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Featured Investing Stories


Build a Buffett-Style Starter Portfolio With $300
The Motley Fool argues Warren Buffett’s investing approach remains relevant and spotlights three Buffett-style picks—Apple, Kroger, and Bank of America—as solid, defensive holdings. With $300 you can deploy about $100 into each stock using fractional shares to create a beginner portfolio built on Buffett’s criteria (strong management, durable moat, steady earnings). Apple remains a major Berkshire Hathaway holding (recently trimmed for rebalancing), Kroger offers budget-conscious appeal and a dividend, and Bank of America reflects Buffett’s continued preference for leading financials. The piece highlights long-term, high-conviction investing over chasing hot trends, and notes Fool promotion of further stock ideas.
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Trade Desk Bets on Growth to Justify a 67% Selloff
24/7 Wall St.•3 days ago
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The Motley Fool•5 days ago
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Market Crash Playbook: Microsoft, Alphabet, and Amazon
Analyst Keithen Drury argues that in a market downturn, Microsoft, Alphabet, and Amazon are well-positioned to survive and rebound thanks to durable segments: Microsoft’s Office suite and cloud services should remain essential, Alphabet’s advertising will recover after a slowdown, and Amazon’s AWS cloud business provides durable revenue even as core commerce slows.
Five Dividend Stocks to Buy for Steady Income Right Now
The piece highlights five dividend-oriented picks for income and defensiveness: PepsiCo (~3.5% yield) as a strong consumer-staples play; Pfizer (~6.3% forward yield) with a renewed pipeline and growth trajectory; Realty Income (REIT) with a ~5% yield and a monthly dividend backed by high occupancy; Verizon (~5.8% yield) for reliable income amid modest growth; and IBM (~2.6% yield) with a long dividend-raising streak and rising high-margin, recurring software/services revenue. The theme is income-focused, defensive exposure in a market wary of overvalued growth.
Prediction Markets Signal 2026 S&P 500 Correction Risk, Backed by Historical Midterm Trends
Kalshi contracts price in a ~58% chance of a 2026 S&P 500 correction (to 6,200 or lower), with another bet near 39% for a roughly 15% drop to 5,900. History suggests bear markets are plausible in 2026 (about 50% odds) and midterm years tend to see notable pullbacks before a post‑election rebound, while earnings are expected to rise about 15% but valuations remain elevated (about 21.5x forward). The takeaway: be cautious, only buy what you’re comfortable holding through drawdowns, and consider keeping a larger cash cushion.

Retail Traders Buy the Dip as AI Fears Spark a $1 Trillion Tech Selloff
A tech-led selloff driven by fears that AI will erode traditional software revenues wiped about $1 trillion from software names, even as the equal-weight S&P 500 hit a record high; retail investors have been vigorously buying the dip, while big-cap tech remains under pressure and overall market breadth shows mixed signals.

AI-driven revenue worries spark tech stock selloff
Investors dumped tech shares after traders realized AI could erode revenues across enterprise software and SaaS, triggering a broad selloff that wiped hundreds of billions in market value. The downturn hit names like Microsoft, SAP, Salesforce, and ServiceNow, with analysts warning AI-enabled tools could compress migration timelines and reduce application‑services revenues, potentially reshaping profitability for IT and software firms in the near term.
Apple and Berkshire Hathaway: A Twin-Pillar Bet for 2026 and Beyond
An investor argues that Apple and Berkshire Hathaway remain the top buys for 2026: Apple’s strong Q1 showing driven by 23% year‑over‑year iPhone revenue growth and its high‑margin services, paired with Berkshire’s massive $378 billion cash hoard and diversified asset base, create a complementary, defensive‑growth duo that can weather AI hype and regulatory risks while providing capital allocation flexibility.
SoFi Falls Below $25: A Long-Term Buy or Watchlist Entry?
SoFi Technologies slid to about $22 after dipping below $25, even as the fintech lender reports robust growth, 12.6 million members, and a Q3 with record revenue ($950M) and eight straight quarters of profitability. Its strong position is aided by AI tools like Cash Coach, but the stock still trades at a high forward P/E (~44.8), suggesting it may not be cheap for quick profits. Long-term investors with higher risk tolerance might view this as a buying opportunity, while short-term traders may prefer to wait or watch for a lower entry.

No AI bubble yet, economist warns—watch for a 2026 IPO surge as OpenAI looms
Fortune reports that top economist Owen Lamont says the AI or AI-adjacent stock run isn’t a bubble yet, because the four ‘horsemen’ of a bubble — overvaluation, bubble beliefs, inflows, and issuance — haven’t all aligned. Valuations and frothy sentiment exist, but there’s a surprising lack of IPOs, which Lamont views as the key trigger. A potential mega-cycle could arrive in 2026 if high-profile private firms like SpaceX go public and OpenAI plans an IPO, signaling the era of abundant offerings and possible bubble risk if insiders start selling. The piece contrasts current spending on AI with past bubbles and notes that the market remains expensive but not at dot-com extremes.
Coca-Cola at Record Highs, Dutch Bros on a Growth Drive: Two Beverage Bets for 2026
The Motley Fool highlights Coca-Cola and Dutch Bros as two contrasting beverage bets for 2026: Coca-Cola is making all-time price highs on steady volumes and pricing power despite a CEO transition, trading around 24x trailing earnings with a solid ~2.7% dividend; Dutch Bros has doubled its store count in five years, expanded nationwide with strong revenue and net income growth, but trades at a premium for its growth story after pulling back from recent highs. Together they offer diversified exposure within the beverage space and different risk/reward profiles for investors.
Coca-Cola: A Classic Dividend King for a $1,000 Starter Investment
Coca-Cola (KO) stands as a long-running Dividend King with more than six decades of annual dividend increases, offering a 2.8% yield and what the article calls a fair price despite consumer-staples headwinds; the company's still-growing organic revenue (+6% in Q3 2025, volume +1%) shows resilience as it adapts to healthier-eating trends, suggesting a solid long-term dividend growth opportunity for a $1,000 starter investment—roughly 13 shares at current prices.