If you've owned Nvidia over the last few years, congratulations—you've basically been standing in front of a money printer wearing a leather jacket. Every time Wall Street started whispering that the run was over, Nvidia responded by showing up with another earnings report that made analysts look like they'd been trying to predict a hurricane with a Magic 8 Ball. At this point, betting against Nvidia has become one of the market's most reliable ways to discover new and exciting forms of financial disappointment. The obvious question now is whether this ridiculous streak can actually continue. Surely, there has to be a limit, right? Companies don't just keep smashing expectations forever. Gravity exists. Competition exists. Economic slowdowns exist. Yet every time investors prepare for reality to catch up with Nvidia, artificial intelligence finds another excuse to consume billions of dollars' worth of GPUs. It's becoming increasingly difficult to tell whethe...
Whenever someone asks me where to start with dividend investing, one fund seems to appear in almost every conversation: SCHD. At this point, it has become the index fund equivalent of that dependable friend who always shows up on time, never borrows money, and somehow still manages to look good after years of doing the same thing. It isn't flashy. It isn't trying to become the next artificial intelligence darling or ride the latest market craze. Instead, it quietly focuses on owning profitable businesses that have a history of rewarding shareholders. The real question is whether that strategy still deserves a place in today's market, or if SCHD has become a victim of its own popularity. I've owned dividend investments for years, and one lesson I've learned is that investors often mistake excitement for performance. The companies making headlines every day aren't always the ones quietly building long-term wealth. Sometimes the businesses that spend the least amou...