Investing

In trading on Tuesday, shares of Tesla crossed below their 200 day moving average of $313.28, changing hands as low as $293.21 per share. Tesla Inc shares are currently trading down about 5.2% on the day. 10 Stocks Crossing Below Their 200 Day Moving Average » The chart below shows the one year performance of TSLA shares, versus its 200 day moving average: Looking at the chart above, TSLA’s low point in its 52 week range is $182 per share, with $488.5399 as the 52 week high point — that compares with a last trade of $300.69. The TSLA DMA…

The U.S. equity market has been difficult so far in 2025. After the sharp drop this Thursday, the S&P 500 was down nearly 8% YTD and 12% off all-time highs due to fears on stagflation and worries over the Trump Administration’s newest tariff policies. Interestingly, this is against a backdrop of expected sales and earnings growth for the rest of the year in U.S. stocks. Figure 1 below shows the consensus Q1 and 2025 estimates for large-cap, mid-cap, and small-cap stocks. All are expected to record good earnings growth for the full year of +7-8%. For the Q1 2025, small-cap…

We discuss the delicate balancing act between minimizing taxes whilst maximizing wealth with Jim Davis, senior wealth advisor at Aspen Wealth Management based in Fort Worth, Texas. Light: Investors are always looking for ways to minimize their tax burden, but there’s a fine line between tax efficiency and maximizing overall wealth. Can you start by explaining why investors shouldn’t focus solely on tax minimization? Davis: The only way to legally pay zero taxes is to make zero income—and, of course, that’s not exactly a desirable strategy for most people. So, investors should focus on maximizing their after-tax wealth instead of…

A new Forbes survey of Wall Street heavyweights shows many who supported Trump’s economic promises have abandoned him – and a vast majority disapprove of the President’s economic policies. More than two months into Donald Trump’s term, with details of his “Liberation Day” regimen revealed this week, Forbes reached out to 50 top Wall Street leaders, including billionaire investors, major institutional asset managers and the nation’s largest wealth advisors, to gauge their support for the president’s economic strategies. The 50 respondents, chosen for their outsized influence, reinforced the recent market tumult. Among these Wall Street heavyweights – more than half…

President Donald Trump formally declared “Tariff Liberation Day” this week—and with it, a seismic shift in U.S. trade policy. The newly signed Executive Order, issued April 2, 2025, imposes a blanket 10% tariff on all imports, with elevated country-specific duties—34% for China, 46% for Vietnam, 24% for Japan and 20% for the European Union. The justification? Persistent trade imbalances that, in the President’s view, pose an “extraordinary threat” to America’s national and economic security. While the stated goal is to level the playing field and reignite domestic manufacturing, I’d be remiss not to acknowledge the risks. Tariffs are, after all,…

The DividendRank formula at Dividend Channel ranks a coverage universe of thousands of dividend stocks, according to a proprietary formula designed to identify those stocks that combine two important characteristics — strong fundamentals and a valuation that looks inexpensive. Apple presently has an above average rank, in the top 50% of the coverage universe, which suggests it is among the top most “interesting” ideas that merit further research by investors. 10 Oversold Dividend Stocks » But making Apple Inc an even more interesting and timely stock to look at, is the fact that in trading on Thursday, shares of AAPL…

The economy is slowing. And if you believe that these tariff-tapping brakes are going to land us in a recession, these muni bonds (with tax-equivalent yields up to 12.4%) are for you. This is the time to recession-proof our retirement holdings. The new administration appears to want to get a slowdown “out of the way” early. Atlanta’s GDPNow forecast says the economy is already shrinking: Meanwhile the latest University of Michigan consumer sentiment report shows that confidence is falling fast. The index dropped to 57.9 in March—its lowest level since November 2022. Back then we were emerging from a sharp…

Trade wars, on-again off-again tariffs, “liberation day”, and rising geopolitical tensions are roiling markets. With uncertainty and volatility through the roof, it’s a great time to remember Warren Buffet’s famous saying, “be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful.” For a long time, the market has been “greedy”, riding the coattails of momentum and meme trading. Those were the easy trading days. Almost every stock went up no matter how good or bad the underlying business was. It is nice when markets are easy. Unfortunately, easy markets cannot last forever. So far in 2025, we’re…

Yesterday, President Trump announced sweeping new tariffs on imports from many of our trading partners. Thus, Trump’s tariffs spark global selloff in stock markets around the world and increase the risk of recession. How bad could it get? How long will it last? In the past few years, stocks have risen substantially. The recent tariff announcement will change that – at least for the short term. Global stock markets are reacting negatively to the added tariffs. How long it will last is unknown, but for perspective, stocks should not fall nearly as much as they did during the 2008 recession.…

Key News Asian equities were lower overnight following President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcements. Vietnam and Japan were hit hard, while Taiwan and Indonesia picked the right day to be closed. Hong Kong, Mainland China, and South Korea were all off, but quite resilient as all markets were down less than -2%. I think it is important to note that both Mainland China and Hong Kong will be closed tomorrow. In the twelve years of studying this market and seven or eight years writing China Last Night, today’s market action doesn’t make the top ten drawdowns by a long shot.…

How Smart Money is Reacting Warren Buffett was 10 years old when the Japanese started a war with the United States, and he was 71 when Al Qaeda bombed the US using its own commercial airplanes. The US has always been the country that did not start wars. Did not seek conquest. Did not demand reparations. Did not exact revenge beyond what justice required. In the quiet corridors of Berkshire Hathaway’s modest headquarters in Omaha, the Oracle himself shared his thoughts about the latest economic saber-rattling with the calm demeanor that has guided investors through countless storms. At 94, Buffett…