The Nasdaq 100 has seen an annualized return of nearly 21% over the past decade. If you invested 100k, it’s now worth 700k.

That’s the most counterintuitive part about it; the more you think it’s overvalued and shouldn’t keep rising, the more it tends to skyrocket.

Many people look at the Nasdaq 100 <a>$QQQ </a> and only have one thing to say:

The price is too high.

It’s gone up too much.

A correction is due.

I’ll wait for a dip to buy.

But year after year passes, and not only do they not get that lower entry point, but the index price keeps climbing higher.

Because whether you think the Nasdaq 100 is overpriced doesn’t really matter.

What matters is that it reflects the earning power, pricing power, and growth potential of the world’s strongest tech companies, which is completely different from the crypto space and the A-shares market.

If you use the valuation logic of mature consumer industries to assess it, you’ll always think it’s overpriced.

But the market isn’t buying cheap stocks like picking up cigarette butts.

The market is buying certainty, growth, and future potential.

The true test of one’s investment logic with the Nasdaq lies not in understanding concepts like AI, memory, or chips.

Rather, it’s whether you can accept a fundamental investment fact:

Good stocks are basically never cheap.

The more you want to wait for a correction to build your position, the less likely the market will give you that chance.

So just establish a base position and start dollar-cost averaging; that’s the right move. Remember, the US stock market will never let you down.

<a>#纳斯达克100 </a> <a>#QQQETF </a>
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