R
rickman
Guest
On 8/30/2015 12:42 PM, amdx wrote:
I think rule 1 is defeatist. A friend has timed several aspects of the
economy with good results. He got out of stocks in his 401k just before
black Friday because he saw the market was up irrationally. He sold his
home at the top of the housing bubble again because values had gone up
irrationally. He is now retired in his 50's, living in Vietnam like a
relative king.
I personally found a number of investments which I knew would pay off
within 6 months to a year and they did. In stocks, timing is
*everything*.
BTW, philosophies like Dollar Cost Averaging is pure BS only working for
certain conditions in the market and working very poorly for other
conditions. *Understanding* stocks is a much better way to invest
profitably.
--
Rick
On 8/30/2015 10:16 AM, John Larkin wrote:
On Sat, 29 Aug 2015 20:03:43 -0700 (PDT), "dcaster@krl.org"
dcaster@krl.org> wrote:
On Saturday, August 29, 2015 at 8:33:06 PM UTC-4, John Larkin wrote:
The rich don't get rich by being "allowed" to get rich, they formulate
a plan, take the reins, and drive relentlessly toward their goal, a
la: "Damn the torpedos, full speed ahead."
I got rich by buying stocks instead of buying new cars. Some of it
was luck, but mostly just recognizing what companies seemed to have
their act together and buying their stock. I bought Texas
Instruments, John Fluke, IBM, Hexcel, and others. And bought S & P
500 index funds in my 401K . I also bought a little Nucor stock when
it was Nuclear Corp of America. Should have lost my ass on that, but
it turned out okay.
It is really easy to get rich, but you need to start early.
Dan
Except for new issues, the stock market is
mostly a gambling pool.
Sorry John, on this one I need you need to get educated.
In my lifetime (1955) the S&P 500 has went from 50 to 2100.
A 42* multiple, inflation is only a 9 multiple.
Just Dollar Cost Average into a low cost total stock market index, and
hold it until you near retirement, Then you need to back off on the
percentage of stocks**.
Rule #1 You can't time the market.
Rule #2 Don't panic and sell at the bottom of a market correction.
I think rule 1 is defeatist. A friend has timed several aspects of the
economy with good results. He got out of stocks in his 401k just before
black Friday because he saw the market was up irrationally. He sold his
home at the top of the housing bubble again because values had gone up
irrationally. He is now retired in his 50's, living in Vietnam like a
relative king.
I personally found a number of investments which I knew would pay off
within 6 months to a year and they did. In stocks, timing is
*everything*.
BTW, philosophies like Dollar Cost Averaging is pure BS only working for
certain conditions in the market and working very poorly for other
conditions. *Understanding* stocks is a much better way to invest
profitably.
--
Rick