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I stuck my head in the sand June 19th and just pulled it out today. Did something happen?
If I was in a good cash position to make some buys.....Monday had potential. :secret: |
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No that's not what I was trying to say. What I was saying is that the RETAIL investor -- mom and pop folks -- that contribute to 401K's etc -- tend to (as a group) stop investing or contributions or cut back on their contributions... in down markets. Doing exactly the opposite of what they should do. The individual investor/trader (they're all the same - except for the holding period)... does the same. They buy on up days and sell on down days. The opposite of what they should do. |
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Yes you missed it -- WE all made a million bucks during that time frame. |
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Sometimes a guy just manages to get it right...... That post was dated JUNE 5th.... http://www.usatoday.com/story/money/...funds/2460831/ |
Does anyone have any wisdom on the Sprint merger?
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:headscratch: The company I work for just went public today and had the big IPO day at NASDAQ. Hopefully, there will be stock options for employees next year. :popcorn2: Randy |
Randy --- Your decision is simple....
Do you think SPRINT is a viable cellular provider going forward. Or not. If not -- then cash out and use the money to invest in something you think has more potential going forward. If yes -- then let them exchange the shares for the new ones... Here's my personal view.... or how you might find an answer. Go around to every friend you have and ask them who their cellular provider is... |
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I woke up this morning thinking about what "investing" really is...
To most it's trying to game the system. Trying to buy "stocks" etc at one price and hope that when they want to sell - they're higher. Here's what an INVESTOR should be focused on. When you buy shares of a company - you are now a PARTNER in that company. Many of you own and operate your own small companies. You've not only invested your money - but you've also invested a great deal of your TIME. Maybe 15 or 20 years... You've been thru good times and bad and managed to survive and even prosper. STOCK investing is the same. Before you buy - ask yourself if you'd like to be a part owner (which is what you're going to be!) in this company. Do you like the products etc. Before you'd become a partner in a business - you'd hopefully understand what they do as well.... You'd never just blindly give someone your money because they asked you to "invest" --- hell no! You'd pester them with all kinds of questions. Cramer calls this "doing your work". When you do a modest amount of "work" beforehand - you'll feel better about your investments. But here's the important part. When you think of yourself as a PART OWNER rather than "I'll buy some stocks"... you'll become a far better investor, and you'll be more likely to really enjoy the process thru the good and the bad. You wouldn't put your money in your own company and then have a bad week or a bad month - and then just decide "I'm outta here" would ya? You'd only do that if you didn't really believe in the value of the company to begin with.... So don't become a partner in something you don't believe in to start with! This reminds me of a friend in Seattle. We're both "boaters" and belong to the same club etc. We'd occasionally hook up on the water -- and the kids were the same ages etc. Eventually talk would turn to business and eventually that turned into a possible business deal. We were going to buy a city block - tear down the 1 story buildings - and put up a 4 story "mixed use" building - retail on the street level and apartments above. One day at lunch as we're getting into the "partnership" details (I was the bank - 51% - he was the managing partner - 49%) - he asked me. "Do you like pride of ownership or the depreciation and tax advantages of a building"? I said --- Pride of ownership. He said -- then our partnership wouldn't work out very well because I just want to cash flow buildings and then dump them within 10 years. He was right on! We wouldn't have made good partners at all! We had a nice lunch and that was that. Had we done the deal - I would have driven by and thought the building needed to be painted.... he would have let the paint peel off as long as we had full occupancy. I'd have gone crazy... I want to drive by and point the building out and say "I own that bad boy" and be proud of it (and make some money off it). We were polar opposites. We're still friends. I understand the way he wants to do business and he's quite well off... his method works for HIM. My guts would have been churning daily had we done the deal and I'd have been looking for a buyer for my "investment" and probably taken a loss. Does that make sense to you guys. |
That right there is true maturity not drivin by greed but savoy business practice. Most people in that arena would of tried to "work something out", when in fact, IT DOESN"T WORK!!.
Ya wouldn't of still been friends 5 to 10 years later, i've been told this many times in business "its just business", when i'm thinking, "ah, no, its just your greedy mismanaged bullsh!#". Hard work continues to teach us lessons, I tell my employees when they "fail", ya didn't fail, you worked hard at something and the results were'nt what we wanted, but you learned from it, and education isn't free.... Hard work always produces results, just sometimes not what we expected. Kinda off topic here, but i tell my clients and coworkers, "you don't go into Walmart and buy a reputation, you earn one, bad or good, they both come earned" |
This morning I'm (as usual) watching the talking heads on CNBC... and again they're always blabbering about the same stocks... BLACKBERRY (BBRY) is one they just can't seem to forget... So as usual -- I decide to pull up the stock on Google Finance website just so I can "confirm" why I wouldn't be interested in listening to whatever they're talking about.
5 plus years ago all of my working professional friends had Blackberry phones - in fact - we jokingly called them Crackberries. If you were a lawyer etc -- you had one. But I noticed -- because that's the way my brain is wired (to pay attention to small details) that one by one - these folks were switching and their new phones were mostly iPhone - but the point is - they were buying anything but another Blackberry. The chart is just awful --- regardless of what period you stretch it out to... so unless you bought it at it's IPO -- you're underwater in a major way. Year to date you'd be DOWN 13% in a market that's UP 13% --- so your "loss" is even more dramatic - because while owning a loser you've also missed a gain in some other name. I'm posting this -- not because it's so informational -- but to once again ask that as "investors" -- to pay attention to what you see and or feel about some business - or product - regardless of what it is. If you're a carpenter and notice that everyone used to use Makita -- and now all the saws and tools are Black and Decker... or vice versa -- those things (trends) can make you -- or loose you (if you're invested in the WRONG one!) money. Let's say you own Home Depot or Costco or Wal Mart or Nordstrom or (pick a name/brand/product).... and you find yourself not going there anymore... Then you need to check your ownership - because you just might be part of a trend that you need to pay attention to. Let's just pick on Apple because it's so obvious that there has been a major trend towards their products... if you looked around this Christmas and nobody got a new "iWhatever"... that would raise the hair on the back of my neck if I owned the shares. Or if you owned Faceybook -- and you notice there are fewer of your buddies posting and they've switched to using Instagram (I'm pulling these out of my you know what because I use neither). Just saying -- use your own "sense" for what's going on. |
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