Why you should ignore commercials that use the word "qualify" Commercials that say “qualify” are often trying to create urgency or exclusivity without being precise, and that can make the message misleading or annoying rather than informative. The word is vague enough to be marketing puffery, so it can hide important details like eligibility, cost or real odds of getting the offer. Why the word is a red flag It can imply you’re likely to get approved, when the real requirements may be much stricter. It often shifts attention away from the actual terms and conditions, which is where the real catch usually is. It may be used because “qualify” sounds official, even when the advertiser is just screening leads, not making a real offer. Better way to hear it Treat “qualify” as a prompt to ask: what are the exact criteria, what is the total cost, and what happens if I don’t meet them? If the ad won’t say plainly, that is usually the point where skep...
How is stock market performance distorted by the Magnificent Seven stocks? (The Magnificent Seven are Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Meta Platforms, Nvidia, and Tesla. The Magnificent Seven distort market performance by making a small group of mega-cap stocks drive a very large share of index returns, so the S&P 500 can look stronger or weaker than the average stock underneath it. In other words, when those names lead, the whole market can appear healthy even if most stocks are lagging; when they stumble, they can drag index performance down even if the broader market is holding up better. Why this happens These companies have become so large that their combined weight is roughly a third of the S&P 500, so changes in their prices have an outsized effect on the index. In 2024, they contributed about 48% of the Russell 1000’s total return, which shows how concentrated market gains became. That concentration means index performance is no longer a clean rea...