You may have a point. But, by year-end, MSFT is going to make more than UNH, INTC and AAPL combined.
I do get it. Are you underweight in anything else besides health?I’m over weighted in the tech sector and the Mag7. AMZN AWS and GOOGL provide exposure to cloud computing. Several others to AI. Maybe swapping out GOOGL for MSFT is a good idea. Search isn’t going to carry GOOGL as much going forward.
I do get it. Are you underweight in anything else besides health?
Health will be back, but may be 2026 in my opinion.
I've searched as well in 2025, dipped my toe into that pool, and got totally scorched.
The merger with Synapse Health on 8/1/25 will be interesting to see how it unfolds. Medicare patients with UNH have received notifications of the change and how they’ll be their supplies moving forward.I think that Big Pharma is more vulnerable. I don’t think that UNH is as dependent on Medicare or Medicaid.
Don't wear anything that says American. Leave your brand name stuff at home. ALL of it. If you wear Oakleys, go to the dollar tree and get some cheap sunglasses for a couple bucks. Cheap shoes. And for God's sake don't leave your cell phone on a table while at dinner. If you are taking teenage girls with you, dress them way down. Crap they wear at high school makes them a target in Muslim countries.We were advised to not drink the water outside of reputable hotels. We did drink it with ice at restaurants without a problem.
One of the two ladies we were traveling with is Jewish. She was the most concerned, and relieved to see the Jewish priest at Giza.
There will be a lot of tourist. We felt safe, but I wouldn't were an American flag shirt in Egypt.
Hope ya'll have a great trip.
From what I remember reading about Buffett, he prefers that companies NOT pay dividends and instead prefer they plow those earnings back into the company. As an aside, he LOVES share buybacks as well because he doesn't sell and his ownership becomes bigger without any additional investment.I don’t think that Buffett gets a big tax advantage with the dividends he receives. As an individual he gets taxed twice on the dividends he receives. I think he does get to exclude from income 50% of dividends that Berkshire receives as long as BHI owns less than 20% of the dividend paying company’s stock.
He likes dividends because he gets to use that cash. Interestingly though he doesn’t pay dividends out of BHI to those shareholders.
Companies pay dividends because it is how corporations return profits to shareholders. But because of the double taxation it isn’t tax efficient. However many people and institutions own stock in order to receive the dividend income. Even though the paying corporation (generally) isn’t allowed to deduct dividend payments against their taxes and the individuals receiving the dividends must (generally) include them as taxable income. Therefore there’s the double taxation element of the equation.
REITs are required to pay out 90% of their earnings as dividends. They are allowed to avoid paying taxes on their earnings that generated the dividends and their earnings pass through to their shareholders.
Companies might decide that it’s better to use the cash that they generate for other things. They can use the cash to grow the business by purchasing equipment or hiring more employees. They can pay down debt. They can buy back their own stock. They can give bonuses to employees. They can pay dividends with the cash. BUT earnings will have to cover the dividends paid to sustain them. Without the earnings companies will eventually not have the funds to pay dividends. Which is why investors need to look at the dividend payout ratio along with the dividend yield. Earnings per share must exceed the dividends paid per share or eventually the company will run out of money.
Corporations can use their cash to buy other companies. They can buy back their own shares of stock (which democrats oppose). Share buybacks are now taxed by the federal government (thanks to Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act). It’s only 1% (for now) and there are some exclusions included in the tax code when it’s under a certain amount or used to fund employee retirement plans. However the 1% excise tax is also NOT deductible as an expense to the company repurchasing their own stock.
So individuals should consider keeping dividend paying stocks in their retirement accounts and stocks with little or no dividends in their taxable accounts. Roth’s avoid the double taxation entirely. Regular IRAs and 401(k) accounts defer the tax on the dividends received.
From what I remember reading about Buffett, he prefers that companies NOT pay dividends and instead prefer they plow those earnings back into the company. As an aside, he LOVES share buybacks as well because he doesn't sell and his ownership becomes bigger without any additional investment.
And unless I’ve missed something, RFK Jr hasn’t done anything concrete - only talked about things he views as questionable / problematic. Am I wrong?I thought it had hit bottom in April. I'm not seeing any news that makes me think confident there is any significant bounce back. But, again, not really picking on UNH. I can rattle off 8-10 health companies that have all cratered since RFK Jr entered the picture.
FWIW, one of my wife’s siblings has spent 40 successful years in the financial industry and we use her for a portion of our investments that have performed well. She’s been recommending new monies go towards NVDA and META as of a few weeks back.I've owned NVDA for a while, and have always said it is a "forever" stock.
Still.
Hasn’t Buffett loved him some KO through the years which is a dividend royalty stock?I can’t cite a Buffett declared preference, but he likes cash. Under 20% ownership and BRK gets to deduct 50% of the dividends received from taxable income. He certainly hates to pay a dividend.
It sucks that there’s now a tax on share buybacks. I expect that one side of the aisle will increase the tax rate when they’re back in power.
It’s great that the other side sees the value of allowing immediate deductibility of CapEx spending.
NVDA is my largest tech holding. I've been thinking about a small position in META . It's just always seemed like a social media platform to me.FWIW, one of my wife’s siblings has spent 40 successful years in the financial industry and we use her for a portion of our investments that have performed well. She’s been recommending new monies go towards NVDA and META as of a few weeks back.
NVDA is my largest tech holding. I've been thinking about a small position in META . It's just always seemed like a social media platform to me.
If I understand correctly, the thought is META is poised to profit from the AI growth. I’ve held some META a long time that shows to have grown 600%, but recently added some more on her advice.NVDA is my largest tech holding. I've been thinking about a small position in META . It's just always seemed like a social media platform to me.
They also seem to have given up (or at least de-emphasized) the metaverse, which is funny given they completed re-branded their company around it a couple of years ago.If I understand correctly, the thought is META is poised to profit from the AI growth. I’ve held some META a long time that shows to have grown 600%, but recently added some more on her advice.
