more about repeating a sensible plan.
Start with a diversified core, add quality ASX shares over time, reinvest the income, and let compounding build momentum.
There will be pullbacks, bad headlines, and moments when cash feels safer. But investors who keep buying good assets through those periods give themselves a real chance of turning a modest starting point into a meaningful portfolio.
The post How to build a $150,000 ASX share portfolio from scratch appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.
Motley Fool contributor Grace Alvino has positions in Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF and Wesfarmers. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Goodman Group, Macquarie Group, ResMed, Wesfarmers, and iShares S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Macquarie Group and ResMed. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Goodman Group, Vanguard Msci Index International Shares ETF, Wesfarmers, and iShares S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.
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