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1MOSES1 01-23-2021 05:05 PM


Originally Posted by 1MOSES1 (Post 4769674)
I had some wins today...

picked up $800 worth of jmia yesterday. hit a quick 10% today and dumped it.

bought nndm at $6.17 and dumped it at $7.11. decent pickup.

bought $7k of GME in the AM hours and picked up 3% selling it later in the day.

bought teladoc at $182 yesterday. Sold it at $194 today.

kicking myself on Lucken coffee. Was going to invest 10k at the opening expecting a huge gain...saw it drop and moved on. Ended up picking up 30%. :(
. :throw:

anyone buy any of these stocks when I told them to buy...you’d be up 200-300%. Hahaha

Eddienel 01-23-2021 05:14 PM

I wish I had time to do the day trade thing. I’ll just stick to mutual funds and annuities.

ThisIsLivin 01-24-2021 08:15 AM


Originally Posted by Eddienel (Post 4774643)
I wish I had time to do the day trade thing. I’ll just stick to mutual funds and annuities.

I used to think the same thing, until I started paying attention and realized my job is actually costing me money. Not getting my 401 rolled into an IRA will cost me a million dollars. I’m having to rethink this work thing.

Eddienel 01-24-2021 09:24 AM


Originally Posted by ThisIsLivin (Post 4774695)
I used to think the same thing, until I started paying attention and realized my job is actually costing me money. Not getting my 401 rolled into an IRA will cost me a million dollars. I’m having to rethink this work thing.

Im getting tired of working 7 days a week and not enjoying myself. My wife and I are camping right now and having a blast doing nothing. Our stress level is 0 right now and loving it!

That being said. I enjoy working I just don’t want to be a slave to it. My goal is to do some more traveling. Drag the boat to some cool places and do some exploring.

1MOSES1 01-24-2021 11:17 AM


Originally Posted by ThisIsLivin (Post 4774695)
I used to think the same thing, until I started paying attention and realized my job is actually costing me money. Not getting my 401 rolled into an IRA will cost me a million dollars. I’m having to rethink this work thing.

problem is you are only able to roll 6k per year unless you are playing catch-up or 50 years and older.

I talk to my parents about investing often, and there one regret was not maxing out Roth IRA’s. They say it’s painful to pull 401k money and have to pay taxes.

Interceptor 01-24-2021 11:21 AM


Originally Posted by 1MOSES1 (Post 4774738)
problem is you are only able to roll 6k per year unless you are playing catch-up or 50 years and older.

I talk to my parents about investing often, and there one regret was not maxing out Roth IRA’s. They say it’s painful to pull 401k money and have to pay taxes.

Yup, that RMD withdrawal it's something we don't look forward too. Getting a pass on it last year was nice.

ThisIsLivin 01-25-2021 08:10 AM


Originally Posted by 1MOSES1 (Post 4774738)
problem is you are only able to roll 6k per year unless you are playing catch-up or 50 years and older.

I talk to my parents about investing often, and there one regret was not maxing out Roth IRA’s. They say it’s painful to pull 401k money and have to pay taxes.

I ran an extensive analysis on whether to do the Roth conversion or not. Our situation is that we make too much to use a Roth or traditional IRA, so we have been maxing out our 401k's. The other benefit is that because it's not taxed now it drops me a full tax bracket so I can afford to max out the 401. In a Roth situation I wouldn't be able to put as much away. I don't intend on realizing as much gross income when I retire so lower tax bracket. I will have zero debt when I retire so I will have a higher net income than I have now so I will live comfortably. After reviewing the state of Social Security, I have adjusted my plans to not consider that potential income source. If we get it great, it will pay the taxes. There is a lot to consider, I spent days running various scenarios on the Fidelity website. I used to think getting to zero debt was most important, it's not. Maximizing savings and returns is. I pay 3.25% on my mortgage and 3% on a home equity credit line. When the market tanked, I pulled out $70k and jumped in. That $70k is now $170k, I only paid $3300 in interest in total on the credit line. Looking back, I should have pulled out $100k. Always, always, always run the numbers for yourself. Everyone's situation is different, don't follow rules of thumb. Your calculator doesn't lie. I spent years investing with advisors, what a waste of time. It's not their money, they are lazy and just looking to ride the market. When I went out on my own, I have always beat the market. Best thing is that every bad year we have had was one of my best. In 2008 I made 40% and I didn't really know what I was doing. I just paid attention to the news and they were predicting the crash for over a month before it happened. I literally made more money in the last year than I had invested at the start. Watch the market closely, with the current spend attitude, they will have to print a lot of money. The dollar will fall and so will the market, be ready to get out of dollars. I have found a gold IRA that keeps the gold in the US and only charges $180 for storage. Just my $.02.

1MOSES1 01-25-2021 11:42 PM

Anyone see BB and GMe today!!!! Holy moly!!

:Score-101010:

Wildman_grafix 01-26-2021 06:57 AM


Originally Posted by ThisIsLivin (Post 4774860)
I ran an extensive analysis on whether to do the Roth conversion or not. Our situation is that we make too much to use a Roth or traditional IRA, so we have been maxing out our 401k's. The other benefit is that because it's not taxed now it drops me a full tax bracket so I can afford to max out the 401. In a Roth situation I wouldn't be able to put as much away. I don't intend on realizing as much gross income when I retire so lower tax bracket. I will have zero debt when I retire so I will have a higher net income than I have now so I will live comfortably. After reviewing the state of Social Security, I have adjusted my plans to not consider that potential income source. If we get it great, it will pay the taxes. There is a lot to consider, I spent days running various scenarios on the Fidelity website. I used to think getting to zero debt was most important, it's not. Maximizing savings and returns is. I pay 3.25% on my mortgage and 3% on a home equity credit line. When the market tanked, I pulled out $70k and jumped in. That $70k is now $170k, I only paid $3300 in interest in total on the credit line. Looking back, I should have pulled out $100k. Always, always, always run the numbers for yourself. Everyone's situation is different, don't follow rules of thumb. Your calculator doesn't lie. I spent years investing with advisors, what a waste of time. It's not their money, they are lazy and just looking to ride the market. When I went out on my own, I have always beat the market. Best thing is that every bad year we have had was one of my best. In 2008 I made 40% and I didn't really know what I was doing. I just paid attention to the news and they were predicting the crash for over a month before it happened. I literally made more money in the last year than I had invested at the start. Watch the market closely, with the current spend attitude, they will have to print a lot of money. The dollar will fall and so will the market, be ready to get out of dollars. I have found a gold IRA that keeps the gold in the US and only charges $180 for storage. Just my $.02.

Me and a friend were talking about the house debt, same thing our rates are so low it doesn't make sense to use money and pay it off early.

1MOSES1 01-26-2021 09:19 PM


Originally Posted by 1MOSES1 (Post 4775022)
Anyone see BB and GMe today!!!! Holy moly!!

:Score-101010:

GME 200% today... hahaha


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