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I hope you read the tea leaves a few months ago on which sectors to invest in for the
There's going to be (already started) a mass exodus of money out of money market accounts into equities which will cause equities to go higher. Certain sectors are going gangbusters for the last couple of months but still have legs to go for a while. This new phase of the bull market will be consisting of the whole market, not just the top 7 mega tech stocks. We needed the support of most companies to participate in the increase value to become a legitimate bull run, and we finally started getting it. Its not too late.
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Concerned about commodity speculation on oil futures already due to speculation on trade through the Suez Canal, already bumping up futures on petroleum which will affect everyone.
Bloomberg sees high spending this Christmas spending but will that be the last hurrah? And then there's the nations budget/spending expecting a fiasco. |
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There's always a December run-up, followed by profit taking in January. Just wait for the next entry point.
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Reading the tea leaves
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I’m a long term investor, finally recouping most of my losses from the last market correction. What’s that saying - buy when people are selling and sell when people are buying. No one can predict human behavior. |
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Nothing like living like it is 1929.
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Frankly I’m cashing out a percentage of my equities. Nothing lasts forever. Cash in and don’t be greedy.
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I have some land smack in the middle of Manhattan if you're interested. Also have several NYC bridges for sale. Great bargain. They just about pay for themselves.
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I’m also a long term investor but I didn’t like what was going on at the end of 2021 so I got out. So I don’t have to wait until I get back to normal. I made money during the last 2 years. Like I mentioned, I’m a long term investor and the funds I got into a few months ago, are the same funds that I have had for decades. |
Pulling out of equities if you don't have to over the years has proved to be unproductive. Stay the course.
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I don’t get the halal
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pull out
ok I'll tell you - stop loss orders at a % you want
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Because it is tasty and delicious
The reason why we need Halal food |
Interesting development in the market just one day after the original post. Seems like people are in a selling mood today!
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Don’t care what the tea leaves say. I have been in AAPL since June 1986 and nothing on Gods green earth will ever convince me to sell.
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https://youtu.be/LZK5VRuUfEY?si=jxxMFZrXgEGYTqSI |
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With aapl, a lot of my go to funds/etfs have aapl as a major stakeholder so at so point you have to look at how much aapl do I want to hold. I’m sure I’ll own it many times more in the future. |
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I was in the wrong place in the 80s, missed the boat in 2008, etc., and what I finally learned is to pay the fee and have Fidelity manage the accounts because they watch everything all the time and much closer than I ever could. Even allowing for the minor fee, I still do better letting them handle it. Lastly, I don't want to spend my retirement WORKING on investments. I'd rather work on spending them down.
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OP, Along with our financial adviser we maintain a diverse portfolio. The market can turn (and does) so best to leave it to the “pros” IMHO.
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Investing
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As you probably know, nobody knows. My only advice has nothing to do with that rocket ride investment of your dreams…….. When you decide what you want to buy, just be sure to keep a moat of cash around the stocks. With money markets and CDs being better than they have for many years, that has been much easier to tolerate in 2023. But even when that “safe” ROI drops, hold on to some of that cash…….. Maintaining a moat of cash makes sure you will not find yourself in the position of having to sell stocks to pay taxes. In fact, if you do not already know how taxes can affect you, especially if now retired, learn the basics, so you are, at least, aware and know how to move those chess pieces. You might need to know about cap gains, IRMAA, conversions to Roth, RMDs, QCDs, and more. My favorite CPA retired a very long time ago, but we used to talk about what he called, “Trying to Free Your Money from Its Prison.” (That was when I was doing conversions to Roth.) That “Prison Effect” also happens with highly appreciated stocks held outside of retirement accounts. There those fat stocks sit, sometimes having been growing for decades, albeit rather slowly sometimes…….. For buy-and-hold dividend investors, such stocks can be taunting and daunting behind those prison bars because the minute you sell, their cost basis kicks in and cap gains takes its money and runs. Such investors often have been consoling themselves with dividends though — still taxable but not as bad as watching the profit on a sell dwindle significantly due to the cap gain. Oh well, here I am, going on and on about being aware of taxable events when it comes to making money in the market when you did not even ask about that. I could write a bunch more on the topic but I need to get on with my real life today. Anyway, my point is (finally) to look at the big picture when it comes to your investment decisions. If you do not know, at least, a little about the vocabulary of taxes, look up some things in preparation for a discussion with a CPA…. CPAs are paid for their time and not for how much of your money they can keep under their management. There are “advisors” out there (lots of them) who will never bring up taxes, saying they do not give tax advice. And, if you are doing your own investing, and saving that 1% “advisors” can get — whether you are up or down — please do not forget to learn everything you can about taxable events and hire a CPA to make sure you have it right. Don’t be penny-wise and pound-foolish when it comes to hiring tax advice……. There is more to the ROI than just the face value of a ,portfolio. I wish you well — and I am liking this discussion, futile though it may be…….still fun to read. Boomer |
I am happy with my 30 year track record averaging 8.40% return. No adviser, no panic, no problem.
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Does this market have legs to continue expanding? Good question. If I feel that the tide has turned and the future has issues brewing, it takes me 5 seconds to sell and put my money into something else. Your point about taxes is a good one. That’s why I never buy managed funds, always buy index funds. Managed funds over time never do as well as index funds and they managed funds have much higher expenses as well as a bigger tax bite. Check out a managed funds turnover rate. Working with friends, I’ve seen some of their managed funds have turnover rates over 400%, which every year, you will be paying taxes on this overhead. When investigating managed funds, there are hidden costs that are above the quoted expense cost, most real costs are over 2x the quoted expenses cost. All of my daily/monthly purchases/selling goes on in my non-taxable accounts that have no bearing on my yearly taxes, and my taxable accounts have been invested in index funds for almost 2 decades without selling a share, just living off the dividends. |
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