A 33-year-old sparked a heated debate online recently after sharing a plan to work 80 hours a week for the next two years in hopes of catching up financially after struggling through most of their 20s. The poster, who still...
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A 33-year-old sparked a heated debate online recently after sharing a plan to work 80 hours a week for the next two years in hopes of catching up financially after struggling through most of their 20s. The poster, who still...
CF Industries gains from tight global fertilizer supplies and low U.S. gas prices, while Norwegian Cruise Line faces higher fuel costs and weak demand.
AI-led earnings, resilient jobs data and easing Iran tensions are fueling hopes for another major S&P 500 rally.
If it feels like growth stocks can’t continue their outperformance much longer, ignore that feeling. The Vanguard S&P 500 Growth Index Fund Exchange-Traded Fund, home to companies with high sales growth including Nvidia Advanced Micro Devices Microsoft and Eli Lilly is up 13% in the past month. A couple of factors have driven the performance of the growth stocks.
AI optimism and strong earnings are driving bullish S&P 500 targets as investors eye ETFs for long-term growth.
<p>Active fixed income continues to grow while passive equity investors may be biting off more than they care to chew in the coming months should SpaceX make it into benchmark indices post-IPO. Don’t miss this riveting <em>ETF Zoo </em>episode that covers everything from the Corgi cannon of ETF launches to the value of a cockroach portfolio in today’s markets. </p>
<p>Table below reflects daily flows on May 11, 2026 and asset totals as of that date.</p>
AI optimism and resilient earnings growth keep long-term optimism alive for U.S. equities. Discover ETFs to buy and hold for long-term growth.
Picture a first-time investor who sinks $200 into Intel shares and watches the position climb to $850, a 280% gain. The instinct is to feel like a genius and let it ride. According to Robert Croak and Austin Hankwitz of the Rich Habits Podcast, that instinct is the single biggest mistake beginner investors make. The ... The Biggest Mistake Beginner Investors Make, According to the Rich Habits Podcast
If market volatility is on the horizon, this ETF could be an especially smart buy right now.
One dividend ETF has risen above the others over the past three years. But it's done so in a very unconventional way.
If it feels like growth stocks can’t continue their outperformance much longer, ignore that feeling. The Vanguard S&P 500 Growth Index Fund Exchange-Traded Fund, home to companies with high sales growth including Nvidia Advanced Micro Devices Microsoft and Eli Lilly is up 13% in the past month. A couple of factors have driven the performance of the growth stocks.
SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) and Vanguard 500 Index Fund ETF (NYSEARCA:VOO) track the same S&P 500 index. The real contest is structure, cost, and cash flow. With the VIX at 17.39, this is a clean moment to compare them. Same Index, Same Names at the Top Both funds own identical holdings. SPY’s largest ... The Hidden Drag of SPY’s Outdated UIT Structure: Why VOO’s 6.45 Basis Point Fee Advantage Matters Over a Decade
Expense ratios, dividend yields, and volatility sharply distinguish these two popular ETFs.
Mutual fund investors who tuned out unsettling war news in April were richly rewarded for staying the course.
The S&P 500 continues to set new all-time highs. That doesn't mean the rally is over just yet.
Wall Street's intensifying ETF fee war may be delivering an unexpected benefit to millions of retirement savers: potentially larger 401(k) balances over time. • Vanguard S&P 500 ETF stock is trading at elevated levels. What should traders watch with VOO? Fund fees continued to be cut as asset managers battle for investor flows in the rapidly expanding ETF industry. For example, a fee battle cost State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY) billions of inflows last year as Vanguard S&P 500 ETF
The S&P 500 looks frothy, but long-term investors shouldn't panic.
State Street’s 2026 Global ETF Outlook puts a stake in the ground on page 20: the first $1 trillion ETF will land this year. The frontrunner is the Vanguard 500 Index Fund ETF (NYSEARCA:VOO), which closed Monday at $660 with $839 billion in net assets as of early May. VOO sits roughly $160 billion shy ... State Street Calls It “The first $1 trillion ETF will land this year”
State Street’s 2026 Global ETF Outlook calls for $2.1 trillion of US ETF inflows this year, with the lion’s share flowing into three core funds: Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:VOO), iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (NYSEARCA:IVV), and Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF (NYSEARCA:VTI). Each charges 3 basis points, each defaults into model portfolios, and each ... If the 10-Year Treasury Crosses 4.6%, Here’s What Happens to VOO and IVV