Americans who don’t own stocks have sat out one of the greatest decades of wealth creation in history.
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Today, the U.S. technology sector is worth more than the entire Japanese stock market – the world’s third-largest economy.
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These two historically robust market anomalies converge only once every four years. Take advantage of it.
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Populists resent Amazon’s and Apple’s dominance, claiming their sizes make them inherently anti-competitive. This is not good for the stock market.
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By seeing every situation as a wealth-building opportunity, you can take the actions that will gradually make you very rich.
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Let me give you one remarkably cheap and simple “set it and forget it” ETF strategy that you can implement today.
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The biggest threat facing investors today is anti-business legislation and confiscatory policies promoted by populist politicians.
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I’ve recently come across a model that can help you understand – perhaps replicate – massive returns made by early investors in Silicon Valley.
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The more you invest, the less others who don’t will have by comparison. Some call this economic inequality. But its real name is envy…
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Admiration and appreciation of society’s wealthiest 1% have been replaced in some quarters with envy, resentment… and even anger.