
Trump said the Dow could rise to 100,000 points.

Last Friday night, U.S. stocks staged a strong rebound, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average leading the gains among the three major indices, breaking through the historic 50,000-point mark for the first time.Trump was clearly delighted, posting on social media that the Dow could reach 100,000 points by the end of his term (just for fun).
However, for U.S. stock investments this year, it's crucial to pay more attention to the Dow Jones, followed by the S&P 500, and Nasdaq might come last. We mentioned this in our previous answer on the platform, "What to allocate besides tech stocks in the U.S. market," because we anticipate the overall market style this year may lean more towards small-to-mid-cap and non-tech stocks.
Therefore, in my specific investment suggestions, I also place more emphasis on recommending increased exposure to non-tech stocks this year. For example, looking at suggestion #4 in Figure 3 regarding allocations to finance, industrials, and healthcare, these are precisely the sectors that the Dow Jones currently overweights relative to the S&P 500 and Nasdaq (see the sector distribution comparison in the last three images).
(Not investment advice)
$Dow Jones Industrial Average(.DJI.US) $Penghua Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF(QDII)(513400.SH) $Invesco QQQ Trust(QQQ.US) $SPDR S&P 500(SPY.US)
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