theo wrote:It sounds like your ability to play the options is helpful. I wish I knew how to do that.
Now I agree that panic selling not going to make you rich. Nobody is advocating that. However, buy and hold is just as dangerous. Investors who did that in 08 rode the market down to 6600; most haven't recovered and probably never will. IMHO U.S. economy is significantly over-valued along with most American companies. I'm all for having a strategy and sticking to it, but you have to make adjustments as new information comes in.
theo wrote:LOL You sound like an advertisement for Fidelity. But seriously if you can pick these exemplary companies then you possess a skill that eludes just about all of main street and most of Wall Street. Also, even very well-run companies can be overwhelmed by high taxes, crushing regulation and unstable commodity prices.
theo wrote:LOL You sound like an advertisement for Fidelity. But seriously if you can pick these exemplary companies then you possess a skill that eludes just about all of main street and most of Wall Street. Also, even very well-run companies can be overwhelmed by high taxes, crushing regulation and unstable commodity prices.
neilgin1 wrote:let me tell you all something, TRUST is a very perishable commodity. Its true, whether it's trust in a person, an institution, whether it be a corporate entity, or a government.
Once that trust is broken,thats it, its broken. Say a spouse is adulterous, you may forgive them, if they ask forgiveness, but the thread of trust is snapped, and trust in the institutions is even more fragile. The way i feel, what i've seen, experienced, my trust in ANY institution is broken, i dont trust stock issuing corporations, i don''t trust govermental institutions, none of them.
i hear ya, about the old buy and hold quality common stock, but i dont TRUST them. You might say, "you're leaving money on the table"...or "you're neglecting opportunity"...so be it, but to me, its just all paper and empty promises made by a bunch of folks who's thing is to lie reflexively...they cant do anything but lie. Now, if you wanna cop and lock on equities, brother i say, may you proper, i mean that from the heart, but for me, when i look at any American Silver coin, whether it be 90's, 40's or .999's, i see the words "In God We Trust".
now silver just IS, its not something you "trust in", silver IS, and it has intrinsic value, but God? He's who i trust.
barrytrot wrote:
Steps:
1. Make sure the company is profitable
2. Make sure the company has either no debt (preferred) or less than 25% debt to cash ratio. I.e. $4 in cash for every $1 in debt.
3. Make sure that the company is in a business that will last at least 2 years.
4. Buy companies with P/E ratio that is favorable when compared to other companies in that sector.
5. Never buy a P/E ratio over 30. NOTE: I know the most explosive companies are well above 30, but that's playing with knives since eventually the P/E will come back down to earth.
6. Buy companies large enough to have a liquid market and liquid options.
Every person on this board could do those 6 things and beat the market every time. Every time.
In fact, if all you did was bought the average but threw out the companies losing money (banks lately) you would beat the market.
neilgin1 wrote:
Go long wood, water and protein...might sound cryptic, but Ted Turner, i believe is the largest landholder in Montana, and outside of marrying jane Fonda, he's no dummy.
neilgin1 wrote:Unless someone knows of a better investment. I'm open to suggestion!
Go long wood, water and protein...might sound cryptic, but Ted Turner, i believe is the largest landholder in Montana, and outside of marrying jane Fonda, he's no dummy.
Treetop wrote:barry, there will likely be very wealthy people created if society ever does face any falls or major stumblings as well.... which I do thinks possible, but for my part i think such things are wise anyway....
barrytrot wrote:
Anyway: You predicted "peak oil" in 1997, it is now 14 years later, so we'll assume your timing isn't perfect.
Since your timing isn't perfect then I'll say the optimal strategy is to start moving some capital into "wood/water/protein". Which is probably a good idea. But putting 100% into that? We don't have any idea if it is time yet. Had we listened to you, we would have done that 14 years ago. Meanwhile people have become millionaires and billionaires investing in the future instead of assuming destruction.
argent_pur wrote:Physical gold and silver are wonderful for protecting what wealth one has saved up, but investing in companies that make things that people want to buy is a time-tested way of increasing wealth. Stock trading has existed for centuries...think about what they (stocks) have seen in that time...famines, earthquakes, disease, world wars, scandals, hurricanes, etc... and yet stocks are still here, companies still producing, people still buying, commerce still goin' on. Even if the dollar crashes and burns in a hellstorm of fire and brimstone---the sun will still rise, people will die and be born, and money will still be spent on stuff made by other people.
It seems that Barry is taking a very level-headed approach here. Many great empires have come and gone, and I'm sure that, at the time, it seemed like the end of the world. PM's are not the end-all/be-all of human existence, but rather a part of it. So, "divide your portion, for you do not know what may happen upon the earth".
Thanks Solomon
NHsorter wrote:sorry to go off topic a little here guys, but I was curious if you could give me a little insight into the reason that you think a "killing winter" is an important factor in your choice of location?
Oakair wrote:A killing winter is a killer winter (for skiers )
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