Anyone investing heavily this year??

How much money did you lose/gain this past week?


  • Total voters
    30
  • Poll closed .

Ceenote

Thinkn with My 3rd Eye!
Platinum Member

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
See this is very informative! Cause they using this AI boom to reel people into their stocks knowing we are many years away...such a fun and interesting thing, investing is!!
Think railroad stock crash. Its the same play. They're looting the pension funds — there is a good chance that pension funds are for black workers. They did it with the Freedman’s Bank.
 

Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor


We often talk about choosing funds or platforms that have a low fee. But when you buy or sell, you can also save money or spend money unnecessarily by executing your trades inefficiently. In this video, we look at how you can use order types to get better buying and selling prices and the risks associated with each order type.

Timestamps
00:00 Introduction
00:28 Market Makers
08:17 Market Order
09:37 Limit Order
11:51 Variations
13:20 Stop Loss Order
15:59 Summary
 

rph2005

Rising Star
OG Investor
I suppose it depends on the context. I don’t believe you can categorize it as the same as going to Vegas. Walking out of your house and going to the grocery store is a gamble, considering the mass shootings that plague our country.
i was just gonna say that, yes, life itself is a gamble from conception to death. 6000 choices a day means 6000 bets a day
 

HellBoy

Black Cam Girls -> BlackCamZ.Com
Platinum Member
Few notes on what I'm seeing:

  • As bond rates rise, the market will fall
  • Investors are watching for bond rates to hit 5% (currently 4.77). If it continues upward over 5%, a market correction could happen
  • If positive job reports and inflation does NOT stop consumers from spending, the Fed will be less likely to cut rates (Edited)
  • Companies that need loans will suffer
  • Stocks with crazy evaluations will suffer
  • Hedge with companies that have excess cash (dont need to borrow)
  • Look into stocks that do well in recessions / Defensive stocks
 
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Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor




On January 2, 2000, Howard Marks published his first memo to garner any reader response, bubble.com, calling attention to excesses he detected in the market for tech and internet stocks. His newest memo revisits the subject of bubbles. Howard expresses his view that they’re more a state of mind than a quantitative calculation and describes bubble thinking as irrational, often underlaid by a widespread belief that ‘‘this time is different.’’ Rather than opining on whether we’re in a bubble, Howard lists the signs he sees today and suggests how you might think about them . . . just as he did 25 years ago.
 

Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor
Few notes on what I'm seeing:

  • As bond rates rise, the market will fall
  • Investors are watching for bond rates to hit 5% (currently 4.77). If it continues upward over 5%, a market correction could happen
  • If positive job reports and inflation does stop consumers from spending, the Fed will be less likely to cut rates
  • Companies that need loans will suffer
  • Stocks with crazy evaluations will suffer
  • Hedge with companies that have excess cash (dont need to borrow)
  • Look into stocks that do well in recessions / Defensive stocks
Appreciate the insights.
 

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Few notes on what I'm seeing:

  • As bond rates rise, the market will fall
  • Investors are watching for bond rates to hit 5% (currently 4.77). If it continues upward over 5%, a market correction could happen
  • If positive job reports and inflation does NOT stop consumers from spending, the Fed will be less likely to cut rates (Edited)
  • Companies that need loans will suffer
  • Stocks with crazy evaluations will suffer
  • Hedge with companies that have excess cash (dont need to borrow)
  • Look into stocks that do well in recessions / Defensive stocks
Warren B. moved over $350 billion out of the market and onto the sidelines over the last 14 months. I believed he dwindled his Apple holdings down over the summer. Now look at the Bitcoin thread.
 

Non-StopJFK2TAB

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Appreciate the insights.
Jimmy Carter and Paul Volker didn't hike the interest rate to curb inflation. They hiked the interest rate to ensure black folks wouldn't have the capital to invest in themselves.

They allowed blacks to join the unions as they waged a war against the unions. All under the banner of “fighting inflation.” The unions were killed by the white government and they naturally blamed the black guy for its death.
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend
Recent activity ...



- Transferred $5000 to an account earning better interest

- Looking over next contributions to RRSP and TFSA accounts (retirement savings / tax-free savings) for later this month

- Have a $145,705 RRSP account maturing just past mid-January / set it up to be reinvested

- The other GIC for $110,000 matures in April (non-RRSP)

- The TFSA GIC for $95,218 matures at the end of November

- Have quite a bit in a savings account that I plan on investing ... but I'm waiting until filing taxes (ours are due by the end of April) to see how bad the amount owing is this year after good returns on investment income. Don't want to invest all of that - make a ton of interest - then owe a shitload back to the CRA (Revenue Agency)

* Don't need or plan to use the RRSP / TFSA stuff for 20+ years yet
 
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