One ETF plan. Published daily.

Historical results compared to the S&P 500 (2015–2025). A receipt file is published each trading day.

  • One clear plan for the U.S. market day
  • Short reasons and risks (chips)
  • A receipt file you can check
Period
Verity’s 10-year advantage
Worst drop
Updated: —
Next: Today’s plan
Research only. Not personalized advice. Disclosure

How $10,000 would have grown

2015–2025, compared to the S&P 500

Verity S&P 500
View full history →

Today’s plan

For the U.S. market day: —

Why today

Verity publishes one clear ETF plan each U.S. trading day — and a receipt file you can check.

Today’s mix
Equity
Gold
Cash

Mix reflects the engine’s allocation for this session.


Why Verity?

Clarity first: one plan, published daily, with proof you can check.

What you get
  • A single daily ETF plan, published before the U.S. market opens.
  • Short reasons and risks (chips) to explain the output.
  • A receipt file so you can confirm what was published.
  • Historical context compared to the S&P 500.

This page shows what was published. If you want to verify it, use the receipt file.

Receipts

Each publish includes a receipt file with the plan and timestamps.

Proof before promises

We show the proof. You can check the receipt.


How to follow this plan

A simple workflow if you choose to use the research output.

A simple workflow
  • Check today’s plan and the reasons/risks chips.
  • Download the receipt file to confirm what was published.
  • Decide whether you’ll act on it (and how).
  • Repeat. Consistency matters more than reacting.
Canonical framing

Independent ETF research publishing a daily plan, compared to the S&P 500.

For educational purposes only.


Disclosure

Research output only — not personalized advice.

What we are not
  • Not an investment advisor
  • Not a managed portfolio
  • Not a broker or trading platform
  • Not account-specific guidance

Past performance is historical context, not a promise of future results.

How the chart is calculated

Both lines start at the same value and are updated each trading day using Verity’s published plan and the S&P 500’s daily change. Shown for historical context.

Benchmark note

“S&P 500” refers to the index concept; a widely traded fund may be used as a reference.