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The 60/40 Portfolio: A Sweet Past, a Future Shadowed by Inflation
By Randall W. Forsyth "Before the next depression, be sure to buy bonds." So said an old New Yorker cartoon of a dowager advising her broker, way back when they would get together in a Wall Street
Worried About Politics? Minimize Investing Risks
Political tensions and the stock market continue to climb in an uneasy mix for investors. The best way through may be to seek a middle ground.
US stocks closed with all three major indices falling, with the S&P Nasdaq index seeing its largest weekly decline in three months. Technology stocks weakened, with Tesla down more than 4%, Nvidia down more than 2%, and CrowdStrike down more than 11%.
Investors accelerated their escape from technology stocks, with stocks and bonds in Europe and the United States being hit hard for two days. This week, the S&P 500 and Nasdaq fell by about 2% and 3.7%, respectively. The Nasdaq stopped its six-week continuous rise, while the Dow and small-cap indices rose by 0.7% and 1.7%, respectively. Chip stocks fell more than 3% on Friday and nearly 9% for the week. Nvidia also fell more than 8.7% for the past three months, making it the worst performer. The "seven sisters of technology" all fell for the week, and cybersecurity leader Crowdstrike, which triggered a global technology outage, fell 11% on Friday, the worst in nearly two years. The VIX panic index rose more than 32% for the week.
What the Stock Market's Wild Week Means for the Next 6 Months
Like passengers on a bus spinning around as the driver loses control, investors were left dizzy by the market rotation of this past week.
Russell Rotation: YTD Market Capitalizations Swelling for Small-caps
'Blue Screen of Death' Adds to Tech Pain on Summer Friday | Wall Street Today
U.S. stocks pulled back Friday, as the largest IT crash in history sent tech even lower for there week following a semiconductor sector pullback.
Doditty : Most overbought etf in the past two days