Is The Best Investment Strategy To Buy Up The S&P 500? | ​⁠@wolfofwallst

Date:

Share post:

50 COMMENTS

  1. S&P very high risk low reward at these prices. If one has a long term horizon and will dollar cost average into crashes then ok. But most can’t stomach a 50% drop nor will they cost average into any drops.

  2. I choose SPMO, PFIX, SPHD, SPYD as standout ETFs to buy in 2026. By investing in equal parts of each stock, you can expect to earn a 3.8% yield — which is roughly 3 times higher than the S&P 500 yield of 1.2%. I'm seeking ways I could divest some of my portfolio, maybe around 150k, to include digital currencies. What's your take on that?

  3. This is what you do if you know absolutely nothing about how to actually make a lot money on the stock market. If you just put in a little effort in you can beat the market significantly.

    If I used the strategy in this video I would have 1/4th of the money I have now

  4. I am having regret from selling my lakefront real estate in Chicago. I liquidated all three of my properties. This was a few years ago and I was living well off of the rental income. I currently have $250,000 liquid. Should I put it in an S&P?

  5. He's absolutely right but there's one flaw in his theory you got to have millions of dollars to make anything if you're going to put it in the S&P 500 because the number one the shares are so expensive they're like $600 a share and then on top of that you only get about 10 or 11 so you're not making any money

  6. I was looking at the S&P but they don't offer an option chain on the 3x version called spxl. Because I'm looking at short-term swing or leap trading where I can get leverage Because unless you've got millions of dollars already you're not going to make anything

  7. S&P treads water – you aren’t richer by investing in it at all. Returns 7% on average the last 50 years or so. The money supply has expanded at 7% in the same timeframe.

    So in real terms – you’re only maintaining your purchasing power at best because the gov prints so much money

  8. I'm not even an expert fund manager and I easily have outperformed the S&P. So idk what you're talking about. Even the NASDAQ beats the S&P every year. So this is definitely bs.

Leave a Reply to @henryvanderbeek2973 Cancel reply

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Related articles

AI Investments Not Expected To Deliver Traditional ROI : Report

KPMG UK has indicated in a recent update that AI no longer needs traditional return on investment...

TotalEnergies refinery in Saudi Arabia damaged in incident

TotalEnergies refinery in Saudi Arabia damaged in incident

Why the AI Takeover Could Be the Best Thing for Your Professional Future

Welcome to the future — a future where artificial intelligence (AI) plays a larger role in our...

Empower Personal Finance Review: Pros And Cons

Quick SummaryRobust personal finance tracking tools (free to use) Wealth management services for higher-net-worth clients High-yield cash account offers...