I Didn’t Buy the NASDAQ Composite Index — I Bought a Narrative Let me be honest from the start: I didn’t invest in the Nasdaq because I calmly evaluated risk-adjusted returns like some spreadsheet-wielding philosopher. I bought a story. A loud, glowing, borderline delusional story about the future. Artificial intelligence would change everything. Cloud computing would eat the world. Software would replace entire industries. And somehow, owning a slice of that meant I was early, visionary, maybe even a little brilliant. I wasn’t just buying stocks. I was buying the feeling that I understood where the world was going. And the Nasdaq—particularly through vehicles like the Invesco QQQ Trust —felt like the cleanest, most concentrated way to express that belief. Growth. Innovation. Momentum. What could possibly go wrong? The Seduction of Growth (a.k.a. “Everything Is Up and to the Right… Until It Isn’t”) Growth investing is intoxicating. You’re not buying what exists—you’re buying what will...
There’s a very specific moment in the market that fascinates me. It’s subtle, almost polite. No fireworks. No panic. No CNBC meltdown music. Just a calm, confident sentence from someone in a suit: “Upgrading to Buy.” And suddenly, the same stock that spent months—sometimes years—getting ignored, questioned, or quietly mocked is now respectable. Acceptable. Approved by the official gatekeepers of financial sanity. That’s usually when I start paying closer attention. Not because I worship analyst upgrades. Quite the opposite. I’m interested because of what they represent: not the beginning of a story, but the middle of one. The moment when reality has already shifted, but consensus is just now catching up. And that lag—that beautiful, human, predictable lag—is where I tend to operate. The Upgrade Is Not the Signal You Think It Is Let’s get something straight: analyst upgrades don’t create value. They recognize it… late. By the time a stock gets upgraded, a few things have alrea...