RJ Hamster
Refund From 1933: Trump’s Reset May Create Instant Wealth





MARCH 26, 2026 | READ ONLINE

Trump’s Reset Can Give Birth To
America’s Greatest Era Yet
A 90-Year cycle may end soon, creating real wealth for early adopters
In 1933, Executive Order 6102 forced everyday Americans to hand over their gold at a fixed rate.
Everyday citizens lost a sizable amount of their hard earned wealth at the stroke of FDR’s pen.
Now, 92 years later, President Trump has focused his energy on making things right.
His next move has the power to trigger a financial reset that could shift trillions of dollars into the hands of the people.
A provision buried in the U.S. Code Title 31, Section 5117 allows the U.S. Treasury to revalue America’s gold reserves from an outdated $42 per ounce to today’s market price.
That’s a 72x increase!
If activated, it could
- Reinforce America’s financial dominance
- Reignite trust in value-backed money, making the dollar valuable again
- Spark a modern day gold rush once the public understand their choices
And the best part…
Over 60 Million Americans are eligible to become a first wave benefactor in Trump’s Gold Reset.
However, only those who download a copy of our 2026 Wealth Protection Guide will know the simple steps needed to take part in this historic wealth reset.
Claim Your FREE Guide Now and discover how to position yourself for this golden opportunity.
Request Your FREE WEALTH PROTECTION GUIDE Today!

Featured Content from MarketBeat Media
Avoid the Top-Heavy S&P 500 With Equal-Weight ETFs
Written by Nathan Reiff. Published: 3/14/2026.
KEY POINTS
- Equal-weight ETFs may target the same basket of companies as popular funds focused on the S&P 500, Russell 1000, or other well-known indices, but with a unique approach to balancing portfolios.
- Equal-weight funds focused on the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ-100 have underperformed their plain vanilla rivals, while a similar fund targeting the Russell 1000 has dominated year-to-date.
- Funds of this type offer added exposure to some of the lesser-known or smaller names in these iconic indices, but they may do so at a somewhat higher price tag than traditional broad index-based ETFs.
- Special Report: Do this before SpaceX IPOs or be sorry (From Timothy Sykes)
A small number of AI-focused tech stocksdominated in 2025, helping to push the S&P 500 up more than 16% for the year. That strong performance, however, left many investors potentially exposed to concentrated risk. Concerns about an AI bubble — and the potential impact of a prolonged conflict in Iran or oil-market disruptions on data centers — have some investors examining how much exposure to this sector exists in their broad-market holdings.
One way to reduce that automatic tilt toward AI and large-cap tech is to use exchange-traded funds (ETFs) that follow an equal-weight strategy. By assigning similar weights to each component of an index, these funds limit the influence of the biggest names and increase exposure to smaller, often overlooked companies. The ETFs below are worth considering for investors who want a more balanced alternative to broad-based funds that may concentrate too much in certain corners of the market.
Equal-Weight Alternative to SPY With Higher Fees but Potential Protection
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The Invesco S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF (NYSEARCA: RSP) fell about 1% the week ending March 13, one of its worst five-day stretches in months. It remains up close to 1% year-to-date (YTD), putting it slightly ahead of the broader S&P 500 over the same period.
RSP holds the same S&P 500 companies, but no single position represents more than roughly 0.5% of the portfolio, reflecting its equal-weight approach. That makes it a natural comparison to the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA: SPY) and other low-cost S&P funds. Because of the overlap in holdings, most investors would not need both RSP and a conventional S&P fund.
RSP charges a higher fee for that allocation method: its expense ratio is 0.20% versus SPY’s 0.09%. Large S&P funds such as SPY also tend to offer deeper liquidity and tighter bid-ask spreads. RSP’s appeal is its potential to cushion a portfolio if the market’s largest names stumble; its dividend yield of 1.6% is an additional perk compared with SPY’s 1.1%.
A Growth-and-Quality Spin on the QQQ
The First Trust NASDAQ-100 Select Equal Weight ETF (NASDAQ: QQEW) applies a similar equal-weight concept to the NASDAQ-100. That index includes many of the largest nonfinancial companies in the world and is commonly accessed through ETFs like the Invesco QQQ (NASDAQ: QQQ).
Unlike QQQ, which weights holdings by market cap and therefore leans heavily into the largest names, QQEW evaluates NASDAQ-100 stocks on growth-and-quality criteria — revenue, forward earnings-per-share estimates and cash-flow growth rates. The fund selects the top 50 components by those metrics and assigns them roughly equal weights.
QQEW has underperformed QQQ so far in 2026, but investors concerned about QQQ’s tech concentration may prefer QQEW’s more diversified, growth-focused approach. That diversification comes at a cost: QQEW’s expense ratio is 0.55%, more than three times QQQ’s.
An Equal-Weight Approach to the Russell 1000
The Invesco Russell 1000 Equal Weight ETF (NYSEARCA: EQAL) applies the equal-weight idea across the roughly 1,000 stocks in the Russell 1000 for an annual fee of 0.20%.
By weighting constituents more equally, EQAL tilts toward smaller names within the Russell universe and produces a more balanced sector allocation. That contrasts with a market-cap-weighted Russell 1000 fund, which typically assigns about a third of its weight to technology and tends to overweight financials.
EQAL can boost exposure to mid-cap companies relative to pure-play Russell 1000 funds. With a YTD return near 5%, it has outperformed the Russell 1000 so far in 2026. Still, investors should weigh that performance against the slightly higher fees and decide whether the equal-weight tilt fits their objectives over the long term.
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