Billionaire investor Warren Buffett is known for his engaging stories about investing, and he's quick to throw in a quip here and there that will get a chuckle out of the crowd. But investors take his investing advice very seriously.
There might be a common misconception out there that investors must be skillful at picking individual stocks for their portfolios to achieve success. This just isn't true.
The Federal Reserve cut interest rates by 0.25% yesterday, and predicted two more rate cuts this year.
The Federal Reserve will announce its decision on interest rate cuts this afternoon.
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Since its 1957 debut, the S&P 500 Index has been such a strong and reliable arbiter of US stock market health that Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger have both routinely touted it in interviews.
ADP reported weak private employer jobs growth in August — 54,000 net new positions.
Retirees are often advised to limit risk in their portfolios. And there's a good reason for that.
When the market is on a tear, it's tempting to hold back and wait for a pullback. The problem is that waiting usually works against you.
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Most investors who buy the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:VOO) assume they already own the market's sweet spot.
Pairing VOO with QDPL balances growth and income, offering resilience amid policy uncertainty and market volatility, especially as AI-driven gains stretch valuations. QDPL delivers a 5.38% yield—more than four times VOO's—using dividend futures and has outperformed its 90% S&P 500 return objective while dampening volatility. A 50/50 VOO/QDPL allocation targets a 3.27% yield, providing substantial income for retirees while maintaining exposure to U.S. equity growth.