Fund data and portfolio figures are current as of July 2026. This article is general analysis, not individualized financial advice. I have spent enough time around investors to know that comparing SCHD with the S&P 500 is never merely a comparison between two investments. It becomes an argument about identity. One side wants dependable dividends, established businesses and the reassuring sight of cash arriving every quarter. The other wants broad exposure to America’s largest companies and sees no reason to place an artificial ceiling on growth merely because a company has not joined the dividend-distribution club. Before long, everyone begins defending an exchange-traded fund as if it raised them. I understand the emotional attachment. SCHD and the S&P 500 represent two different ways of thinking about long-term investing. SCHD emphasizes established companies with durable dividends and strong financial characteristics. An S&P 500 fund owns a much broader collection of lar...
I'll admit it—Walmart isn't exactly the kind of stock that gets people rushing to YouTube to watch a thirty-minute breakdown. Nobody is making dramatic thumbnails with glowing arrows pointing toward a shopping cart and screaming, "This Changes Everything!" Walmart isn't flashy. It isn't chasing the next artificial intelligence breakthrough. It isn't promising to reinvent an entire industry before next Tuesday. And honestly, that's part of the reason I keep paying attention to it. The stock market has a funny way of making boring companies look... well... boring. Investors love excitement. They chase momentum, obsess over the latest technology, and convince themselves they've discovered the next company that will change the world. Meanwhile, companies like Walmart quietly keep selling groceries, household essentials, clothing, prescriptions, and just about everything else people buy regardless of whether the economy is booming or falling apart. That...