Soldato
		
			
		
		- Joined
- 14 Jun 2004
- Posts
- 7,572
Bit of a shame we cant update post 1 mcast123 has been seen for a long while so the usefull info is one location
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			for the new invester what are the suggestions for doing things that dont loos money? they wont know what those things are
Yeah he does that a lot… you get used to it…
“I’m not buying individual company’s shares….”
“It’s going to pop soon….” Lol
But to be fair, it sounds like he’s doing well.. the cautious one… lol
Personally I rather have a portfolio that I don’t have to worry about, time in the market beats timing the market et al.
for the new invester what are the suggestions for doing things that dont loos money? they wont know what those things are
more easier to manage losee and gains will likely use this instead of single stock in future. didny see it before Ta
I finally convinced my wife to check in to her US pension and updater our finance spreadsheet.Ha yes there is a lot to be said about just not having to think about it.
In the good times it's great. But falls can be so quick. Its easy to lose if you aren't on top of stop losses.
ThisOr just forget about it and make regular buys.
Yeah that makes sense, but there’s way more money chasing the same limited pool of big-name stocks now. With zero-fee trading and everyone able to invest a tenner, higher P/Es are inevitable — the market’s just not comparable to 5 or 10 years ago.Might not have remembered this right, but listening to Motley Fool podcast and they said S&P currently trading at a P/E of 25. Traditionally a P/E of 20 is high, and meant market likely to have a 20% correction.
 
					
				 uk.finance.yahoo.com
						
					
					uk.finance.yahoo.com
				U.S. households are expected to remain major buyers of equities in 2025, according to a note from Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS), which estimates they will purchase $425 billion in stocks this year, second only to corporates at $675 billion.
You've made the fatal failure of using logic to assess markets which inherently defy logic. It's normally the retail investor who ends up "bag holding" after buying at the top of the market (FOMO effect) and then panic and sell at the bottom. All stocks are bad, just some are sometimes less bad. That said, My cautiously positioned portfolio is up 12% this year which I 'm very pleased about as someone who is recently retired.I could be wrong don’t invest more than you can afford to lose, and definitely don’t borrow money for this..
but logically I don't think there's really any flaw to this view point.

I don’t have the balls to fully go big on one stock. In fact I’m trying opposite just pulling out small amounts daily profit on lots and lots of small positions. Always be selling something.Things still going well , i see numbers now nut real money , my plan is go big or go home ,you see i am getting on a bit but i still have a pulse. potential isa limits are a concern though and if it goes wrong this so called government love giving out benefits
Things still going well , i see numbers now nut real money , my plan is go big or go home ,you see i am getting on a bit but i still have a pulse. potential isa limits are a concern though and if it goes wrong this so called government love giving out benefits
In general, let the winners run where you feel prospects are good, and cut the losers.I’m long term holding 8 stocks for half portfolio value and other half have around 130 stocks ranging from £100 to £600 invested (DCA started with £100 start buy at least). These are my “farming stocks” and will take minimum 10% profit to try to hit my daily profit needed. Then I will try to frequently sell/buy on any large moves either way. £600 max cash invested for any of my “farmer” stocks.
My worst position last year was minus 8.6 k , I have a few more stocks than my favourite one , just bought some beyond again this morning, not emotional about this one and have a small buffer already, seems some support around 2 dollars?My take:
People that go big tend to have to go home. If you are taking too much risk, sooner or later it will turn against you, no-one is immune.
If you have made some decent money it is a bit silly not to put some risk management in place, such as taking a large % of profits and putting them in to lower risk stocks that pay a good dividend, or taking out some cash and waiting for a stock market downturn.
It's great that you've done well, but in my view stockmarket performance has been fuelled by lax Fed monetary policy, and this is not that far away from having a major hiccough, which will then have a big impact on the stockmarket.
 
	