
Those who stick to dollar-cost averaging are quietly widening the gap with the market

Ordinary people who consistently outperform the market are actually doing the same "seemingly simple but hardest to stick with" thing—dollar-cost averaging (DCA).
Warren Buffett was once asked: How should someone in their 30s, with no time to research stocks, living only on a salary, invest? He replied with just one sentence: Put your money regularly into a low-cost S&P 500 index fund, and then keep working hard.
The charm of DCA lies right here: no need to time the market, no need to watch the screen constantly; use time and discipline to turn market volatility into long-term compound interest. Simple, worry-free, easy to stick with—more and more people rely on it to participate in the US stock market.
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🔍 What is Everyone DCA-ing Into?
Top DCA Rankings:
- Index ETFs: $Invesco QQQ Trust(QQQ.US), $VG S&P 500(VOO.US), $SPDR S&P 500(SPY.US), $Invesco Nasdaq 100 ETF(QQQM.US)
Covering tech leaders and the overall US market, serving as the "DCA core position" for many users.
- Leading Tech Stocks: $Tesla(TSLA.US), $NVIDIA(NVDA.US)
Participating in high-volatility, high-growth sectors through DCA.
- Diversified Allocation Targets: $SPDR Gold Shares(GLD.US), $Schwab US Div Eq(SCHD.US)
Balancing stability with long-term returns.
The trend is clear: people are increasingly inclined to invest in assets they understand and are willing to hold long-term.
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