The S&P 500 has averaged about 10% annually since 1928, but that figure varies widely by time period. What the long-run data actually shows.
The key takeaway is that 48% of the S&P 500 contributes just 0.25% of the index's yield. Meaning that if you took out the 20 largest stocks, the S&P 500 would yield around 2% -- just like it did a ...
Wide swathes of the investing public have their retirement funds tied to the fate of the S&P 500. The fact that we are likely in an AI bubble means that millions of folks stand to lose massive amounts ...