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Stock market tips and experiences
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02-28-2023, 09:27 PM | #7591 |
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The best stock market tip is to go back in time and invest in the companies you know will blow.up or invest $1000 in bitcoin when it was less than pennies
Do not invest in crypto now though. It's all a pump and dump scam or just scam in general, including bitcoin. |
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03-01-2023, 03:01 PM | #7592 | |
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The upper 10% is defined as a annual household income of ~$212K. The upper 1% is $570K (dual income). The median income in the US is around $79K. It's those in the median income range and below that will struggle with retirement because they simply aren't or can't put money away in retirement. Over 67% of the households in the US make less than $100K/yr and over 55% less than $76K/yr. I know it's hard for some on this site to believe these numbers because they have high incomes and surround themselves with similar income friends.
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03-01-2023, 05:18 PM | #7593 | |
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03-04-2023, 09:09 AM | #7594 |
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So what you guys doin now that it remains uncertain? I am heavily in cash and selling what I have in 1+ yr ownership territory (capital gains). I feel SP500 is going to yearly low (3583)
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03-04-2023, 01:48 PM | #7595 | |
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If I were close to retirement age, I'd be more cautious and consider moving things around. But I'm 48 and looking to retire in 5 years or so. |
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03-04-2023, 02:55 PM | #7596 | |
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Might buy 6-12 month Treasuries if rates keep going up. A few of my stock are touching ATH. Staying the course, heavy stock allocation. |
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03-04-2023, 03:43 PM | #7597 | |
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03-04-2023, 05:04 PM | #7598 | |
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03-04-2023, 05:36 PM | #7599 |
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The thesis I’ve heard is that inflation is stubborn and somewhat unresponsive to the FED’s actions, so the FED keeps tightening and raising rates. That pushes the economy from “no landing” (currently priced into the market) through “soft landing” to “hard landing” (recession). The recession begins later this year and lasts to mid-late 2024 (it’s an election year, so there could be a lot of fiscal shenanigans offsetting the FED’s tightness). Markets are forward looking, so begin to recover probably right after the election. The expectation is more like a 15% S&P500 decline, not 20%.
There are some problems with this thesis, of course. One being the labor market remains tight and participation low, so there isn’t much slack there and it is unlikely unemployment will push up, at least for a while. Another is consumer spending remains high, although consumer debt is increasing as well. And while inflation is a problem, it seems consumers have largely adjusted to it, and those with fixed rate mortgages and car loans are suddenly flush. Finally the 401(k) flows continue to go into stocks, so there is cash flow that didn’t exist in the 1970s when this scenario actually played out (stagflation). |
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03-04-2023, 05:41 PM | #7600 |
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I’m sitting with all cash in my discretionary brokerage account and don’t really know what to do.
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03-04-2023, 08:41 PM | #7602 | |
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I've posted this before but it doesn't really matter if eggs are $4.29 a dozen or $5.29 in the grand scheme of things. |
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03-04-2023, 08:56 PM | #7603 | |
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Most Americans can win at #1, especially given the generally low inventory available to home buyers. For #2, however, read Kroger's 4th quarter earnings report to learn what Americans are choosing to do in response to significantly higher food prices.
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03-04-2023, 09:30 PM | #7604 |
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Fed dropped the ball when they first found inflation to be transitory. It has run from there. The higher rates will help cool things but it has already become ingrained
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03-05-2023, 08:55 AM | #7605 | |
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Add to that the move to near-shore and re-shore manufacturing, increasing LNG exports, and federal clean energy mandates and this is a recipe for cyclical costs going up. Add to that the increase in labor costs in China. We spent the last 45 years offshoring everything in order to reduce costs of consumer goods at home. We've pretty much run this playbook as as much as possible and we'll be in a period of increasing rates for at least the next few years / next major financial crisis. |
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03-05-2023, 08:58 AM | #7606 | |
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You haven't lived like the majority of Americans if you think that the price of eggs increasing $1 (more like $3), or milk doubling in price won't have an impact on your spending. Inflation hits those with fixed incomes (young and retiree alike) very hard. When your food costs increase 40% in one year and your insurance costs increase 20%, something's got to give. Last edited by tgrundke; 03-05-2023 at 09:03 AM.. |
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03-05-2023, 09:02 AM | #7607 | |
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Fed's trying to avoid breaking something catastrophically. Crypto got deflated, building materials are deflating, consumer goods are deflating, and now the real estate market is really starting to show it. So far, they've actually done a decent job of not cratering the economy, considering it takes ~12 mos. for rate changes to be fully absorbed by the market. The problem is that there's always something lurking out there that will suddenly pop and cause a cascade - and nobody knows what that "thing" is. |
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03-05-2023, 12:49 PM | #7608 | |
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03-05-2023, 04:29 PM | #7610 |
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Better yet, put the cash in a money market fund that pays nearly 5% and is immediately liquid, unlike a CD. FZDXX is an example if you are able to make a $100k or more initial purchase. $100k balance does not need to be maintained.
Last edited by chassis; 03-05-2023 at 06:10 PM.. |
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03-06-2023, 07:43 AM | #7611 | |
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Anyway... I was watching the national news last week, and they had a bit on how car insurance is going up so much (many factors involved, most of which are d/t higher costs and fewer cars) and I wondered, how does the average person who barely makes enough money to pay their rent (which has also gone up recently) and buy food get by? I do most of the grocery shopping, and I see first-hand how much food has gone up. I can't imagine how someone making $60K a year with some kids can survive without draconian cuts. Surely at some point this is going to affect the economy. And it's not just the USA, it's a world-wide thing.
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03-06-2023, 11:14 AM | #7612 | |
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I sold a house last fall and bought another (moved to a different state). To make that work I sold a lot of stocks in the fall - stocks I no longer wanted to own so won’t buy back. That put me at about 1/3 cash in the total portfolios, excluding my house (no mortgage). I’ve been sitting on that cash anticipating the market would be weak/volatile through Feb/Mar, but it firmed up earlier than I had expected so I’m late getting back in (but happy with my positions, just not optimized). I also took on a full-time consulting gig starting Jan and have been really busy with that, so I haven’t had the time to look closely at stocks and put in the buy orders - I’m just watching at a high level. So I may delay getting back in a few more months. At that time I’ll go to about 85% stocks and 15% cash (I’m retired so that cash is next year’s expenses plus a cushion). I don’t like bonds because they typically have poor real yields, and I think we are in a long-term rising interest rate cycle (18 more years to go, or so), which will deflate their values. I’d rather have a dividend stock or fund with some growth potential if I was looking for a cash generator. All of that reflects my risk tolerances and very long term outlook/horizon. (“Cash” in this context is money markets and other short-term stuff, it is all earning, just poorly). |
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