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Why Dave Ramsey Chooses $5,000 Index Funds Over SpaceX: The Math Explained
Key takeaways
- Index funds like SPY returned 257% over ten years at a 0.09% expense ratio, setting the hurdle that every single stock must beat.
- Both hosts capped speculative positions at 5 to 10% of total portfolio, which meant no more than $25,000 across all single-stock bets on a $250,000 net worth.
- Many financial professionals are salespeople paid on what they push, not whether you end up wealthier.
Why Dave Ramsey Chooses $5,000 Index Funds Over Space X: The Math Explained Michael Williams Tue, June 16, 2026 at 7:16 PM GMT+7 5 min read SPCX SPY QQQ TSLA Quick Read Dave Ramsey declined Space X stock, preferring mutual funds because the U.S. market historically doubles every seven years without single-stock risk.
Index funds like SPY returned 257% over ten years at a 0.09% expense ratio, setting the hurdle that every single stock must beat.
Both hosts capped speculative positions at 5 to 10% of total portfolio, which meant no more than $25,000 across all single-stock bets on a $250,000 net worth.
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