看不懂的SOL|Jun 26, 2026 08:52
Nasdaq 100 is afraid of high, it's a disease in itself
Let's talk about another common sense: the Nasdaq 100 has almost always set new highs since its establishment in 1985.
From 1985 to 2025, the annualized rate of return is 13.89%.
Over the past decade, the annualized rate has approached 20%.
Being afraid of heights is essentially a speculator with a lack of long-term vision.
Value investing is buying and holding for decades without selling.
My fans often ask me, "How can I buy on NASDAQ 100 when it's so high
I said, 'What I bought is also the highest point in history, and the PE is even higher than it is now.'. "
But if it's decided to hold for the long term, don't worry about the present.
After understanding this principle myself, I decisively invested all my spare money and maintained a monthly investment plan.
Those who are still asking 'should we wait until it falls before buying?' are probably the group of people who 'waited for a pullback' until now, watching it rise several times.
If it's high now, should I sell it all and buy it when it falls?
If you like this operation, please go out and turn left to the adjacent A-share.
Either invest in stocks, or use leverage to trade futures and currencies, earning tens of points a day and making a fortune immediately.
The Nasdaq 100 is not suitable for you.
According to official data from Invesco (as of June 2026), QQQ has achieved a cumulative return of 456% over the past 10 years, with an annualized return of approximately 19.6%. In the past 10 years, 7 of them have outperformed the S&P 500.
My judgment is that the "high" of Nasdaq 100 is a normal performance of long-term compound interest on high-quality assets.
Afraid of high, it's because you treat stocks as lottery tickets, not assets.
Always remember, time is the most violent lever.
If you are conservative, then make a decision to invest.
Those who are still hesitating now are likely to miss the next decade.
Share To
HotFlash
APP
X
Telegram
CopyLink