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Reply to "2001, 2008, or 2022"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]01 wasn’t bad at all, unless you were all tech invested and/or worked in tech. 08 was terrible, unemployment and investments, we were close to a total financial collapse due to the housing bubble and leverage 22 ?? What is collapsing? Stocks are down 10%, this is just regular market moves, happens every few years. Where is the meltdown coming from. No collapse in housing, may decline a bit due to mortgage rates but there is no foreclosure crisis based on better lending standards. Company profits look solid. Maybe there is some mystery bubble in finance but nobody can predict that one.[/quote] Nasdaq is down 20% from its peak last year. That is actually quite a bit.[/quote] It's not. Normal stuff.[/quote] Down 20% in 3 months is not normal. It shows that the market was (and still is) very inflated. Big banks are warning of a recession, not that it’s a big surprise.[/quote] That is utter noise. We are up 300% since 2016. There is no way we are dropping anywhere near that; Nasdeq companies are taking over the world [/quote] DP- Nasdaq on track for it's worse month since October 2008. Take that as you will.[/quote] The worst month since the longest bull market ever started... again, nothing burger.[/quote] Dude, shut up. This is not a nothing burger. The market is looking very sick and there has been a lot of pain already. You are only looking at indexes propped up by mega caps, but many companies have already gotten haircuts by like 50%. There's no depth to the market at all. [/quote] Dude? Get your big boy pants on. It's going to be OK. We may drop 30% from the high, but thus is NORMAL. Maybe not since you've been in the market, but if you take the long view as all the smarter (than you) folks are suggesting you'll make money in the end. Just don't pull your money out and keep drip feeding. Or just stop putting money in because you don't really have the balls to be in. [/quote] Name the number of times the market has had experience with quantitative tightening. And tightening to roll off multiple trillions. I'll wait. Then tell me.again 'this is normal' with a straight face. [/quote] Sorry, you're not worth the response. Just do it your way.[/quote] Ahhhhh. The 'financial professional' is too scared to tell everyone the truth - and that's the fact that the market has virtually ZERO experience with quantitative tightening (except for only about one other time), especially with QT requiring trillions in roll off. What the financial professional doesn't tell you is that no financial models exist for QT, unlike how rate hikes can be priced into DCF models they finance clowns like to use for attempting to value companies and stocks. QT is basically going to be an unprecedented shock. [/quote] DP. You might be right, you might not. But time and time again in my life I’ve seen people panic, sell everything, and then either they sold near the bottom, or they were too scared to get back in when they need to. If my portfolio dips by 50% and takes years to recover I’ll be ok. I learned my lessons about active management from decades of actively managed funds and accounts and watching my net worth lag the indices, all the time, every time. Your tone is not helping your position at all. [/quote]
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