I am all for helping those who need help, I am totally against helping those who make more than $500K a year and given current events over last several years worry most relief will go to those who need it the least.
Not once you understand that you are dealing with random events, events that no one can forecast...Nassim Taleb's very good book "Fooled by Randomness" discusses the problems where someone gets lucky and, from that, concludes that he is a genius. I recommend it.
NASDAQ has always been electronic.I read it would continue electronically. Come to think of it, why do traders need to be there on the floor in the first place?
Those lenders and landlords, etc., are all having to pay employees and suppliers, many of whom are also living paycheck to paycheck. Many of the people you're asking to hold out are themselves highly leveraged. You're making a big assumption here that may not be valid.
I think you are missing a key point here. If those employees living paycheck to paycheck that rely on the landlord for employment also have no bills than the entire system stands up pretty well. The circle of expenses vs income stablizes quicker if you limit expenses.
No it doesn't, because no one will have "no bills" whatsoever.
What would motivate a farmer to produce more food than enough for his own family if he can't get paid and if he doesn't have to worry about paying his mortgage or his power bill?
I'm finding it very hard to resist BRK.B at this level.
Here is a pretty good video of Fama and Thaler discussing the EMH. Both agree that your (and my) going-in assumption should be the EMH, but the discussion of behavioral finance/emotional price distortions is very good. https://famafrench.dimensional.com/famafrench/videos/are-markets-efficient.aspx... I’ve arrived at a modified “Random Walk/Efficient Market” philosophy. Yes, discounting inside information, every other investor knows what you do, and that is efficiently priced into the price of any stock or commodity. As such, any given stock at any given time is fairly priced and equally likely to go up or down. If not randomly, essentially unpredictability.
We'll differ on that one. It is true, though, that we are physiologically wired remember our winners and forget our losers, so when you win on a "hunch" it sticks. Try Jason Zweig's "Your Money & Your Brain"... I do think “intuition” can give one a leg up. For instance, subscribing to Netflix very early on and having a hunch that even though the stock seemed “overpriced” at the time*, that the business had lots of potential to grow. Similar hunches could be had with Microsoft, Apple, eBay, Facebook, Amazon and Google, leading to huge gains if one followed those hunches. Others with the same information may not have the insight you do. Or so it seems to me.
Of course. It's astrology for investors. We are pattern-seeking animals. It is a huge survival trait; there simply is not time to analyze every situation ab initio. But this trait causes us to see patterns in randomness where there actually are none. Taleb again ...... technical analysis is hogwash.
Ok I think you are making sweeping assumptions here. There are huge differences between someone who makes 30,000 and 99,000. The plan I think I’ve heard takes some of that into account but the person making 30,000 likely is living on little savings but not the guy who makes 99,000. Also, this plan makes little to no adjustment for where you live and just makes a blanket handout.
Certainly this money won’t help the stock market at all.
Save that for r/wallstreetbets.
Two oil leveraged ETFs just liquidated. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/arti...l-products-to-shut-down-in-wake-of-epic-crash
Not as much as you think.
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/05/22/fed...-adults-cant-cover-400-emergency-expense.html
Slide the bar to 100K.
http://graphics.wsj.com/what-percent/
You will find that roughly 8% of the population makes more than 100K.
Americans suck at saving.
Tim
I totally understand your point about Americans being awful at saving and managing debt. I teach high school economics and I have a multi week unit on this. My issue was not with the premise of your comment but the sweeping nature of it. You can’t make an arguement that the guy making 95,000 needs as much money as the person making 30,000 especially if the premise of this money is basically a bridge loan.
I totally understand your point about Americans being awful at saving and managing debt. I teach high school economics and I have a multi week unit on this. My issue was not with the premise of your comment but the sweeping nature of it. You can’t make an arguement that the guy making 95,000 needs as much money as the person making 30,000 especially if the premise of this money is basically a bridge loan.
All of you stock holders can breath more easily today.
I only had enough cash to last me about 2 or 3 months and I figured that in 3 months from now the market MAY be in even worse shape than it is now. So I sold enough mutual funds yesterday to make my cash last about a year. You can be sure those stocks, and the market in general will go up today. Assuming I sold enough.
Yep. Just as I predicted and promised. I sell and the DOW pops 1,500 pts.Just in time for a big up open!
Thanks, @JOhnH!Yep. Just as I predicted and promised. I sell and the DOW pops 1,500 pts.
Yep. Just as I predicted and promised. I sell and the DOW pops 1,500 pts.
If I could just get the damn timing right.
Don't feel bad. Just look here: https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Taylor_Larimore's_market_timing_quotes... If I could just get the damn timing right.
Yep. Just as I predicted and promised. I sell and the DOW pops 1,500 pts.
I have often thought of writing a news letter to tell people when I buy or sell. I would call it "The Contrarian", but I think that name is already taken.Would you mind letting us all know when that time arrives?
All of you stock holders can breath more easily today.
I only had enough cash to last me about 2 or 3 months and I figured that in 3 months from now the market MAY be in even worse shape than it is now. So I sold enough mutual funds yesterday to make my cash last about a year. You can be sure those stocks, and the market in general will go up today. Assuming I sold enough.
Well, I guess I should’ve bought BA a week ago at $95 a share.
I was thing the same. Could’ve almost doubled if timing the market.
I’m not sure it’s going to stay at ~$165; with such reduced demand, there’s no need for the airlines to get Max deliveries back on track for the time being.
What the current event does to business travel is yet to be seen.
Im real close to pulling about 30k out of my working capital and dumping it in the market. I think the daily death toll will peak early next week and people will be shocked that it's no where near the millions predicted. By late April/may most will be back to work.
Of course ,I bought Boeing about a month after the second crash, thinking the max would be back flying shortly, so my prognostication is worth exactly what you paid for it.
I'm down about 25%, but I tend to be invested a bit more aggressively than the common thinking is for folks my age (60). I'm not relying on the money in my retirement and investment accounts to live on... that's covered elsewhere. Sooo.. still sort of playing the long game. In the past week, I've maxed out my 2019 allowed Roth contributions and have started investing this year's allowed $7k on top of it.What do you think the "average person's" percentage loss in their market investment (stocks/bonds/ETFs etc; ie not real estate or other) loss was from Feb to now?
10%? 20%?
I haven’t looked in a few weeks. Last time I did I was down around 25-30%. I decided early on I was riding it out.What do you think the "average person's" percentage loss in their market investment (stocks/bonds/ETFs etc; ie not real estate or other) loss was from Feb to now?
10%? 20%?
I'm all for helping everyone, or no one.I am all for helping those who need help, I am totally against helping those who make more than $500K a year and given current events over last several years worry most relief will go to those who need it the least.
What do you think the "average person's" percentage loss in their market investment (stocks/bonds/ETFs etc; ie not real estate or other) loss was from Feb to now?
10%? 20%?