thepupil Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 17 minutes ago, Intelligent_Investor said: This is true if you are worried about market price, but not if you are a value investor worried about the intrinsic value. The stock with a 5% earnings yield growing at 6% will throw off more cash than the bond will, even if the market price is more sensitive, and thus will have a higher intrinsic value than a 5% fixed coupon bond, even if the bond is less volatile in market price. of course, to be clear I'm 80% risk assets. I'm just saying it's consistent that if you think stocks need to be at lower multiples to own bonds at similar yields to earnings yields of stocks.
dealraker Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 (edited) Very likely because I've seen so many cycles from 20% interest rates down to basically zero, inflation from way up in the double digits to whatever it was when lower, I'm far-far-far away from the fears that seem to be geared toward "folks" that just don't know enough. I personally think for most investors, including those thinking they are smart and thus able to maneuvre around thus escaping the downs, that the biggest risk is not being a participant. Again, I know endless wealthy people - to some degree I was incredibly lucky to have lost my parents early and thus forced to get out and about and I had endless connections from both family in political and business positions and ownership. For me I summarize it this way: People who are in business and who avoid crappy endeavors, trendy/silly things...people diversified (to some degree) who stay owners of business? They have ALL the money. People who sell, people who go to cash or skirt in and out of endeavors, and especially older people who go to cash, tax free bonds, or whatever they do to distance themselves from operating businesses? Their family money simply goes away...and NOT slowly. Inflation and spending send it flying away to others. And it really doesn't get much more complex than that--- given a lot of time. And most of you here have a lot of time left. The more direct your connection is to successful businesses the more money you will have over time. My biggest fear is the big boys take away all the good businesses while little people chant "I won" by selling out (at what they thought was great life altering price). Edited February 8, 2023 by dealraker
Gregmal Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 7 minutes ago, dealraker said: My biggest fear is the big boys take away all the good businesses while little people chant "I won" by selling out (at what they thought was great life altering price). This is quite possibly the most life altering perspective one can have, and it requires a great deal of internalizing the investment process. When I started out and had little money, every fluctuation was a big deal. Over time you can’t help but notice how many, most, almost all….of the well timed sales look foolish if given enough time. The long game is just as simple as Buffett has shown it to be…accumulating. Not churning, flipping, etc.
StevieV Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 11 minutes ago, dealraker said: People who are in business and who avoid crappy endeavors, trendy/silly things...people diversified (to some degree) who stay owners of business? They have ALL the money. Can you elaborate? Interested in what businesses, how started, anything else of note?
TwoCitiesCapital Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, Intelligent_Investor said: This is true if you are worried about market price, but not if you are a value investor worried about the intrinsic value. The stock with a 5% earnings yield growing at 6% will throw off more cash than the bond will, even if the market price is more sensitive, and thus will have a higher intrinsic value than a 5% fixed coupon bond, even if the bond is less volatile in market price. See, but that's the problem. Those companies AREN'T growing at the moment. Earnings are down 5% YoY across the S&P 500 companies. The big tech darlings that could do no wrong with secular growth tailwinda? Also contracting. And this is only the beginning IMO seeing as it takes MONTHS for Fed actions to flow through the economy and corporate margins are a historically reverting series. Yes, if you have a 30-year time frame, those companies will likely catch back up and exceed bonds. But over the next 3-5 years? I think short- term bonds will come out ahead as measured from the peak at the end of 2021. Now that intermediate bonds have corrected and provide some value, I'll take them outperforming equities over the next 3-4 years. Cash and short-term bonds are some of the BEST inflation hedges because they have the least duration. That's exactly why these asset classes outperformed in 2022 on a nominal basis. Oil/Gold/TIPS can work on persistent and long-term inflation, but in the short term it's cash and short bonds. That inflationary correction/repricing may not be entirely over, but you can probably start wading out on the risk spectrum now. But wading out on the risk spectrum means buying agency mortgages, short duration corporates, and intermediate treasuries. 4-7% returns without taking equity risk or too much duration. Inflation hasn't YET been slayed, economic indicators are screaming fragility, and equities have rarely been attractive in environments of contracting PMIs/Leading indicators/corporate earnings. Sure, there are pockets of attractiveness in equities. I own Fairfax. I own commodity producers. I own EM and etc. But cheap has gotten cheaper in basically every pull back I've ever witnessed. Fairfax going up last year is one of the few individual exceptions I can think of. But they also cratered in 2020 despite sitting on tons of cash and an opportunity rich environment so there's no guarantees that continues. Having dry, liquid powder in an environment characterized by such fragility is rarely a bad thing. Especially if you aren't sacrificing returns by sitting in 0% return products. Edited February 7, 2023 by TwoCitiesCapital
dealraker Posted February 7, 2023 Posted February 7, 2023 (edited) 2 hours ago, StevieV said: Can you elaborate? Interested in what businesses, how started, anything else of note? StevieV I was referring to either privately owned, I am a part owner of a builders suppy and a millwork business, or public as I own about 250 stocks- although I'm 80 percent weighted in just two stocks. There is no difference as to staying connected/attached to the things that create wealth in capitalism. That said, I do absolutely know for certain that Walter Schloss types and right here Parsad can be successful buying/selling shares of stock. This model is an easier win in tax free accounts of course. I'm just not programmed or capable to do it and as of yet in my life I personally know no one who has gotten wealthy this way...and I know a LOT of wealthy people. Edited February 7, 2023 by dealraker
Spekulatius Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 It depends on the business. Almost all small business are crappy ones where basically the owner just owns a job. My dad was one of them- he passed away last year and basically died broke. Many of his fellow entrepreneurs or land owners went to work for other people over time, as their own business failed. The local economy has a lot to do with it, if you are in a demographically challenged area for example. Survivorship bias is huge with small business, much more do than with mid cap or large cap stocks,
StevieV Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 9 minutes ago, Spekulatius said: It depends on the business. Almost all small business are crappy ones where basically the owner just owns a job. My dad was one of them- he passed away last year and basically died broke. Many of his fellow entrepreneurs or land owners went to work for other people over time, as their own business failed. The local economy has a lot to do with it, if you are in a demographically challenged area for example. Survivorship bias is huge with small business, much more do than with mid cap or large cap stocks, What does the board recommend for young folks then?
Gregmal Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 25 minutes ago, StevieV said: What does the board recommend for young folks then? Work hard and do whatever makes you the most obscene amount of money until you have somewhat of a base….then get aspirational and make lifestyle choices.
Spekulatius Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 9 minutes ago, Gregmal said: Work hard and do whatever makes you the most obscene amount of money until you have somewhat of a base….then get aspirational and make lifestyle choices. Yes, and work smart. If something does not pan out, switch careers and/or move elsewhere and try again.
thepupil Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 (edited) This discussion bring up the idea of time horizon. In truth, I don’t know my time horizon. 7-10 years ago, I’d have told you it was 5 decades, but then I plowed a large portion of my accessible net worth into a down payment on a house a few year a ago . So that money was thought of as 50 year money but was actually 5 year money. Maybe I should have invested more conservatively (though that would have been a worse result). Right now if I knew I wanted to work 3 more decades, I’d know my time horizon was super long. If I want to work 5 more years or 3 and start something entrepreneurial, my time horizon is not nearly as long. I think once one reaches a certain level of wealth / income from other sources, one doesn’t really care about drawdowns or volatility, but before then, volatility matters. Before you have “f you” money, before you know what path you’ll take, if there’s a chance you want to access your money for whatever reason before “many years from now”, you care about drawdowns and your time horizon is probably not as long as you think. I don’t have super strong or well formed views here but I don’t think it’s as simple as “young = long time horizon” also when you’re young and have little money, new money is huge percentage of portfolio. Once you have a little scratch, you can’t as easily correct mistakes / invest into drawdowns with new money. $100k/year of savings is more meaningful to a $100k portfolio vs a $1mm or $2mm, so I think drawdown sensitivity increases as you get wealthier, then decreases again if you have so much that you can live well at very low withdrawal rate. Edited February 8, 2023 by thepupil
Jaygo Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 1 hour ago, StevieV said: What does the board recommend for young folks then? Stevie find something that you are good at, enjoy somewhat and the market readily pays for. I see too many bright people go into mostly intellectual and useless things. Go learn something we all need and there is a shortage of and read some books if your into philosophy or history. I do ok in my business and there are tax benefits but when I see the tik toks of silicon valley gigs and they make the same money i do or more it makes me feel like a fool for going down the road I did. I generally bust my ass, have a relatively dangerous job and work a lot of nights plus a couple hundred k in capital expended. If i knew how to code i could do as well or better plus get a massage after work, id take the switch but I dont code however i'm good with my hands and ok with my mind so i went the route of small business and have built a bit of a nest egg. Without knowing you I dont think spouting advice is appropriate or fair to you other than the top sentence.
Jaygo Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 5 hours ago, dealraker said: People who are in business and who avoid crappy endeavors, trendy/silly things...people diversified (to some degree) who stay owners of business? They have ALL the money. People who sell, people who go to cash or skirt in and out of endeavors, and especially older people who go to cash, tax free bonds, or whatever they do to distance themselves from operating businesses? They family money simply goes away...and NOT slowly. Inflation and spending send it flying away to others. And it really doesn't get much more complex than that--- given a lot of time. And most of you here have a lot of time left. The more direct your connection is to successful businesses the more money you will have over time. These three paragraphs need to be printed out and recited over and over as gospel. I suffer from the need to do something and I understand that I am suffering for it financially. Aside from some huge percentage gainers on very small stakes (Thank you shopify, cell therapeutics and spartan energy) my best investment was the original 120 shares of brk.b somewhere around 105. Its the only thing ive never traded out of so the only investment on my statement that shows any real success. "the more direct your connection is to a successful business the more money you will have over time" Dealraker This is so simple that most people will overthink it and not benefit from the wisdom. thanks Dealraker
Dinar Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 1 hour ago, thepupil said: This discussion bring up the idea of time horizon. In truth, I don’t know my time horizon. 7-10 years ago, I’d have told you it was 5 decades, but then I plowed a large portion of my accessible net worth into a down payment on a house a few year a ago . So that money was thought of as 50 year money but was actually 5 year money. Maybe I should have invested more conservatively (though that would have been a worse result). Right now if I knew I wanted to work 3 more decades, I’d know my time horizon was super long. If I want to work 5 more years or 3 and start something entrepreneurial, my time horizon is not nearly as long. I think once one reaches a certain level of wealth / income from other sources, one doesn’t really care about drawdowns or volatility, but before then, volatility matters. Before you have “f you” money, before you know what path you’ll take, if there’s a chance you want to access your money for whatever reason before “many years from now”, you care about drawdowns and your time horizon is probably not as long as you think. I don’t have super strong or well formed views here but I don’t think it’s as simple as “young = long time horizon” also when you’re young and have little money, new money is huge percentage of portfolio. Once you have a little scratch, you can’t as easily correct mistakes / invest into drawdowns with new money. $100k/year of savings is more meaningful to a $100k portfolio vs a $1mm or $2mm, so I think drawdown sensitivity increases as you get wealthier, then decreases again if you have so much that you can live well at very low withdrawal rate. I thought I had F you money, but then I got married....
nwoodman Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 (edited) 56 minutes ago, Jaygo said: my best investment was the original 120 shares of brk.b somewhere around 105. Its the only thing ive never traded out of so the only investment on my statement that shows any real success. If you understand why this worked - valuation? quality of the company? timeframe? then you are well on your way. Not saying Berkshire is the (only) answer, but it provides an excellent basis for handicapping business prospects, recognising the beauty of long-term compounding and management integrity. 10 years or so to formulate a sensible framework is perfectly acceptable if you then use it for another 30-40 years, it will work out well. I understand the desire to jump around but you need to resist the urge to pay taxes. I sometimes wonder if the lure of the trade in the "tax-free account" is like the call of the sirens for patience. One of the advantages you have as a small retail investor is timeframe i.e. patience. @dealraker is spot on and I wish someone had said that to me in my early 20's, very nicely put. Edited February 8, 2023 by nwoodman
Masterofnone Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 Dealraker has been consistent in his message. He was around 25 years ago on the very first active stock message board-Yahoo. He pointed out that Berkshire fit the bill as a company worth partnering with. You don't need too many good ideas with this framework and as Buffett has often said, if you have a new idea you should always ask "is it better than the other ideas you have acted upon?" I first bought Berkshire at what was a terrible entry point in 1998. Took five years for the stock to catch back up to the very dear price I first paid- but even those ill-timed shares have done just fine over time. If you partner with the right people, time is really all you need. And when you really get to know your partners, you can just confidently add when folks will sell more to you cheap. After that first purchase with lots of reading and help from folks like Dealraker, I learned better when to add and just rode that single pony (largely) right on into retirement.
Viking Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 (edited) 10 hours ago, dealraker said: Very likely because I've seen so many cycles from 20% interest rates down to basically zero, inflation from way up in the double digits to whatever it was when lower, I'm far-far-far away from the fears that seem to be geared toward "folks" that just don't know enough. I personally think for most investors, including those thinking they are smart and thus able to maneuvre around thus escaping the downs, that the biggest risk is not being a participant. Again, I know endless wealthy people - to some degree I was incredibly lucky to have lost my parents early and thus forced to get out and about and I had endless connections from both family in political and business positions and ownership. For me I summarize it this way: People who are in business and who avoid crappy endeavors, trendy/silly things...people diversified (to some degree) who stay owners of business? They have ALL the money. People who sell, people who go to cash or skirt in and out of endeavors, and especially older people who go to cash, tax free bonds, or whatever they do to distance themselves from operating businesses? They family money simply goes away...and NOT slowly. Inflation and spending send it flying away to others. And it really doesn't get much more complex than that--- given a lot of time. And most of you here have a lot of time left. The more direct your connection is to successful businesses the more money you will have over time. My biggest fear is the big boys take away all the good businesses while little people chant "I won" by selling out (at what they thought was great life altering price). @dealraker i love the comments… please keep them coming. Great wisdom. As i get older i am starting to question if Buffett’s and Lynch’s wisdom - that an average person can learn to successfully invest on their own - is actually realistic/possible (for most people). I just see so few people who are actually able to figure it out over time. Worse, i know a fair number of people who have tried and failed… some miserably. None of my family members have been able to figure it out. Why not? I am wondering if the vast majority of people simply do not have the required emotional make-up to be successful self-directed investors. So few people get rich the way Warren Buffett did (financial markets) - perhaps its not as easy as it looks. ————— By ‘successfully invest’ i mean they are able to achieve results (over decades) that are better than the relevant market benchmark. Edited February 8, 2023 by Viking
Charlie Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 "@dealraker i love the comments… please keep them coming. Great wisdom. As i get older i am starting to question if Buffett’s and Lynch’s wisdom - that an average person can learn to successfully invest on their own - is actually realistic/possible (for most people). I just see so few people who are actually able to figure it out over time. Worse, i know a fair number of people who have tried and failed… some miserably. None of my family members have been able to figure it out. Why not? I am wondering if the vast majority of people simply do not have the required emotional make-up to be successful self-directed investors. So few people get rich the way Warren Buffett did (financial markets) - perhaps its not as easy as it looks. ————— By ‘successfully invest’ i mean they are able to achieve results (over decades) that are better than the relevant market benchmark. " Successful investing goes against human nature. Digital inventions like iphones etc. make people more irrational, not less. So we value investors can all celebrate the irrationalities of our fellow human beings for decades to come.
mattee2264 Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 Was reading a fintwit account the other day that showed certain patterns we are seeing now also features in the 2000-2002 and 2007-2009 bear markets: -Markets rallying at the end of a Fed tightening cycle -Confidence in a soft landing from IMF/Fed/markets etc. Of course there are contrary examples where economists/markets correctly predicted a soft landing. 2018 would be an obvious example. And probably a soft landing is the most likely outcome. But it does seem to be priced in at this point and if things take a turn for the worse there is quite a lot of downside.
mattee2264 Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 Charlie: in fairness Buffett always suggests the average investor should stick to index funds. As for Lynch the concept that a lay person can beat the pros by investing in what he knows shows a lot of hindsight bias especially as most of his examples are small cap growth companies. For every Chipotle or Domino's Pizza there are plenty of similar fast food concepts that crashed and burned. Even for professionals with great track records if they are running a concentrated portfolio it only takes a few big mistakes for things to go to hell. While if you are running a very diversified portfolio you end up doing factor investing (i.e. statistical value) which may give you a slight edge over very long periods of time but can also result in very long periods of underperformance that can make you question your faith just at the time that the factor is due for a prolonged period of outperformance. And of course as many individual investors have found during a bull market it can be easy to make money especially if you take a lot of risk and start to think that you are the next Buffett. Personally I am a fan of the core and explore approach. Within your equity allocation: 70-80% index invested to minimize future regrets/unforced errors etc. and ensure you benefit from the long term upwards trend of markets. 20-30% reserved for big pitches or kept in cash if there seem to be no obvious examples of undervaluation within your circle of competence.
Spekulatius Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 The average investor does not need to beat the market to do well. Just matching about the market and he will do just fine. Most average investors though hugely underperform trying to time (badly) or invest in Fomo/Momo stocks at the wrong time. My comment above regarding to own a business should not prevent anyone from trying. I just think that over time most business in tough industries (contractors , restaurants, retail) fail. Most upstarts fail. When I recall the business that I knew in the town I grew up in the 70‘s, virtually all of them are not there any more. Some of the owners just retired and sold out and did OK. Others not so much. This is in a demographically challenged area. I am sure that in a growing area, the results would have been much better and there is a lesson here: Don‘t keep pissing against the wind. One business though closeby was sort of crappy looking machinery business that made it huge, went into international export and got bought out by a public company. I am sure it was a hundred bagger. So, much of the returns are in the tail. Again, if as in investor, you can capture the tails by indexing, even if you no nothing. As an active investor, you can try to actually get exposure to the tail by having better insight. Or you can try the behavioral edge and buy when others are selling out, which may be easier.
dealraker Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 As to buy/hold investing. I worked full time for a salary from 1978 until 1994, I've not worked for $ since. But only towards the end of my work life did I make enough money to fund an 401K. So I contributed a total of $30,000 over the 1988 to 1994 time frame while still in business. I never made over $45,000 working in my entire life. This isn't the money I inherited, nor does it have anything to do with our foray into the insurance business that created what is my largest personal holding the result of merging with AJ Gallagher. This is piddley stock investing from the small contributions to the 401K. But in any event there were no sales of stock in this account ever and it began with a total of $30k to a 401K. I think the return over the entire lifetime is over 13%. I transferred it to Wells obviously in 2011. Buy and hold doesn't have to mean boring or loser as nearly all project it to be. 13% adds up over time. I am simply presenting an example. We have those stating, actually screaming, here to their investors to buy Bitcoin and sell stocks. My reply is, "OK...but I'm not getting poorer holding stocks either." Since Performance Inception +15.27% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$1,033,594.13 $1,278,791.86 YTD +6.59% $1,199,701.17 $0.00 +$79,090.69 $1,278,791.86 2022 +0.81% $1,190,031.46 $0.00 +$9,669.71 $1,199,701.17 2021 +20.59% $986,824.87 $0.00 +$203,206.59 $1,190,031.46 2020 +12.82% $874,655.60 $0.00 +$112,169.27 $986,824.87 2019 +24.56% $702,183.47 $0.00 +$172,472.13 $874,655.60 2018 -1.26% $711,136.40 $0.00 -$8,952.93 $702,183.47 2017 +12.33% $633,078.14 $0.00 +$78,058.26 $711,136.40 2016 +15.75% $546,940.28 $0.00 +$86,137.86 $633,078.14 2015 +0.15% $546,101.43 $0.00 +$838.85 $546,940.28 2014 +19.64% $456,465.26 $0.00 +$89,636.17 $546,101.43 2013 +41.70% $322,142.95 $0.00 +$134,322.31 $456,465.26 2012 +19.51% $269,559.28 $0.00 +$52,583.67 $322,142.95 2011 +16.33% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$24,361.55 $269,559.28 Performance Disclosures and Definitions
changegonnacome Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 50 minutes ago, dealraker said: As to buy/hold investing. I worked full time for a salary from 1978 until 1994, I've not worked for $ since. But only towards the end of my work life did I make enough money to fund an 401K. So I contributed a total of $30,000 over the 1988 to 1994 time frame while still in business. I never made over $45,000 working in my entire life. This isn't the money I inherited, nor does it have anything to do with our foray into the insurance business that created what is my largest personal holding the result of merging with AJ Gallagher. This is piddley stock investing from the small contributions to the 401K. But in any event there were no sales of stock in this account ever and it began with a total of $30k to a 401K. I think the return over the entire lifetime is over 13%. I transferred it to Wells obviously in 2011. Buy and hold doesn't have to mean boring or loser as nearly all project it to be. 13% adds up over time. I am simply presenting an example. We have those stating, actually screaming, here to their investors to buy Bitcoin and sell stocks. My reply is, "OK...but I'm not getting poorer holding stocks either." Since Performance Inception +15.27% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$1,033,594.13 $1,278,791.86 YTD +6.59% $1,199,701.17 $0.00 +$79,090.69 $1,278,791.86 2022 +0.81% $1,190,031.46 $0.00 +$9,669.71 $1,199,701.17 2021 +20.59% $986,824.87 $0.00 +$203,206.59 $1,190,031.46 2020 +12.82% $874,655.60 $0.00 +$112,169.27 $986,824.87 2019 +24.56% $702,183.47 $0.00 +$172,472.13 $874,655.60 2018 -1.26% $711,136.40 $0.00 -$8,952.93 $702,183.47 2017 +12.33% $633,078.14 $0.00 +$78,058.26 $711,136.40 2016 +15.75% $546,940.28 $0.00 +$86,137.86 $633,078.14 2015 +0.15% $546,101.43 $0.00 +$838.85 $546,940.28 2014 +19.64% $456,465.26 $0.00 +$89,636.17 $546,101.43 2013 +41.70% $322,142.95 $0.00 +$134,322.31 $456,465.26 2012 +19.51% $269,559.28 $0.00 +$52,583.67 $322,142.95 2011 +16.33% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$24,361.55 $269,559.28 Performance Disclosures and Definitions Thats a thing of beauty! Buy and hold is the way. The human need to "do something" is strong........I've tried during my investment career to temper it at all times.....sitting on your ass and doing nothing is an under-rated strategy. The temptation to do 'something' is always there........and the financial industry of course runs on getting people to do 'stuff'..........one thing that worked for me and I suggest it to others.......is if you feel the need to do things constantly and in a way who doesn't......take a small percentage of your portfolio (5%)....move it to another brokerage provider.....and if you feel the urge to do stuff after watching CNBC go and do it there.......it scratches the itch........and creates a wonderful A/B test on whether your doing stuff is helping or hurting!!
Spekulatius Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 1 hour ago, dealraker said: As to buy/hold investing. I worked full time for a salary from 1978 until 1994, I've not worked for $ since. But only towards the end of my work life did I make enough money to fund an 401K. So I contributed a total of $30,000 over the 1988 to 1994 time frame while still in business. I never made over $45,000 working in my entire life. This isn't the money I inherited, nor does it have anything to do with our foray into the insurance business that created what is my largest personal holding the result of merging with AJ Gallagher. This is piddley stock investing from the small contributions to the 401K. But in any event there were no sales of stock in this account ever and it began with a total of $30k to a 401K. I think the return over the entire lifetime is over 13%. I transferred it to Wells obviously in 2011. Buy and hold doesn't have to mean boring or loser as nearly all project it to be. 13% adds up over time. I am simply presenting an example. We have those stating, actually screaming, here to their investors to buy Bitcoin and sell stocks. My reply is, "OK...but I'm not getting poorer holding stocks either." Since Performance Inception +15.27% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$1,033,594.13 $1,278,791.86 YTD +6.59% $1,199,701.17 $0.00 +$79,090.69 $1,278,791.86 2022 +0.81% $1,190,031.46 $0.00 +$9,669.71 $1,199,701.17 2021 +20.59% $986,824.87 $0.00 +$203,206.59 $1,190,031.46 2020 +12.82% $874,655.60 $0.00 +$112,169.27 $986,824.87 2019 +24.56% $702,183.47 $0.00 +$172,472.13 $874,655.60 2018 -1.26% $711,136.40 $0.00 -$8,952.93 $702,183.47 2017 +12.33% $633,078.14 $0.00 +$78,058.26 $711,136.40 2016 +15.75% $546,940.28 $0.00 +$86,137.86 $633,078.14 2015 +0.15% $546,101.43 $0.00 +$838.85 $546,940.28 2014 +19.64% $456,465.26 $0.00 +$89,636.17 $546,101.43 2013 +41.70% $322,142.95 $0.00 +$134,322.31 $456,465.26 2012 +19.51% $269,559.28 $0.00 +$52,583.67 $322,142.95 2011 +16.33% $126,513.16 +$118,684.57 +$24,361.55 $269,559.28 Performance Disclosures and Definitions @dealrakerThat's is some real good performance. Was this with mutual funds or ETF's or was this with individual stock picking? 13% compounded is some serious outperformance.
Castanza Posted February 8, 2023 Posted February 8, 2023 1 hour ago, dealraker said: I am simply presenting an example. We have those stating, actually screaming, here to their investors to buy Bitcoin and sell stocks. My reply is, "OK...but I'm not getting poorer holding stocks either." I am very skeptical of BTC and have low confidence that it will be able to stand if government forces in the US deem it unsavory. However, it's the best financial tool that exists outside of the "system" and I think that will/could have some utility in the future. Take a look across the pond and the CBDC that is being proposed. Expiration dates on savings, push a button limitations on what you can buy and when you can buy for people the government decides needs those restrictions (kids and mentally unstable....and?). Nobody is saying sell stocks to buy BTC. At least not on here. A 1% position is prudent imo. Still 90% stocks and plan on being that way for as long as I can see.
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