cheap stocks
#221
#222
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Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 97
Likes: 34
f you're not a trader, buy some good growth stock mutual funds. Fidelity has several, as well as some that have low/zero fees. Look for 10+ year track records, but watch the fees!
Or, if you have 100k to blow, buy 5 Bitcoins and hold for about 5 years. You'll likely be glad you did.
Or, if you have 100k to blow, buy 5 Bitcoins and hold for about 5 years. You'll likely be glad you did.
#223
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Joined: Oct 2010
Posts: 1,621
Likes: 402
From: Cheboygan, MI
I used to have an IT company and one of my clients was a financial planner for the very well to do. He showed me his methodology for investing in mutual funds due to their lower risk. I've tried to follow that and I don't think I've ever made less than 25% per year. Now that my company has their 401k with Fidelity I have access to anything I am doing much better, I should hit over 40% this year. Much lower risk and very steady growth. I've tried professional investment planners, they were terrible. They think if they make you 8% you should be grateful. I still say that MACGX is the one to get into, consistent long term growth and the dividends it just paid were huge. Morningstar rated it the top earning fund.
#224
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Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 11,904
Likes: 1,143
I used to have an IT company and one of my clients was a financial planner for the very well to do. He showed me his methodology for investing in mutual funds due to their lower risk. I've tried to follow that and I don't think I've ever made less than 25% per year. Now that my company has their 401k with Fidelity I have access to anything I am doing much better, I should hit over 40% this year. Much lower risk and very steady growth. I've tried professional investment planners, they were terrible. They think if they make you 8% you should be grateful. I still say that MACGX is the one to get into, consistent long term growth and the dividends it just paid were huge. Morningstar rated it the top earning fund.
^^^^^^solid advice but most people don't like funds because they aren't glamorous enough to brag to their buddies about. Why talk MACGX when Tesla is up 400%!!!! This is what gets athletes in trouble, they think safe and 8-10% is losing vs. bragging about one stock that exploded (albeit at a significantly higher risk). NOBODY wants to talk about the losers, just like gambling.......Yeah went to Vegas and won 20K, ummm ok but what about the last time when you lost 50K!
I read a story years ago about Scottie Pippen (ex-Bulls player) and how he got killed in a super risky real estate deal. He was blinded by crazy promised returns that he didn't calculate the risk. The scammers feed on the players greed for a big return and failure to gauge risk properly. Needless to say, the property got foreclosed on, the partners had no money but Pippen sure did so the bank sued because he guaranteed the loan.
I worked in financial services at a national firm in Boca Raton, FL when I graduated from college. When the dot com thing started rolling people were coming into the office demanding 25% returns on everything. People with NO risk tolerance, one lady wanted to pull 450K out of CD's and go into the market chasing returns. After doing some digging we realized the CD money was her parents retirement money and she wanted to dump it in the market, pay the parents a 5% return and then keep the rest for herself. Needless to say, she was shown the door by management. Had a Dr making 400K a year, had 180K in mutual funds and he wanted to boost the returns yet he had zero disposable income, literally spent the whole paycheck. 3 kids in private school, renting a big house, leased cars, tennis for the wife........zero savings. We couldn't figure out the 180K. Was he a saver before he got married, did he just move to a high cost of living area and took a lower paying job? His 180k was his inheritance from his mother, he wanted to double it so he could use it as a down payment to buy a house! The returns are rarely the problem, the spending usually is the culprit!
#226
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Joined: Mar 2002
Posts: 4,473
Likes: 2,109
From: Milton, Fla!
Never made a straight stock purchase but almost popped my cherry on that one.
Not being US owned made me nervous.
Not afraid of foreign investments but the covid variables effect on the cruise industry and who would be making the decisions on/for them....., made me nervous.
As in a commahala harris............, and/or pelosi....., attack the rich??
Not being US owned made me nervous.
Not afraid of foreign investments but the covid variables effect on the cruise industry and who would be making the decisions on/for them....., made me nervous.
As in a commahala harris............, and/or pelosi....., attack the rich??
#228
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Joined: Jun 2010
Posts: 4,826
Likes: 907
fact is a blind guy could have picked any stock back in March and be up 100%, 200%, 1000%.
there are only a handful of stocks that aren’t up YTD.
hindsight is always 20/20. Tesla and some of the big winners pale in comparison in gains versus some of the stocks that aren’t mentioned. Good example is overstock. Could have bought them back in March for $2.50. It peaked at $128. That’s almost 60X!!!!!
coulda woulda shoulda...
there are only a handful of stocks that aren’t up YTD.
hindsight is always 20/20. Tesla and some of the big winners pale in comparison in gains versus some of the stocks that aren’t mentioned. Good example is overstock. Could have bought them back in March for $2.50. It peaked at $128. That’s almost 60X!!!!!
coulda woulda shoulda...




