Every once in a while, an investment sneaks up on you. You don’t expect much. Maybe you glance at it while screening income funds, maybe it shows up in a chart comparison, maybe someone casually mentions it in a portfolio discussion. At first glance it looks like just another high-yield dividend ETF in a market that already has dozens of them. But then something odd happens. You start digging into the details. You look at the strategy. You look at the holdings. You look at the income profile. You look at the risk management approach. And suddenly you realize something uncomfortable for your preconceived ideas. This high-yield dividend ETF… actually looks pretty good. That was my reaction when I started taking a closer look at one of the newer generation income ETFs that has quietly carved out a niche in the dividend investing world. It didn’t make a huge splash at launch. It didn’t dominate headlines like some of the mega funds. But the more I examined it, the more it surpri...
A practical look at the two numbers that quietly determine most valuation outcomes In the world of investing, few things look as scientific as a spreadsheet filled with discounted cash flow models. Columns of numbers stretch across the screen, formulas hum quietly in the background, and the final output delivers a valuation with impressive precision—often down to the cent. Yet hidden inside those elegant models are two assumptions that quietly control the entire outcome. Terminal growth. And the discount rate. These two variables are the gravitational forces of valuation. Change them slightly and the entire financial universe of a company shifts. For late-stage companies—firms that have moved past hypergrowth but still have long operating runways—these assumptions become especially important. The reason is simple: most of the value in a discounted cash flow (DCF) model often comes from the terminal value, which itself depends heavily on growth and discount rate assumptions. Unde...