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OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc.

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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1121 » by stuporman » Wed Jul 13, 2022 7:12 am

HarthorneWingo wrote:
stuporman wrote:This is me when I realized this morning that I opened a trade 100 times my usual size on forex after the trade was active...

Image

Luckily I was able to exit the trade within a few mins for a $75 gain...yea, like $75 for a couple of pips positive position.

One day my account will be big enough to have the margin to support these types of trade sizes and I'll be able to scoop up hundreds in mins but now is not that time.


Did you get a rush?


One of my strategies actually is a big lot size, maybe not that big though, for a quick under 15min trade so it wasn't too much of a shock, just being dramatic. I just switched to the smaller time frame chart and went ahead scalping it.

Right now there's a rare moment going on. The EUR/USD is at almost exact parity at 1.00, it hasn't been at parity since 2002 and it's been as high as 1.54 in 2007 since then. It's bum rushed parity coming from over 1.20 in about three months and from over 1.04 in two weeks coming to within 10pips a number of times. That is a price of 1.0010, a tenth of a penny.

It's not bouncing off it, kinda snuggling up to it and testing a break below it I guess. If it does reject the break there could be a significant bounce to cash in on. I almost don't want to go to sleep because the European session can be very active since it's the euro, then that runs right into the US session.

Exciting forex nerd stuff!!

It's a huge psychological support and should create some great volatility to trade it with.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1122 » by stuporman » Wed Jul 13, 2022 5:52 pm

There was a small pierce of 1.00 and huge whipsawing over the past 12 hours, 100-120pip whipsaws but the 1.00 support held up. I was able to scrape some pips off it but I was being cautious as the technicals were all over the place with the price action printing indecisive candle one after another on the hourly chart.

US session has gotten kinda quiet on the EUR/USD after all that volatility overnight, we'll see if the pair condenses for a session or few before another run at the support. I'll trade others pairs until it gives me some signals, right now the technicals are twisted around all kinds of ways. So far it held with a strong rejection.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1123 » by knickabocker88 » Wed Sep 14, 2022 4:31 am

I just upped my 401k contribution starting this pay period but this death by 100 cuts is worse than waiting all summer for D. Mitchell.

No sign of a bottom but the pessimists are saying a cold winter.

Don't have the guts to DCA in my taxable account yet either.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1124 » by aq_ua » Wed Sep 14, 2022 10:02 am

knickabocker88 wrote:I just upped my 401k contribution starting this pay period but this death by 100 cuts is worse than waiting all summer for D. Mitchell.

No sign of a bottom but the pessimists are saying a cold winter.

Don't have the guts to DCA in my taxable account yet either.

The lower prices go, the higher the future expected return. That's all that relationship really means. The return just won't come in a linear manner, it never does, but ultimately, it always goes up.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1125 » by br7knicks » Wed Sep 14, 2022 11:04 am

knickabocker88 wrote:I just upped my 401k contribution starting this pay period but this death by 100 cuts is worse than waiting all summer for D. Mitchell.

No sign of a bottom but the pessimists are saying a cold winter.

Don't have the guts to DCA in my taxable account yet either.


Yeah, was called dummy for saying how all this money printing will lead to recession, possibly depression.

We're already in recession, and it's going to get worse.

Every 10-15% drop, I buy a bit more than my normal monthly, recurring buy. It'll eventually bounce back.

Things are already on discount, and it's going to get cheaper here within the next year or so. It'll get worse until we can get some financial responsibility in place by those in charge.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1126 » by stuporman » Wed Sep 14, 2022 11:06 pm

br7knicks wrote:
knickabocker88 wrote:I just upped my 401k contribution starting this pay period but this death by 100 cuts is worse than waiting all summer for D. Mitchell.

No sign of a bottom but the pessimists are saying a cold winter.

Don't have the guts to DCA in my taxable account yet either.


Yeah, was called dummy for saying how all this money printing will lead to recession, possibly depression.

We're already in recession, and it's going to get worse.

Every 10-15% drop, I buy a bit more than my normal monthly, recurring buy. It'll eventually bounce back.

Things are already on discount, and it's going to get cheaper here within the next year or so. It'll get worse until we can get some financial responsibility in place by those in charge.


The money printing didn't lead to it, not when Reagan did it, Clinton did it, both Bush's did it, Obama did it, Trump did it or Biden did it.

The recession is a culmination of decisions made about letting corporations freely leave the US while getting subsidies and tax breaks for doing it in conjunction with neglecting domestic manufacturing and infrastructure for decades.

If there is a criticism about the money printing is that they gave it directly to corporations bypassing the citizens under the guise of 'they will do the right thing and create jobs with it' but all corporations did was reward executives, buy back stock and stuff it in the already wealthy's bank accounts.

If they would have used the money on subsidizing social programs to help average Americans and in programs to build American infrastructure it would have helped America, it's populace and still would have wound up in wealthy people's accounts but at least it would have helped citizens along the way.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1127 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 15, 2022 12:10 am

stuporman wrote:
br7knicks wrote:
knickabocker88 wrote:I just upped my 401k contribution starting this pay period but this death by 100 cuts is worse than waiting all summer for D. Mitchell.

No sign of a bottom but the pessimists are saying a cold winter.

Don't have the guts to DCA in my taxable account yet either.


Yeah, was called dummy for saying how all this money printing will lead to recession, possibly depression.

We're already in recession, and it's going to get worse.

Every 10-15% drop, I buy a bit more than my normal monthly, recurring buy. It'll eventually bounce back.

Things are already on discount, and it's going to get cheaper here within the next year or so. It'll get worse until we can get some financial responsibility in place by those in charge.


The money printing didn't lead to it, not when Reagan did it, Clinton did it, both Bush's did it, Obama did it, Trump did it or Biden did it.

The recession is a culmination of decisions made about letting corporations freely leave the US while getting subsidies and tax breaks for doing it in conjunction with neglecting domestic manufacturing and infrastructure for decades.

If there is a criticism about the money printing is that they gave it directly to corporations bypassing the citizens under the guise of 'they will do the right thing and create jobs with it' but all corporations did was reward executives, buy back stock and stuff it in the already wealthy's bank accounts.

If they would have used the money on subsidizing social programs to help average Americans and in programs to build American infrastructure it would have helped America, it's populace and still would have wound up in wealthy people's accounts but at least it would have helped citizens along the way.


yes, you are right in that the money printing alone didn't cause this recession. it was a culmination of things. it was the main culprit, though. you can't devalue the dollar as much as it has since trump started all of it.


i definitely agree with you on how they handled the money printing allocation. it was a complete joke. especially hearing the amount of fraud that took place as well.

when biden got elected, i got excited and put a **** load of money into infrastructure ETFs. then almost nothing went into infrastructure. and i sold out of XLE (i bought it before covid, and sold WAY too soon), as the energy sector took right off instead.

we will learn our lesson? time will tell. but no, we will not learn our lesson.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1128 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 15, 2022 12:21 am

what sucks is that it's going to get worse before it gets better. we'll see these small bull runs, since it's happened in all other recessions before the one we're currently in. but overall it's going to go quite down from here.

just putting money aside, each month, for when the market goes to near depression level crash
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1129 » by aq_ua » Thu Sep 15, 2022 1:58 am

br7knicks wrote:
stuporman wrote:
br7knicks wrote:
Yeah, was called dummy for saying how all this money printing will lead to recession, possibly depression.

We're already in recession, and it's going to get worse.

Every 10-15% drop, I buy a bit more than my normal monthly, recurring buy. It'll eventually bounce back.

Things are already on discount, and it's going to get cheaper here within the next year or so. It'll get worse until we can get some financial responsibility in place by those in charge.


The money printing didn't lead to it, not when Reagan did it, Clinton did it, both Bush's did it, Obama did it, Trump did it or Biden did it.

The recession is a culmination of decisions made about letting corporations freely leave the US while getting subsidies and tax breaks for doing it in conjunction with neglecting domestic manufacturing and infrastructure for decades.

If there is a criticism about the money printing is that they gave it directly to corporations bypassing the citizens under the guise of 'they will do the right thing and create jobs with it' but all corporations did was reward executives, buy back stock and stuff it in the already wealthy's bank accounts.

If they would have used the money on subsidizing social programs to help average Americans and in programs to build American infrastructure it would have helped America, it's populace and still would have wound up in wealthy people's accounts but at least it would have helped citizens along the way.


yes, you are right in that the money printing alone didn't cause this recession. it was a culmination of things. it was the main culprit, though. you can't devalue the dollar as much as it has since trump started all of it.


i definitely agree with you on how they handled the money printing allocation. it was a complete joke. especially hearing the amount of fraud that took place as well.

when biden got elected, i got excited and put a **** load of money into infrastructure ETFs. then almost nothing went into infrastructure. and i sold out of XLE (i bought it before covid, and sold WAY too soon), as the energy sector took right off instead.

we will learn our lesson? time will tell. but no, we will not learn our lesson.

Causes of recession are quite complicated, but I don't think it's right to just point to money printing as the cause of recession. Money printing can cause excess demand for consumption and therefore inflation, and excessive inflation leads to central banks (the Fed) seeking to tamp it down by dramatically raising interest rates (as we are currently seeing) which in turn causes consumer demand to drop and can lead to recession.

However, the big issue we're facing is an overall constricted and choked supply chain, so even if demand wasn't elevated, the supply would be lower and still lead to the inflation we're seeing today, with the same results. Fixing the supply chain side of things is super complicated, time consuming, capital consuming and just painful for everyone involved, and by the way there are wars going on, both in the traditional sense and in the economic / trade war sense.

It's a right mess for sure - but it's really hard to predict where things go, and for how long, let alone really point to the cause of everything. That's why at the end of the day, you have to believe in the long term outcomes and accept that short term volatility is going to be really high for a while.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1130 » by HarthorneWingo » Thu Sep 15, 2022 7:20 am

aq_ua wrote:
br7knicks wrote:
stuporman wrote:
The money printing didn't lead to it, not when Reagan did it, Clinton did it, both Bush's did it, Obama did it, Trump did it or Biden did it.

The recession is a culmination of decisions made about letting corporations freely leave the US while getting subsidies and tax breaks for doing it in conjunction with neglecting domestic manufacturing and infrastructure for decades.

If there is a criticism about the money printing is that they gave it directly to corporations bypassing the citizens under the guise of 'they will do the right thing and create jobs with it' but all corporations did was reward executives, buy back stock and stuff it in the already wealthy's bank accounts.

If they would have used the money on subsidizing social programs to help average Americans and in programs to build American infrastructure it would have helped America, it's populace and still would have wound up in wealthy people's accounts but at least it would have helped citizens along the way.


yes, you are right in that the money printing alone didn't cause this recession. it was a culmination of things. it was the main culprit, though. you can't devalue the dollar as much as it has since trump started all of it.


i definitely agree with you on how they handled the money printing allocation. it was a complete joke. especially hearing the amount of fraud that took place as well.

when biden got elected, i got excited and put a **** load of money into infrastructure ETFs. then almost nothing went into infrastructure. and i sold out of XLE (i bought it before covid, and sold WAY too soon), as the energy sector took right off instead.

we will learn our lesson? time will tell. but no, we will not learn our lesson.

Causes of recession are quite complicated, but I don't think it's right to just point to money printing as the cause of recession. Money printing can cause excess demand for consumption and therefore inflation, and excessive inflation leads to central banks (the Fed) seeking to tamp it down by dramatically raising interest rates (as we are currently seeing) which in turn causes consumer demand to drop and can lead to recession.

However, the big issue we're facing is an overall constricted and choked supply chain, so even if demand wasn't elevated, the supply would be lower and still lead to the inflation we're seeing today, with the same results. Fixing the supply chain side of things is super complicated, time consuming, capital consuming and just painful for everyone involved, and by the way there are wars going on, both in the traditional sense and in the economic / trade war sense.

It's a right mess for sure - but it's really hard to predict where things go, and for how long, let alone really point to the cause of everything. That's why at the end of the day, you have to believe in the long term outcomes and accept that short term volatility is going to be really high for a while.


Well said. I might add that there's a potential railroad strike on the line that could great impact current inflation. The railroad workers have been getting screwed by management, so I'm all in for the strikers. I just hope that Dark Brandon, DOT Sec. Pete Buttigieg, and Labor Sec. Marty Walsh can put the right amount of pressure on management to come to the table with a fair deal sooner than later.

In the meantime, people here have to remember that inflation is not just experienced here in the U.S. It's being felt worldwide. I'm grateful that at least the gas prices have gone down significantly.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1131 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 15, 2022 10:42 am

aq_ua wrote:
br7knicks wrote:
stuporman wrote:
The money printing didn't lead to it, not when Reagan did it, Clinton did it, both Bush's did it, Obama did it, Trump did it or Biden did it.

The recession is a culmination of decisions made about letting corporations freely leave the US while getting subsidies and tax breaks for doing it in conjunction with neglecting domestic manufacturing and infrastructure for decades.

If there is a criticism about the money printing is that they gave it directly to corporations bypassing the citizens under the guise of 'they will do the right thing and create jobs with it' but all corporations did was reward executives, buy back stock and stuff it in the already wealthy's bank accounts.

If they would have used the money on subsidizing social programs to help average Americans and in programs to build American infrastructure it would have helped America, it's populace and still would have wound up in wealthy people's accounts but at least it would have helped citizens along the way.


yes, you are right in that the money printing alone didn't cause this recession. it was a culmination of things. it was the main culprit, though. you can't devalue the dollar as much as it has since trump started all of it.


i definitely agree with you on how they handled the money printing allocation. it was a complete joke. especially hearing the amount of fraud that took place as well.

when biden got elected, i got excited and put a **** load of money into infrastructure ETFs. then almost nothing went into infrastructure. and i sold out of XLE (i bought it before covid, and sold WAY too soon), as the energy sector took right off instead.

we will learn our lesson? time will tell. but no, we will not learn our lesson.

Causes of recession are quite complicated, but I don't think it's right to just point to money printing as the cause of recession. Money printing can cause excess demand for consumption and therefore inflation, and excessive inflation leads to central banks (the Fed) seeking to tamp it down by dramatically raising interest rates (as we are currently seeing) which in turn causes consumer demand to drop and can lead to recession.

However, the big issue we're facing is an overall constricted and choked supply chain, so even if demand wasn't elevated, the supply would be lower and still lead to the inflation we're seeing today, with the same results. Fixing the supply chain side of things is super complicated, time consuming, capital consuming and just painful for everyone involved, and by the way there are wars going on, both in the traditional sense and in the economic / trade war sense.

It's a right mess for sure - but it's really hard to predict where things go, and for how long, let alone really point to the cause of everything. That's why at the end of the day, you have to believe in the long term outcomes and accept that short term volatility is going to be really high for a while.



well, the money printing is the main cause. as i stated, its biggest problem is how it's being allocated, though. it wasn't used in a way that would help sustain the economy through the lockdowns, then after we came out of it.

Things like the supply chain issues also play a major role. If we can't get consumable supply to the demand, prices will go up. But money printing is the main issue. Nixon was the biggest idiot on the planet, and is honestly the most to blame for this.

but then continue to try to pass more policies that are done through more money printing, and in ways that don't actually tax the rich but the middle and lower class, is what will continue to hurt the economy.

money printing is the main cause of the inflation, as well as our current recession and the major drop that's about to happen. it's not the only problem; as you pointed out, it is very complicated.


but when you devalue the dollar, you're going to see drops; when you devalue as much as trump and biden have, it's going to lead to a major recession/crash/depression. we're trending downwards fast, but we're not trying to do enough to stop it.

the federal reserve, fortunately, is raising interest rates to lower the impact of what the money printing has done. but it won't be enough, at least not short term. im pessimistic in general, so i think the US economy is going down the **** (which is why my money is mostly in VWO). unfortunately, this means there will be an enormous amount of job loss in the next few years - it's already started.

but i'm hoping im wrong, and the interest rate hike will lead to a recovery. but this won't happen for a few years. we just need better financial responsibility by those in charge, at the federal and state level; local communities have mostly been doing better.


you're definitely right. it is tough to predict what will happen, specifically. unless there's some crazy miracle, there's no reason not to believe we will continue to drop for the forseeable future. however, you are definitely right that, in the LONG run, things will recover and trend back upwards.

there will be short term volatility. in the long run, it should recover and continue to grow. hence why i stated that i'm saving money more than investing. it's about the long game. as a more old school investor, it's important to think 20-30 years from now for me.

what you stated is most important for investing, it's about the long game.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1132 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 15, 2022 11:11 am

HarthorneWingo wrote:
aq_ua wrote:
br7knicks wrote:
yes, you are right in that the money printing alone didn't cause this recession. it was a culmination of things. it was the main culprit, though. you can't devalue the dollar as much as it has since trump started all of it.


i definitely agree with you on how they handled the money printing allocation. it was a complete joke. especially hearing the amount of fraud that took place as well.

when biden got elected, i got excited and put a **** load of money into infrastructure ETFs. then almost nothing went into infrastructure. and i sold out of XLE (i bought it before covid, and sold WAY too soon), as the energy sector took right off instead.

we will learn our lesson? time will tell. but no, we will not learn our lesson.

Causes of recession are quite complicated, but I don't think it's right to just point to money printing as the cause of recession. Money printing can cause excess demand for consumption and therefore inflation, and excessive inflation leads to central banks (the Fed) seeking to tamp it down by dramatically raising interest rates (as we are currently seeing) which in turn causes consumer demand to drop and can lead to recession.

However, the big issue we're facing is an overall constricted and choked supply chain, so even if demand wasn't elevated, the supply would be lower and still lead to the inflation we're seeing today, with the same results. Fixing the supply chain side of things is super complicated, time consuming, capital consuming and just painful for everyone involved, and by the way there are wars going on, both in the traditional sense and in the economic / trade war sense.

It's a right mess for sure - but it's really hard to predict where things go, and for how long, let alone really point to the cause of everything. That's why at the end of the day, you have to believe in the long term outcomes and accept that short term volatility is going to be really high for a while.


Well said. I might add that there's a potential railroad strike on the line that could great impact current inflation. The railroad workers have been getting screwed by management, so I'm all in for the strikers. I just hope that Dark Brandon, DOT Sec. Pete Buttigieg, and Labor Sec. Marty Walsh can put the right amount of pressure on management to come to the table with a fair deal sooner than later.

In the meantime, people here have to remember that inflation is not just experienced here in the U.S. It's being felt worldwide. I'm grateful that at least the gas prices have gone down significantly.


well, you don't have to like what i have to say. that's fine, no burden on me. as my guy from the minority mindset says, "you can complain about the game, or learn the rules." so i've learned not to complain about what trump and biden have done. just learn how to combat it.


but economics works easily. when you print money, it increases the money supply and devalues the dollar (thanks, Nixon). when this happens, the federal reserve has to increase interest rates. when they have to do this, companies can't grow (they also have learned to pocket money that has been printed). when companies can't grow, they cut jobs. job loss leads to more economic strife, mainly for the middle and lower class.

meanwhile, policies are set in place so the rich don't have to pay taxes (hence why buffet, trump, musk, bezos, etc pay little to no taxes). i've learned to stop complaining about guys like this. policies will always allow the rich to avoid paying their share like the rest of us. i'm trying to learn what they do. as minority mindset says, don't complain about the game, learn the rules.

again, no one has to like this. it sucks. but it's how the economy works. go speak to people in business. they'll tell you i'm not wrong. yes there are many factors, but these are the biggest components. i hope i'm wrong and someone fixes this. but we're trending downwards. just have to learn the rules, and know where to put your money and be smart about it until this is fixed.
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1133 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 15, 2022 11:36 am

Then again, you may not want to listen to me. I was off by a few months on my prediction of when the stock market was going to start free falling, due to the free money that was artificially inflating it. I said fall off '21, but it didn't start till January
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1134 » by Jstock12 » Wed Sep 28, 2022 7:17 pm

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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1135 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 29, 2022 12:08 am

Jstock12 wrote:Image


I lost a bunch on smaller coins like cadano, decentraland, as well as general stock market.

it's probably going to keep taking a beating for a while. not sure how long until it gets anywhere near to where any of them peaked
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1136 » by br7knicks » Thu Sep 29, 2022 11:45 am

we'll probably see a small bull run in Q4, as always, due to holidays. but that's expected - small bull runs always happen in recessions, but, overall, **** goes down hard

but we're already in a recession, and it's going to get worse in 2023. inflation should hopefully come down soon, although it has started to jump back up recently after dropping a tiny bit a little while ago.

europe is going to get hit really hard though. unfortunately i bought into the ETF, XLE, when the recession first hit, but then got out WAY too early. we'll see what happens with energy this winter, especially when oil prices likely rise again


remember, i'm just an elementary teacher, though. my research comes from old school investors and financial guys, not tik tok idiots, or "this penny stock will go to the moon," guys.

guys i listen to, in order:

Jaspreet Singh (Minority Mindset on Youtube, and free, 5 minute read daily email called Market Briefs <=== I highly suggest, as it's free, and quick to read).
Marko (Whiteboard Finance on Youtube, and he does some online academy).
Robert Kiyosaki (Rich dad, Poor dad)
RIP, magnumt '19

PG: M Smart/E Bledsoe/I Smith
SG: D Russell/C LeVert/L Stephenson
SF: H Barnes/T Horton Tucker/
PF: T Harris/C Boucher/B Griffin/
C: J Valanciunas/J McGee/
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1137 » by br7knicks » Fri Oct 7, 2022 1:58 am

Not as big a fan of gold and silver, and dumb, misleading title, but I'm incredibly glad for Schiff. Has helped save me from losing tens of thousands this past year, after I pulled out most of my **** in March

Just looking out for other RealGMers.

Him, kiyosaki, jaspreet Singh are big reasons I brought up the start of the collapse last summer. Just wish I got out in January of 22, not March.

RIP, magnumt '19

PG: M Smart/E Bledsoe/I Smith
SG: D Russell/C LeVert/L Stephenson
SF: H Barnes/T Horton Tucker/
PF: T Harris/C Boucher/B Griffin/
C: J Valanciunas/J McGee/
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1138 » by br7knicks » Fri Oct 7, 2022 10:45 am

gas is already on its way back up

also, if you want another guy who is really good with just facts (schiff is a bit too political for me, despite how smart he is), this guy is really good. my guy, Jaspreet Singh from Minority Mindset, also makes it a point not to bring in politics and go just with facts.

my only issue with this guy is that he's incredibly dry and boring. but if it'll help me financially (since we're going up against rich people), i'm fine with learning from smart people, despite how boring they are.

i do have very small positions in ET, ENB, and EPD because of their dividends i use as a small hedge against inflation (since i pulled almost all of my money out in march), and eventually these will rebound. anyone think of what would be a better place to go? I had XLE about 2 years ago, and got out WAY too early.

RIP, magnumt '19

PG: M Smart/E Bledsoe/I Smith
SG: D Russell/C LeVert/L Stephenson
SF: H Barnes/T Horton Tucker/
PF: T Harris/C Boucher/B Griffin/
C: J Valanciunas/J McGee/
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1139 » by raiser » Fri Oct 7, 2022 5:32 pm

If you are a teacher, you should be dollar cost averaging / maxing your New York State Deferred Compensation 457 with index funds. Look for the funds with the lowest expense ratio. Once your max out your 457 find out what low cost 403b vendors are on your districts plan and also max that out.

Robert Kiyosaki is a con artist and Rich Dad Poor Dad is made up story. Check out Bogleheads and stop taking swing bets on the market.

https://thecollegeinvestor.com/4726/ultimate-hypocrite-robert-kiyosaki-companys-bankruptcy/

https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/403b_plans_for_K-12_public_school_district_employees
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Re: OT: Crypto, Stocks, Bonds, Real Estate, Investments, IRAs & Finances, etc. 

Post#1140 » by NYKinMIA » Fri Oct 7, 2022 7:06 pm

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