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Vanguard Beefs Up Its Active Lineup

Vanguard Beefs Up Its Active Lineup

Bloomberg3 days ago
"Bloomberg ETF IQ" focuses on the opportunities, risks and current trends tied to the trillions of dollars in the global exchange traded funds industry. Today's guests: Vanguard Head of Active Equity Product Ryan Barksdale and SS&C ALPS Advisors Head of Fund Sales & Strategy. (Source: Bloomberg)
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Got $1K Saved? Here's What Experts Say To Do With It in 2026
Got $1K Saved? Here's What Experts Say To Do With It in 2026

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Got $1K Saved? Here's What Experts Say To Do With It in 2026

As 2026 barrels this way, it may bring with it a very different economic landscape from 2025. Higher prices, steeper costs of living and questions about the fate of interest rates could offer different opportunities for your money. Learn More: Read Next: If you've managed to save $1,000 or more (on top of an emergency fund) experts explained some of the best things to do with it next year. Prepare For a New Economic Environment The smartest thing to do is to think ahead to plan for the new economic environment, according to Jack Fu, co-founder and managing director at Draco Capital Partners. 'In 2026, interest rates may be relatively higher, and market volatility might be more common compared to previous years.' Additionally, 'geopolitical change and supply chain adjustment' could continue to create an uncertain investing climate. On the positive side, Fu said that if the Federal Reserve begins to cut rates, capital may flow back into equities and growth-oriented assets. AI and renewable energy investment trends may also bring new areas of growth. Find Out: Invest It Wisely If you're bringing $1,000 in savings into 2026 that you don't need for an emergency fund, you should definitely consider investing it, Fu said. 'If you have no high-interest debt, think about dividing it between low-risk, short-term assets (like money market funds or high-yield savings) and long-term growth investments (like ETFs or stocks) to balance liquidity and long-term appreciation,' he recommended. Take Risk Tolerance Into Consideration However, Fu said a lot depends upon the individual investor's risk tolerance and time horizon. 'For those investors seeking stable returns, consider investment-grade bond ETFs as insulation against inflation,' he said. For those with a longer time horizon, placing some of the money in actively managed ETFs could allow an investor to 'potentially profit from more opportunities than passive index funds.' Pay Down High-Interest Debt If you hold money in savings but you're also carrying any high-interest debt, you might be surprised that it makes more sense to pay down the debt first, Fu said. 'Usually, the interest rate on unsecured debt is much greater than the return you can realistically anticipate from investing, so I'd prioritize paying off the debt.' Though it may not feel like money going out is an 'investment,' Fu said, 'This is a sure return equal to the interest saved without taking on investment risk.' Invest In a Side Hustle Aaron Razon, a personal finance expert at Coupon Snake, feels that the smartest move with $1,000 in 2026 is investing in bringing in more income. 'I believe the best way they can use this money to promote their financial growth would be to invest in a side hustle idea that can be sustained,' he said. This will help to ensure that they have a steady flow of income. 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How ESPN finally made the leap from cable TV to the app era
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How ESPN finally made the leap from cable TV to the app era

CEOs rarely talk about plans that are a half-decade or more away from reaching reality. Yet way back in 2015, Disney CEO Robert Iger confirmed the company would eventually offer ESPN as a direct-to-consumer service. It would be an epoch-shifting moment for a channel that has been a cornerstone of pay TV in its traditional form for decades, and Iger said it wouldn't occur until at least 2020. Ultimately, this retooling took a full decade—a period during which Iger retired and unretired. But the moment he said would come has arrived. Starting today, you can get full-blown ESPN in stand-alone streaming form, available on connected TVs, phones, tablets, and computers. It's the biggest inflection point for Disney's direct-to-consumer video strategy since the company launched Disney+ in 2019. 'We believe that people should be able to subscribe to ESPN in whatever way best suits them,' says Adam Smith, named chief product and technology officer for Disney Entertainment and ESPN a year ago after over 20 years at YouTube and Google. 'If they want to do it direct to consumer through us, if they want to buy it through a bundle, or if they want to just continue purchasing it through [a cable or satellite provider], that's all great.' What Disney is offering isn't just the same familiar ESPN programming delivered over the internet. Instead, the company has taken its 47,000 live sporting events a year, spread out across 12 channels, and built a distinctly digital experience around them. That experience spans apps for connected TVs, phones, computers, and TVs, sometimes intermingling them. It also flows into Disney+, where ESPN's motherlode of content could provide a competitive advantage over Netflix, HBO Max, and other streamers that offer only a dollop of athletics by comparison.

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