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Stroke @stroke
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Analysis · 1m

Bull 🐂
The bull case is that $PLTR isn’t just selling AI tools, they’re positioning themselves as the infrastructure layer that helps governments and enterprises actually deploy AI at scale.

Strong revenue growth, expanding commercial adoption, long-term government contracts, and improving cash generation continue to support the story.

Valuation will always be debated, but if execution continues and AI adoption keeps accelerating, today’s prices may look very different a few years from now.
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Ty @tybuys
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Beginner Investors · 2d

Who Agrees???
Relying on a single day job for 100% of your financial survival is the ultimate risk.

If that single income stream dries up tomorrow, the average person is exactly one or two missed paychecks away from complete chaos.

Yet, those exact same people will look you in the eye and tell you investing in broad index funds is "too risky."

The logic is completely backwards.

They willingly trust a single employer with their entire livelihood, but don't trust the 500 most profitable corporations on earth to grow their capital over time.

When you consistently allocate a portion of your paycheck into compounding assets, you are hiring thousands of the smartest workers, engineers, and executives on the planet to make you money 24/7.

Stop letting your labor be a single point of failure.

Convert your working hours into permanent, unstoppable equity every single chance you get.
$VFV $XEQT $QQQM $SCHD

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Nik @srinik
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ETFs · ⭐ Featured

Here is the ultimate beginner portfolio
I see many beginners posting that they’re new to investing and don’t know where to start. 🤔 As someone who was in a similar situation just a few months ago and learned, here are the 4 ETF types (& ETFs) that are popular among long term investors 😃 :

1) S&P 500:
US: $VOO / $SPY / $SPLG
Canadian: $VFV / $ZSP / $TPU

2) GROWTH / TECH:
US: $QQQ / $VUG / $VGT / $SCHG
Canadian: $QQC / $HXQ / $TEC / $ZUQ

3) DIVIDENDS:
US: $SCHD / $VYM / $DGRO
Canadian: $VDY / $XEI

4) ALL IN ONE / BASKET / Global Exposure:
US: $VT / $AVGE
Canadian: $ZEQT / $XEQT / $TGRO / $VEQT / $ZGQ

I noticed many people following this type of a basic / uncomplicated portfolio and are doing really well for themselves 🔥

For % allocation, you can divide evenly among the ETF categories or allocate a higher % based on your preferences. Just DCA regularly and you should be good. 😎

Some people even just put it all into an all in one etf like $XEQT. This is also a good approach - it is much simpler and it works. Ultimately, it comes to whatever you prefer 🙂

Oh and yea, there are overlaps, but I don’t think there is anything wrong in that though - it would just count as doubling down on good things. 💯

I’m sharing with you all what helped me, but don’t forget to do your own research too! 🙏🏼

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Saif Althani@althani
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Options · 3m

🚀
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Ronan
@ronan
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Beginner Investors · 6d

What Actually Is “Diversification”? 💰
Investors talk about “Diversification” as this great tool to help you invest, but what does it actually look like in your portfolio?

Diversification is referred to as “Not putting all of your eggs into one basket”, but it’s actually quite a bit more than that.

A common misconception is that having more holdings makes you a more diversified, investor; This is only partially true. Diversifying into more holdings does make a difference, but that’s only if you do it right.

A broad market index fund like $XEQTor $VFV is considered more diversified than buying a single stock. XEQT holds thousands of companies, and VFV also owns hundreds. This number of holdings definitely diversifies you, but it’s not just about holdings.

If an investor holds 100 companies, ALL of which are tiny micro caps that trade under 10 cent a share, you’re not really “diversified”. The companies are SO incredibly risky that even holding 100 of them still doesn’t change that. I’ve seen many new investors say “I have 30 holdings I’m very diversified!”, but their holdings consist of very high risk companies and their portfolio moves 5% a day. That’s why diversification is a lot more than just holdings.

Like I said originally, diversifying is more than not putting all of your eggs in one basket, because there’s different ways you can do that. Simply having more holdings is only one part of diversifying, let’s look at some others.

Geographical Diversification: $XEQT for example is not only good for its number of holdings, but also its geographical holdings. It was International Diversification, meaning there are many country’s stock markets that are included in the fund. This allows your portfolio to not be subject to one country (like the US) and its market

Asset Diversification: Stocks are not the only asset you can own. Many people have 100% equities, but multiple other kinds of assets also can appreciate in value and add diversification. Real Estate, Fixed Income, Precious Metals, Bitcoin, Collectibles, all offer different kinds of investment opportunities that differ from just owning stocks.

Sector Diversification: This is a big one that’s overlooked. Many investors go all in on one sector, in recent years it’s Technology. Owning one sector alone puts you at risk of longer and larger drawdowns in your investment lifestyle. If you owned the NASDAQ post 2000, you would have taken 15 years to recover from an 80% drawdown, that’s not something to take lightly. This also applies to those owning individual stocks. Your companies may be doing great and continue to, but if all you own is 10 tech businesses, no matter how good the businesses are you’ll be hit HARD in a bear market. Diversifying outside of 1 sector means your portfolio will move in different directions thereby reducing your risk and volatility.

Now those all seem pretty obvious ways to diversify, but there’s other ways to diversify especially for those who choose to be more concentrated and buy things like individual stocks. Just because you’re more risky, doesn’t mean you can’t take safety precautions.

Sector diversification is still big, if your stocks are all in one sector you’ll be hit even harder than the sector as a whole in the future. Another one is revenue diversification and it’s a big one. Owning businesses that have diversified revenue means the business is less likely to all of a sudden lose all of its income. Payfare was a business that operated closely with DoorDash. However, the revenue for Payfare was 75% from DoorDash. The company then proceeded to lose the contract, and overnight the share price fell 75%. Their revenue wasn’t diversified, and shareholders took the brunt of the consequences.

You can also diversify your businesses with low volatility. Most investors cannot handle moves of 5% a day. You can focus on low volatility or businesses that move in low beta to the market. This helps you take the hit on bad days or prolonged red markets since not all your stocks are directly tied to the index.

Position sizing is another big one for diversifying your portfolio. If you don’t want extreme risk, you can position your investments accordingly. Rather than buying a stock and making it 40% of your portfolio, size it according to the risk you can handle and what it could grow to. If you owned $NVDA or $AMD as 25-50% of your portfolio, you’re now almost entirely tied to the business movements of those companies. It doesn’t fully matter about the other stocks you own, it NVIDIA plummets, you’ll be down with it. If instead you had it at 10% of your portfolio, your daily swings and long-term risk drops significantly since you’re not tied to the success of one business. Having positions at 5 or 10% instead of 50% means you’re much less affected by any investment at any given time, other investments can balance out your daily swings.

Being concentrated or “risky” does not mean you need to throw risk management and diversification out the window. Even if you have a riskier portfolios, there are still ways to protect yourself from bad decisions and create longevity in any market.

Remember, risk is only easy to handle when you’re making money, what happens when you actually start losing it?

As always, do your research and happy investing!

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Nick
@realnickstrategy
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Technology · 8m

Is anyone touching Palantir here?

PEG Ratio: 1.39x

$PLTR

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yield
@yield
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Passive Income · 17m

Top 9 🇨🇦 Covered Call ETF Holdings Comparison
NOTE: Allocations as of Jun 28th, 2026

$BANK : 6 Banks & 4 Lifecos
$UTES : 4 Utilities, 3 Pipelines, 3 Telecoms
$CDAY : 25 Dividend (80%) + VOO (20%)
$CANY : 11 Top Trending
$ECHI : 13 Top & Trending
$ENCL : 12 Oil & Gas
$OILY : 10 Oil & Gas
$HHIC : 10 Top & Trending
$SIXY : 6 Banks

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Ronan
@ronan
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Beginner Investors · 17m

Don't Just Hold Onto Bad Investments 👎
Have you ever owned something and wish you bought something else instead that made way more money? That's the cost of choosing one investment over the other. Opportunity cost is the return you miss out on when picking your stocks. This is something to not overlook when understanding your own investments.

If you buy an investment worth $100, and it falls to $50 then you might regret buying. At the same time, a different investment could have brought your $100 to $125. Your opportunity cost was holding the poor investment instead of the good one. The problem comes if you decide to continue holding onto your bad investment just because you hope it will go back up.

If you make a poor decision and lose some money, that's okay it happens. We all make poor investment decisions, but the important part comes what you decide to do with the investment afterwards. Many investors will look at that $50 they lost and continue to hold on to the investment until they might "break-even". This is an investing fallacy, not every investment is guaranteed to go back to the price you bought.

The more important thing is WHY do you think your investment will go back up? If you're holding a broad index fund like $VFV or $XEQT then you might know that long-term the whole market will eventually recover and you can hold long-term. The same can't be said about many other funds or single stocks. If $NVDA were to crash 50% or more, there may or may not be a time where it recovers, that's totally unknown.

The problem is many take on such a large opportunity cost because they hold investments all the way down until they've lost all their money. An important skill is to know when you've made a bad decision and move on from it. Even if your $100 went down to $50, it could still absolutely keep going down to $30 then $20 then $10. What might be a better choice is to take that $50 and put it towards something that will actually give you better returns.

Remember, hope is not a strategy, the market does not care how you "feel" about an investment. You need to have a valid reason WHY you're still holding onto a losing investment. Is it because there's evidence it will recover? Or are you just hoping you won't look stupid for making a bad investment? Learn to be honest with yourself, you won't be a perfect investor.

We as investors can get too attached to our positions and we need to look at them through an objective lens. Opportunity cost can exist for everything we buy, we just need to learn when it's time to call it a day and move on from a poor choice we made.

As always, do your research and happy investing!

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Nara @imnarajp
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Beginner Investors · 6d

Started investing for my future home
Bought some $VFV $XEQT and $VDY on the FHSA account.

Looking for more insights and stocks i should put towards it!

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Maxwell
@maxstocks
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Community · 22m

Accredited Investors Can Still Invest in Blossom!
😎 Quick PSA that we have <$400k in allocation room left for accredited investors to invest in Blossom! To be accredited, you need either >$200k in annual income or over $1M in net worth. If that’s you, here’s the link if you want to invest - https://www.frontfundr.com/blossomsocial2026

🚀 We’ve already had $1.1m invested from accredited investors alongside the $1.5m invested from non accredited that filled in 2 hours 🤯

🤗 Huge warm welcome to all our new shareholders and shoutout to all our existing shareholders who increased their position. I noticed a few shareholders who invested all the way back in 2022 (before Blossom even launched) reinvested in the round which was pretty cool to see 🔥

🎁 Will get all the perks sorted this week, make sure you’ve filled out the form with the same email as your Frontfundr email!

🇺🇸 For US folks stay tuned as we’re working with some US platforms to do a similar opportunity for you all to also invest!
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Ashton Invests
@ashton_1nvests
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Beginner Investors · 34m

Generational Opportunities
I believe these 5 stocks are generational buying opportunities right now.

In my opinion, every one of them has the potential to 3x or more over the next 3–5 years.

1. $SOFI | SoFi Technologies
2. $NOW | ServiceNow
3. $ZETA | Zeta Global
4. $AMZN | Amazon
5. $UBER | Uber Technologies

These are not low-risk investments, and they will not move in a straight line.

But I believe the current prices could look incredibly cheap three to five years from now.
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Kevin Henderson
@kev4hunnid
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Beginner Investors · 55m

$QNDX

Does anyone have any insights on $QNDX? Would this be a good alternative to QQQM versus paying $200 for a nasdaq 100 index?
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STA Research@staresearch
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Market News · 11d

Canadian Analyst Updates: June 16th, 2026
Analyst coverage is broadly positive, with a clear bias toward Buy and Outperform ratings alongside generally rising price targets, particularly in banks, large-cap financials, and parts of the energy and infrastructure sectors, reflecting confidence in earnings stability and resilient fundamentals. However, sentiment is more mixed in cyclicals, consumer names, and resource-related stocks, where outcomes vary by company and risk profile, with some speculative coverage highlighting higher volatility. More cautious views persist in select REIT and cannabis names, where neutral ratings and downward target revisions point to ongoing sector-specific pressure within an overall constructive market tone.

37 Analyst Updates

A&W Food Services of Canada (AW:CA) — RBC Capital maintained its Sector Perform rating with a $40.00 price target.

Alimentation Couche-Tard (ATD:CA) — TD Securities maintained its Buy rating and $100.00 price target.

Allied Properties REIT (AP-UN:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained a Neutral rating with a $10.50 price target.

Atlas Salt (SALT:CA) — Ventum Capital maintained its Buy rating and $2.50 price target.

Bank of Montreal (BMO:CA) — Scotia Capital raised its price target to $239.00 from $234.00 while maintaining a Sector Outperform rating.

Brookfield Corp. (BN:CA) — TD Securities maintained its Buy rating with an $84.00 price target.

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM:CA) — Scotia Capital increased its price target to $157.00 from $155.00 and maintained a Sector Perform rating.

Canadian Net REIT (NET-UN:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained a Neutral rating and $27.00 price target.

Canopy Growth (WEED:CA) — Alliance Global Partners lowered its price target to $1.60 from $1.80.

Dundee Precious Metals (DPM:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained a Neutral rating with a $64.00 price target.

F3 Uranium (FUU:CA) — Fundamental Research initiated coverage with a Buy rating and a $0.44 price target.

Franco-Nevada (FNV:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained an Outperform rating and $480.00 price target.

Gildan Activewear (GIL:CA)— CIBC World Markets maintained an Outperform rating with a $108.00 price target.

Gildan Activewear (GIL:CA) — TD Securities reiterated a Buy rating with a $112.00 price target.

Gran Tierra Energy (GTE:CA) — Roth upgraded the stock to Buy with a $14.50 price target.

Greenfire Resources (GFR:CA) — TD Securities initiated coverage with Buy ratings and $10.00 price targets.

Groupe Dynamite (GRGD:CA) — TD Securities lowered its price target to $85.00 from $105.00 while maintaining a Buy rating.

Groupe Dynamite (GRGD:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained its Outperform rating with a $100.00 price target.

High Tide (HITI:CA) — TD Securities maintained its Buy rating with a $6.50 price target.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — BMO Capital Markets raised its price target to $65.00 from $60.00.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — CIBC World Markets increased its price target to $65.00 from $63.00.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — Scotiabank raised its price target to $65.00 from $60.00.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — Raymond James lowered its price target to $66.00 from $67.00 while maintaining an Outperform rating.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — ATB Cormark increased its price target to $58.00 from $55.00 while maintaining a Sector Perform rating.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — National Bank raised its price target to $61.00 from $56.00 and maintained an Outperform rating.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — RBC Capital increased its price target to $62.00 from $60.00 while maintaining an Outperform rating.

Keyera (KEY:CA) — TD Securities maintained its Buy rating with a $68.00 price target.

Klondike Gold (KG:CA) — Fundamental Research initiated coverage with a Buy rating and a $0.59 price target.

Mako Mining (MKO:CA) — Stifel initiated coverage with a Speculative Buy rating and a $20.00 price target.

Meridian Mining (MNO:CA) — CIBC World Markets maintained an Outperform rating with a $3.25 price target.

National Bank of Canada (NA:CA) — Scotiabank raised its price target to $222.00 from $214.00 while maintaining a Sector Outperform rating.

Rocket Doctor AI (AIDR:CA) — Fundamental Research maintained its Buy rating with a $1.55 price target.

Royal Bank of Canada (RY:CA) — Scotia Capital increased its price target to $280.00 from $275.00 and maintained a Sector Outperform rating.

Star Copper (STCU:CA) — Fundamental Research initiated coverage with a Buy rating and a $2.35 price target.

Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD:CA) — Scotiabank raised its price target to $169.00 from $164.00 while maintaining a Sector Outperform rating.

Trident Resources (ROCK:CA) — Fundamental Research maintained its Buy rating with a $7.48 price target.

https://www.stocktargetadvisor.com/blog/canadian-analyst-updates-june-16th-2026/

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Kevin Henderson
@kev4hunnid
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ETFs · 56m

$QNDX

Does anyone have any insights on $QNDX? Would this be a good alternative to QQQM versus paying $200 for a nasdaq 100 index?
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Marcos Milla
@marcosmilla
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ETFs · 1h

100% on $DRAM
100% on $MU
100% on Blossom

This year

Now my chain hit like lightning ⚡️

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Marcos Milla
@marcosmilla
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Beginner Investors · 1h

There's a 100% Chance of Death and Taxes in your lifetime...

There's also a 100% Chance you see:
1) Micron $MU hit $2,000
2) $DRAM hit $200
3) $VOO hit $1,000
4) $QQQM hit $500
5) NVIDIA $NVDA hit $400

In your lifetime...

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Twenty-five And Invested
@25andinvested
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Beginner Investors · 10d

The dip for when?!?!?
lets say you pick stocks and your post is about buying the dip.... sure, i dont nessisaraly agree with it but sure.

Your buying $VEQT ,$XEQT, $VFV and your shouting dip.....

Dip compared to what?
why does it matter?
What is the time horizon?

Buying the dip for someone who has taken on the "indexing" strategy means buying when the funds are avalible, not when the market is down .314%

Buying on a red day by accident feels good, but if the aim is to catch what the market gives then timing for a .1% dip is a descision that will not matter in 10+ years.

it wont even be a descision you remember in 20 years. Missing out on market returns because you wanted the dip buying experiance is a regret that is just as likely as catching the dip.

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BD Investing
@bdinvesting
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Beginner Investors · 🔥 Hot

Unhinged ways to make money 💰
Episode 3 of the Retail Rundown is live !!

On this episode we want to bring our rich friends to tell us how they REALLY make money.

We sit down with entrepreneur, crypto trader, and content creator ‪@zac_hartley‬

We dive into Zach's journey from running for Mayor of Calgary to building multiple income streams through domain investing, Bitcoin mining, Amazon FBA, 3D printing businesses, AI-powered software projects, and stock market investing.

Zac shares how he turned a $15 domain purchase into a $4,000 sale, built a 3D printing business generating roughly $200,000 in annual profit, sold his Amazon operation, and used AI tools like Claude to build a Canadian finance platform in just a few hours.

We also discuss:

• Bitcoin's 4-year cycle and crypto mining profitability
• Amazon FBA and product launch strategies
• Selling a business and entrepreneurship lessons
• AI, software development, and vibe coding
• Canadian investing, ETFs, TFSAs, and sovereign wealth funds
• Diversifying income streams and learning from failure

Subscribe for more episodes of Retail Rundown & who we should bring on next !

https://youtu.be/yDE_MV6hRo0?si=dG2ooCCP_Cv-SLDs
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Real Blush@thereal_blush
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Market News · 1h

📅 Monday Market Calendar | June 29
Here’s what’s on our radar as we head into Monday’s trading session:

👀 Volatility Watch: $GME $MOMO
🔥 Potential momentum: $WEN
📈 Overbought: $NVCT $PSIG $ALOT
📉 Oversold: $CEPO $HDRN
🗓️ IPOs, dividend plays, and the $HON $HONA spinoff all kick off this week.
What ticker is at the top of your watchlist for Monday? Drop it below 👇
$SPY $SPX $QQQ

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Ranjan
@ranjan2906
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Community · 2h

Markets last week
$SPY dropped 1.4% last week driven by sell offs in semiconductor names and hyperscalers.

- $MU $TXN $TER $LRCX $COHR $AMAT $AMD $AVGO $NVDA all experienced drops ranging from 5 - 10%. The sell off was primarily driven by SK Hynix pulling back its expansion plans in AI memory and switching back to traditional consumer chips. This led to fears that AI chip pricing premium might be coming down.

- Hyperscalers $META $GOOGL $MSFT $AMZN $AAPL also dropped on spending concerns and OpenAI dwlaying its IPO. Questions are now arising if all the spend on AI is going to be validated by the returns.

- Rate hike and rising geopolitical concerns also led to selloff in growth stocks like $IONQ $RKLB $INFQ

Personally, I feel there is more volatility ahead and thats why I have encouraged everyone to diversify. Yes my portfolio also declined but by only .35% over the week beating both $SPY and $QQQ.

I dunno about you but I am never going to focus just on one sector. That's why while everyone was buying AI names at all time highs, I started a new position in boring $DUK .

Keep investing, not gambling !!

✌️✌️
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Stocks @stocksetfsbonds
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ETFs · 3h

📊 Popular investment options 3 year returns 📈📈
Everyone talks about “buying the market”… but different investment styles have delivered very different returns over the last 3 years.📈🚀👇

Here’s a quick comparison:

📈 Growth Stocks ($NVDA, $PLTR, $AVGO)
3-Year Return: +150% to +900%+
➡️ Highest upside, but also the most volatile.

⚡ Growth ETFs ($QQQ, $VUG, $SCHG)
3-Year Return: ~+45% to +90%
➡️ Great way to own innovation without relying on one company.

💰 Dividend ETFs ($SCHD, $VIG, $DGRO)
3-Year Return: ~+20% to +45% (plus dividends)
➡️ Focus on consistent cash flow and long-term compounding.

🛒 Consumer Staples ETFs ($XLP, $VDC)
3-Year Return: ~+5% to +20%
➡️ Defensive holdings that tend to hold up during downturns.

⚙️ Technology Sector ETFs ($XLK, $VGT)
3-Year Return: ~+60% to +100%
➡️ Powered by AI, semiconductors, and cloud computing.

⚡ Energy Sector ETFs ($XLE, $VDE)
3-Year Return: ~+20% to +55%
➡️ Strong returns despite commodity price swings.

🏥 Healthcare ETFs ($XLV, $VHT)
3-Year Return: ~+10% to +30%
➡️ Historically resilient with long-term demographic tailwinds.

🏠 REIT ETFs ($VNQ, $SCHH)
3-Year Return: ~-5% to +15%
➡️ Hurt by higher interest rates but could benefit if rates decline.

🌎 Broad Market ETFs ($VOO, $SPY, $VTI, $VXUS, $FXAIX, $VT)
3-Year Return: ~+45% to +65%
➡️ A solid core holding for many long-term investors.

⸻

📌 Lesson: There’s no “best” investment.

A balanced portfolio often combines:

* 🚀 Growth for upside
* 💵 Dividends for income
* 🛡️ Defensive sectors for stability
* 📈 Broad index funds for consistent long-term compounding

Diversification may not produce the highest return every year—but it can help you stay invested long enough to benefit from compounding.

Past performance doesn’t guarantee future results, but understanding how different asset classes behave can make you a better long-term investor.

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Regis
@mytranslator
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Beginner Investors · 🔥 Hot

Poster for my office
No, this is not AI!
I have such a strong conviction in my portfolio and I am such a fan of it that I have printed a poster! 🤪 It will go straight to my office above my desk, as a daily reminder to stay the course and keep on investing!!
💪🚀🚀

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LM @retiredyoung
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Personal Finance · ⭐ Featured

Preparing for the inevitable.
I am currently 47 years old. Unfortunately in that time frame I have lost a lot of family members. Some (most) were accidents, some to age, some to cancer, and one to suicide. That’s 11 deaths total. Only 1 person out of 11 had a will.
When you are grieving the last thing you want to do is close an estate up.
It’s even harder if nothing has been prepared in advance.
After the initial shock of the death settles (the phase where everyone is usually nice), greed comes through in a most alarming manner. I’ve watched people turn into monsters. Make sure you have a will!!!! or people will fight. 

I know most people hate thinking about their death or their spouses death but honestly it’s just a fact of life.

I’ve personally been the executor of 2 estates now.

This is my advice:

1. If your young get life insurance. If you’re retired it’s not worth it.
2. Make sure you have a will.
3. Make sure you have a personal directive.
4. Make sure you have a power of attorney set up.
5. If your married make your spouse the beneficiary of your TFSA and RRSP(has to be done through the account not the will), they will roll into the spouses account without taxation.
6. If you’re married, and you own a house, make sure both names are on the title, joint tenant, NOT tenant in common. This activates right of survivorship on property and doesn’t have to go through the estate.
7. If you’re married, both people should have their name on all the vehicles, joint, otherwise it’s a headache after death.
8. Buy a file folding system. I have a plastic one that has a clasp and handle.
9. Put EVERYTHING in this file folder that would be needed if you died tomorrow.
a) all land titles
B) information on house insurance so it can either be eventually canceled or name changed over.
C) your will (or the location of your will),  power of attorney, and personal directive
D) the information for your car, car insurance, and registration on vehicles.
E) information on life insurance.
F) all current year papers needed for filing your taxes. Because the survivor will have to do it and will need that information.
G) where your household bills are. ALL OF THEM, electricity, gas, Netflix, magazine, subscriptions everything you can think of that is in their name. Because you are going to have to cancel them.
H) their credit card information where to contact to cancel the cards
I) birth certificate, SIN numbers, marriage, license, etc.
J) information on all your investments accounts, bank accounts, etc.
K) anything else you can think of for your situation


If you’re married, I’d have one box per person.

When you die, the funeral home will issue many death certificates. And your lawyer will give you copies of the will.
These will be needed to change over any accounts. Everything else goes through the estate which is taxed and the lawyers take their fees so I’d avoid this as much as possible especially if you’re married. This is why having property in both people‘s names is so important because it doesn’t have to go through probate.

I am widowed now and I have my black file folder and my two remaining children know if something happens to me, all they have to do is grab the folder. Everything they need to take care of my estate will be located in this folder.

At the beginning of every year, I open this file up and go through everything to make sure it’s up-to-date.

If you are young and do not own much or can’t afford a will, you can draft one up but it must be handwritten to be classified as a legal document. You cannot type it out!! If you’re not worth much, everything will most likely be sold to pay your bills and cover your funeral expenses. But you can state who your executor will be in your handwritten will.

 Disclaimer I’m not a lawyer or an accountant and this is not legal advice. Talk to a lawyer and talk to an accountant. Make sure everything is set up for you and your situation. These are situations that I personally ran into.

Good luck


Also I’ll add in. IF you have a lot of assets make an appointment with your accountant first. They will tell you how to properly set things up. Then take that information to your lawyer.
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Jake JTC Insights@jaketradinginsights
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ETFs · 8h

$17B was invested into robotics and physical AI in Q1 2026.

That's nearly 10× more than in 2020.

These 16 companies will benefit the most:

1. $OUST – $42.02 52wk: $16.40–$51.50

Ouster's lidar sensors give robots and autonomous vehicles 3D spatial awareness for safe navigation.

2. $SYM – $41.24 (52wk: $23.59–$87.88, 1yr: +16.0%)

Symbotic's AI robots automate warehouse logistics, replacing manual labor with autonomous pallet/case handling.

3. $AEVA – $20.04 (52wk: $8.83–$38.80)

Aeva's FMCW 4D lidar detects velocity and position instantly, key for autonomous driving perception.

4. $RRX – $221.56 (52wk: $127.96–$236.35)
Regal Rexnord's motors and motion control components are the muscle inside industrial automation systems.

5. $SERV – $6.02 (52wk: $5.78–$18.64)

Serve Robotics builds autonomous sidewalk delivery robots, scaling embodied AI into everyday last-mile logistics.

6. $VPG – $135.40 (52wk: $25.49–$148.39)

Vishay Precision's sensors enable force/weight feedback critical for humanoid robot grip and balance.

7. $AMBA – $62.16 (52wk: $40.81–$96.69)

Ambarella's edge AI chips give cameras and robots on-device computer vision without cloud latency.

8. $ISRG – $404.70 (52wk: $414.30–$610.45)

Intuitive Surgical's da Vinci robots pioneer robotic-assisted surgery, the gold standard in medical automation.

9. $TSLA – $379.71 (52wk: $288.77–$498.83)

Tesla's Optimus humanoid and FSD stack apply real-world AI training data at massive vehicle scale.

10. $QCOM – $220.71 (52wk: $121.99–$259.92)

Qualcomm's edge AI chips power robotics, drones, and AI data centers beyond its core smartphone business.

11. $FFAI – $0.26 (52wk: $0.21–$3.61)

Faraday Future pivots into embodied AI humanoid robots, though execution risk remains extremely high.

12. $RR – $1.94 (52wk: $1.73–$7.43)

Richtech Robotics builds AI-powered service robots and a humanoid (DEX) for hospitality and industrial use.

13. $NNDM – $1.40 (52wk: $1.19–$2.32)

Nano Dimension makes additive manufacturing printers for electronics, enabling rapid robotics hardware prototyping.

14. $NVDA – $192.71 (52wk: $151.49–$236.54)

Nvidia's GPUs and Jetson/Isaac platforms are the compute backbone training every major physical AI system.

15. $PATH – $10.55 (52wk: $9.20–$19.84)

UiPath's software robots automate enterprise workflows, the digital-labor counterpart to physical robotics.

16. $KSCP – $1.91 (52wk: $1.78–$10.14)

Knightscope's autonomous security robots patrol real-world sites, an early commercial physical-AI deployment.

The robotics supercycle is starting already $OUST exploding and $MU says in their Q3 earnings the next 2 years will be massive for robots.

+1.22%

7.4% held

-7.57%

1.1% held

+6.04%

0.0% held

-1.64%

3.3% held

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Ashton Invests
@ashton_1nvests
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Beginner Investors · 18h

NFA
Don’t be surprised if $NVDA continues trading sideways while $AMD keeps hitting all-time highs.

-1.64%

0.0% held

-2.06%

26.6% held

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