Anonymous wrote:Good market performance presupposes political stability, foreseeability and the rule of law. Does it look like we will have any of this in the next four years. That should give you an answer.
Sadly, you cannot compare the situation pre-election with since the election.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just checked mine and they aren't down at all. How are you all losing 6 figures? How much money are you starting with???
Check the post date before you reply, OK? The stock market is extremely volatile because of Trump's frequent attempts to impose crazy tariffs, and the fact that he's eventually going to cave on some major ones. The stock markets regained all of today's losses, for example. Timing really matters these days if you want to play the market under Trump.
I really wonder about the long-term impacts of imposing tariffs for a day or two and then backing down. It seems like the imposition of tariffs is big news in the media but the backdown isn’t. How many people aren’t paying close attention and continuing to put off major purchases because they assume that the tariffs are still on?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Keep your head down and keep investing. It'll come back. Always does. The stock market is a place where the impatient transfer wealth to the patient. Be the latter.
But this assumption that "it always comes back" presupposes that the United States is the world leader and that the USD is the world's reserve currency.
We are upending the post-WWII society and headed into a multipolar world where China, India, and several African nations will have the demographic- and resource-advantage.
Anonymous wrote:When I knew nothing about investing and heard people saying how they lost money, I thought the companies they owned went out of business. Well, Enron did.
Comes out, most people sold their shares when the price went down instead of buying more on sale. Remember when Amazon crashed to couple of bucks. Wasn't amazon's fault. Market was rattled.
The stocks I hold go from $200 a share to $450. I'm taking the ups and downs like a champ.They should be near $1000+ in 4-5 years.
I can buy and sell inside of Roth when passive investing gets too boring. My volatile stocks are perfect for it. Volatility is vitality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our portfolio is up 32.8% in the last year. S&P 500 is up only 14.5% during the same timeframe.
Today we witnessed a gain of $377K. We’re active investors, obviously, but maybe OP should rethink the lemming strategy?!?
This is OP - The money is in Fidelity Private Wealth Management. I assume they know what they are doing. Do you work in finance? Because that’s pretty good investing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just checked mine and they aren't down at all. How are you all losing 6 figures? How much money are you starting with???
Check the post date before you reply, OK? The stock market is extremely volatile because of Trump's frequent attempts to impose crazy tariffs, and the fact that he's eventually going to cave on some major ones. The stock markets regained all of today's losses, for example. Timing really matters these days if you want to play the market under Trump.
Anonymous wrote:Our portfolio is up 32.8% in the last year. S&P 500 is up only 14.5% during the same timeframe.
Today we witnessed a gain of $377K. We’re active investors, obviously, but maybe OP should rethink the lemming strategy?!?
Anonymous wrote:You deserve to lose some money, OP, if you are lax to the point of suddenly waking up after a stock market slide and post on DCUM wondering where your money went.
Also, PP is correct. I've made millions in the stock market. The stock market has been volatile ever since Trump came to office and all indices had a bad day today. Tomorrow the Commerce secretary said there might be a compromise on tariffs - the stock market has always been the pride and joy of Trump, and this White House doesn't like seeing it slide like that.
I cashed out of a portion of my stocks in February, something I've never done before in my 20 years of investing. I will be staying liquid until I can buy one of last dips before the market stabilizes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How old are you? I’m 35 and just not checking my investment accounts. They are long term vehicles and if we don’t survive trump and the market doesn’t cycle back long term, I’ve got bigger problems.
Not looking is certainly an option. But the world will not be the same again, so I don’t know if the old methods like waiting it out will work. I expect a lot of things we’re used to will be gone out permanently damaged.