Author Topic: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)  (Read 4281 times)

insanity_bb

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #75 on: February 20, 2014, 01:40:33 PM »
Lies. Market maker through legislation. ;D

lol, yes

Skorp1o

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #76 on: February 20, 2014, 01:54:16 PM »
Show me wealthy fund managers who are on forums bragging about taking exotic vacations and banging 1k an hour escorts while high on Colombian cocaine. Id love to see it.

HAHA...dude you're so diluded and up your own arse, you are literally making up fantasies in your head about me, as my reality does not provide you with enough substance to your satisfaction.

I am not a Fund Manager, there is not a single mention in my posts about me being a fund manager, I never worked in one and I don't even know any fund managers.

I have never had sex with a hooker in my whole life. I do have sex with models and some fine chicks and that's a facts, sometimes even married women, hell id fuck your wife, but she's probably uglier than warts.

I have not touched cocaine in 10 years, there's no mention of cocaine on here whatsoever not by me nor any member  ???

You are basically a hot air balloon fantasist creating an enemy for yourself out of nothing, so you can argue with him, again, as my reality does not provide you with enough substance to your satisfaction. How fucking sad is that. You have some psychological issues don't you even worry about financial markets, cos you've got you're own shit going on in your head to contend with mate.
S

TimBryce

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #77 on: February 20, 2014, 02:39:37 PM »
Making good $ in investing is far from easy... You either have to be very intelligent with a great logic sense and constantly look up the news, reports, markets info,etc all the time.. Or be lucky enough to find someone who's good at it, which is hard because for some reason in this field, everybody thinks they are some sort of genius.
As soon as they understand how it works, they then think they know how to make it work and profit, but they almost all fails big time and end up quitting, convincing themselves that the only people who succeed are firms with super-programs, or those who have insider infos

ESFitness

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #78 on: February 20, 2014, 02:42:35 PM »
Making good $ in investing is far from easy... You either have to be very intelligent with a great logic sense and constantly look up the news, reports, markets info,etc all the time.. Or be lucky enough to find someone who's good at it, which is hard because for some reason in this field, everybody thinks they are some sort of genius.
As soon as they understand how it works, they then think they know how to make it work and profit, but they almost all fails big time and end up quitting, convincing themselves that the only people who succeed are firms with super-programs, or those who have insider infos

which is why it's a full time job.

if you 'casually invest' or 'play the market', you're going to get chewed up and spit out. there is no 'casual investing'. you're either in or your out.

most people who make a living from 'the stock market' don't do it with their own money.

prove you know what you're doing and can turn a profit and get others to give you money to invest for them and take a percentage of that profit

randy841

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #79 on: February 20, 2014, 03:59:34 PM »
People who invest in gold are idiots.  When you see if being worn by porch monkeys how can you call it a sound investment?

Don't the

Pocho's/pocha's

taco benders

and beaners

do the same wetback?

galeniko

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #80 on: February 20, 2014, 04:00:02 PM »
read florian homms book.

didnt end very well for him in the end, but he had crazy profits.


allegedly cross-traded billions of shares of penny stocks among the company’s funds to boost the value of the otherwise illiquid securities.


easy as that.

ust have to have the balls ;D
n

pissant

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #81 on: February 20, 2014, 04:06:10 PM »
which is why it's a full time job.

if you 'casually invest' or 'play the market', you're going to get chewed up and spit out. there is no 'casual investing'. you're either in or your out.

most people who make a living from 'the stock market' don't do it with their own money.

prove you know what you're doing and can turn a profit and get others to give you money to invest for them and take a percentage of that profit

smart man :)

Lexus II

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #82 on: February 20, 2014, 06:49:40 PM »
You must be very young and naïve.

Buffett started buying stocks at precisely the correct moment in history.  Buying all the insurance companies was smart thing at the time.  Now he only "invests" in companies that have a government backing and banks that pay him a 5-10% coupon.  The man is an insider, despite his Coke drinking and ukulele playing grandpa image.  A very shrewd and greedy man

The stock market is a huge bubble right now all pumped up by the Fed reserve.  When this thing pops, it's gonna make the 1929 crash look like a picnic.

Every asset class has it's cycle... right now stocks and RE are NOT the place to be.

Buy gold and silver instead.

Your wrong about one thing.  When Warren first started buying stocks it was not the right time to buy.  Ben Grahm and his father told him to wait, but he wanted to just jump in there and do it.

He is shrewd and has crafted his gradpa image, but he is also very giving of his knowledge to everyone.  I have nothing but admiration for the man.


ESFitness

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #83 on: February 20, 2014, 09:32:28 PM »
Your wrong about one thing.  When Warren first started buying stocks it was not the right time to buy.  Ben Grahm and his father told him to wait, but he wanted to just jump in there and do it.

He is shrewd and has crafted his gradpa image, but he is also very giving of his knowledge to everyone.  I have nothing but admiration for the man.



buffet's a different kind of investor than many of us will ever be. with the capital he has behind him, he can take his time and sit and wait.. most of us can't. we need to trade what's moving right now.. which is why we're traders, not investors. if we sit and wait, we lose money, (if we're not making money, with our money, we're losing money and missing opportunities), unless you have an 'income' fund which you can derive income from dividends. you can have a net worth of 500k and control a fund with 500k and still be dead broke if you're not liquid.

POB

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #84 on: February 20, 2014, 11:21:58 PM »
Unless your on the inside(if your on Getbig your not), buy blue chips in a recession sell them when everybody starts talking about the stock market. Now is a sell time NOT buy...

pissant

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Re: Food for thoughts (Investing in Stocks)
« Reply #85 on: February 21, 2014, 05:24:25 AM »
buffet's a different kind of investor than many of us will ever be. with the capital he has behind him, he can take his time and sit and wait.. most of us can't. we need to trade what's moving right now.. which is why we're traders, not investors. if we sit and wait, we lose money, (if we're not making money, with our money, we're losing money and missing opportunities), unless you have an 'income' fund which you can derive income from dividends. you can have a net worth of 500k and control a fund with 500k and still be dead broke if you're not liquid.
all that matters is yearly % returned. If you have cashflow coming from your employment long term investing is doable. If you wanna live of your stock market returns on a month to month basis its not for you.

Just cause you do alot doesnt mean you are creating anymore alpha .