N659HB
En-Route
Anyone here subscribe? Worth it?
I signed up for a one month trial.
I signed up for a one month trial.
Although there are strategies for scouting stock picks. You’re right, it’s mostly a gamblers game. I don’t condone trying to day trade, but I do periodically. I use StreetSmart Edge from Schwab, which provides many analytics to find volatile stocks to “try” and day trade. Big Gap Ups, % Change since Open and most Volume are a few criteria I’ll look for, but then again, trying to day trade is not a good strategy. Most inexperienced folks risk too much of their portfolio or will scalp the stock to make a small profit. Bad idea and not recommended. Buy the dip has always been one of my main strategies.You will see lots of bragging-type forum posts from guys who have made money picking stocks. GIven the noisy nature of markets, it is definitely possible to do this due to pure luck. Just like the casino billboards showing suckers (err ... customers) holding big checks, the lucky traders are not representative. Do you expect the losers to be posting?
Yup. It's worth re-reading every once in a while. Malkiel has kept it up (and his income up) with periodic revisions. At Amazon it looks like the most current edition is January 2016.Anyone read "A Random Walk Down Wall Street" lately? It's been at least 20 yrs for me.
Agreed, that kind of thing can be lots of fun. BTDT. The problem is that as individual traders we don't have any information that everyone else doesn't also have and most professionals get it much faster than we do. So if the market price established by thousands of traders reflects all available information (efficient market hypothesis) then we are just rolling the dice on future events. Worse ("Your Money and Your Brain" by Jason Zweig) we are wired to remember our wins and forget our losses. This keeps us sitting at the table.I never did get into listening or reading any of the huckster type material. A lot of stock picking (at least for me anyways) is just being aware of your surroundings and knowing the business cycles. I've always bought stocks in companies that I use their products, or that I'm familiar with. When oil was at an all time high, I bought airline and refinery stocks. I own Apple computers, so naturally I own Apple stock. As an offshoot of the computer market I own stock in hard drive and graphic card companies. When Bush was president, I bought gun stocks and held them through the Obama era. I like to listen to XM/Sirius radio, so I bought their stock. When Garmin came out with the first handheld GPS, I bought a couple E-maps and some stock in that company. I also play the futures and will regularly buy RBOB options when gas is at it's lowest in the winter and sell when gas is at it's highest in the summer. Same goes for the oil/cattle/grain markets. Wars, droughts, flooding, or freezes effect those markets, so you try to keep in tune with the weather/climate/politics and trade appropriately. I also like to play the VIX as that's kind of a no-brainer and goes along with the "fear or complacency" of the overall markets in general.
Strange time to buy those two sectors. Both usually sell off when oil rally’s. Curious what the strategy was in that trade?When oil was at an all time high, I bought airline and refinery stocks.
I also like to play the VIX as that's kind of a no-brainer and goes along with the "fear or complacency" of the overall markets in general.
Over the last 30 years, the majority of the stocks in my portfolio have been 10-bangers or better. Don't get me wrong, I've picked my share of losers also (mostly speculative plays) and have dumped many a stock once they've reached my threshold. I try to stay as diversified as possible. If something's down, usually something else is up. Overall I'm way ahead. I'm a long term investor when it comes to stocks. The only speculation I do is in the commodities markets, and they're usually pretty simple if you understand the cycles.Have you calculated your total return over the period you've been doing this?
What's the largest expenditure for an airline? Same goes for a refinery. I try to buy when everybody is selling and sell when everybody is buying.Strange time to buy those two sectors. Both usually sell off when oil rally’s. Curious what the strategy was in that trade?
Right now it's way too complacent, so I'm not playing. Wait for an upsetting event (or the rumor of one) to happen that panics the market and then buy or option SVXY. Last time I played was when all the UK Euro BS was going on. I knew it was going to be a non-event so I loaded up and made some good money. I just recently dumped it.Interesting...do you have a view/position on for the VIX right now?
Nothing personal, but I'll pick on this a little bit. First, shares sold always equal shares bought. So there is no case where "everybody is selling" or "everybody is buying." When prices are going down, it is because professional traders are not optimistic about a stock. When prices are gong up, professional traders are optimistic about a stock. It's also important to know that the person on the other side of any amateur's trade is very likely to be a professional (95% of trades, I have read).... I try to buy when everybody is selling and sell when everybody is buying. ...
Exactly! Thus my reasoning for buying when everybody is selling, and selling when everybody is buying. Take for instance the airline and refinery stocks. The "professionals" were dumping them left and right because of the high oil prices and the impending market crash as those companies were not showing any profits and likely wouldn't be for quite a long while. So I started loading up on them. I knew that there are only a handful of airlines and that the major ones (at least here domestically) were not going to go anywhere soon. Worst case scenario the government bails them out. Same goes for the refineries. There are only so many refineries here in the US and those that have long been established are not going anywhere. Our national security depends on it. So I made those plays and have done quite well.When prices are going down, it is because professional traders are not optimistic about a stock. When prices are gong up, professional traders are optimistic about a stock.
Actually, it would be a dynamite strategy. If you could do it. The problem is that no one knows how to call bottoms or tops.Best advice I ever received about the stock market is: never buy the bottom or sell the top. This strategy makes you go broke!
Sorry. False.Most retail traders lose their accounts in 90 Days ..
Sorry again. It is extremely unlikely that anyone on this board is making trades that are large enough to even slightly interest the front-runners. (http://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/frontrunning.asp) They are lying in wait for the big mutual funds to trade tens or hundreds of $millions and for large index reconstitution events.big houses just short your longs or long your shorts. It’s easy money for them.
Anyone here subscribe? Worth it?
I signed up for a one month trial.
Thanks everyone for the insights. The lure that got me to bite had to do with AI being the next biggest thing. Every aspect of our lives will be touched by AI, yada yada yada. It turns out they were recommending stock in a company that makes gaming video chips (not an AI company!), the premise being AI systems will use such image processors to scan billions of images for common patterns.
Hmmmm. Perhaps I had had one too many drinks that night. They did offer a money back guarantee, so I'll probably take them up on it, and not play the fool.
I've been putting money into our company's 401k over the past 5 years, which has had lackluster performance until this year. So far this year the return has been just over 9%. Should be over 10% by year end.
As to company 401k plans, most of the ones I’ve seen lately have been lackluster. My last company put everything in a target date fund which I could not change; the only reason I contributed was to get the company match. My current company doesn’t match, so I pay the taxes now and put that money in a brokerage account instead. That may or may not be the best answer for everyone.
If you want to make money in the markets but not play in the markets, buy index funds (preferably from Vanguard or similar no load, low expense index funds) and hold them. Data from multiple credible studies proves that even the best actively managed mutual funds WILL NOT beat the indexes over time. If time is shorter (i.e. approaching retirement) then perhaps an active strategy makes more sense, but that all depends on your financial situation and your personal goals.
If you have some extra cash and want to play in the markets, you better have an intimate knowledge of what you’re doing unless you like to lose money. If you’re relying on Fool or Cramer or similar media celebrities to pick your stocks, you’re probably better of in a mutual fund.
As to company 401k plans, most of the ones I’ve seen lately have been lackluster. My last company put everything in a target date fund which I could not change; the only reason I contributed was to get the company match. My current company doesn’t match, so I pay the taxes now and put that money in a brokerage account instead. That may or may not be the best answer for everyone.
Just my opinion.
JKG
Not at all. There's a sucker born every minute.... They also claim to have over 200,000 subscribers. Unreal.
What? A few posts up your were poo-pooing me for being smarter than the so-called "professionals" by being well diversified, knowing how to play the charts and cycles, and adopting a buy and hold strategy. What gives?So passive is the winning strategy.
OK, no harm, no foul. I was picking on you for implying that you were smarter than the market. "charts and cycles" type stuff, which I equate to reading entrails. Diversification, basically buying everything, and holding it is the statistically sound strategy. Buffet, when asked what the ideal stock holding period was, answered "Forever."What? A few posts up your were poo-pooing me for being smarter than the so-called "professionals" by being well diversified, knowing how to play the charts and cycles, and adopting a buy and hold strategy. What gives?
Just yanking your chain...
Actually, it would be a dynamite strategy. If you could do it. The problem is that no one knows how to call bottoms or tops.
John Bogle: "The idea that a bell rings to signal when investors should get into or out of the market is simply not credible. After nearly 50 years in this business, I do not know of anybody who has done it successfully and consistently."
John Kenneth Galbraith: "There are two kinds of forecasters: those who don't know, and those who don't know they don't know."
Sorry. False.
Sorry again. It is extremely unlikely that anyone on this board is making trades that are large enough to even slightly interest the front-runners. (http://www.investopedia.com/terms/f/frontrunning.asp) They are lying in wait for the big mutual funds to trade tens or hundreds of $millions and for large index reconstitution events.
Believe whatever you like.What you have listed is against SEC regulations, front running. What I’m talking about is your bank taking the opposite of your trade.
Investment firms and banks are allowed to trade the market. And the market is designed to take money from retail investors.
Strange time to buy those two sectors. Both usually sell off when oil rally’s. Curious what the strategy was in that trade?
Years ago a programming buddy (who was a staunch commodities trader) and I spent a couple months and wrote some algos based on historical charts/cycles/weather/political patterns etc. of the commodities that we liked to trade the most. His favorites were coffee, corn, and OJ. My favorites were oil, cattle, and fuel. Let’s just say we’ve been fairly accurate over the years.OK, no harm, no foul. I was picking on you for implying that you were smarter than the market. "charts and cycles" type stuff, which I equate to reading entrails.