Originally posted by kork13
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How much have you "lost" so far?
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Originally posted by kork13 View PostI still see some significant downside coming.
I'm not currently planning to put any more extra money in though that's subject to change if the right opportunity arises.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Originally posted by Singuy View Post
I pick growth stocks only which all has 0 PE and long term debt. My criteria is competitive advantage, pace of innovation, and path for long term growth. These are all disruptors, companies that are suppose to take old inefficient company's place, or completely create a new way of life. The Total addressable market needs to be huge and these company's current market share needs to be very small. AMD has a 8% market share in servers, 18% marketshare in desktop and 12% in laptops. Tesla has 1% marketshare if they sell half a million cars. So this is what I mean by a path for long term growth.
I do this because I am always trying to find the next amazon or apple. But to find these companies when risks are high but has good long term potential. Apple and Amazons when the stock were cheap were cheap for a reason..meaning they also had lots of debt, looked like they were gonna go bankrupt, and had terrible PEs.
Kill the debt, before it kills you!
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Has anyone noticed that the S&P500 is nearly back to the level of Oct'19? Much less, up 2.5% on the day that announced 4.8% contraction in the US GDP! But honestly, that kinda makes sense... Doomsday folks were saying -10% or worse. Even as bad as it is, clarity brings confidence when it comes to the markets. And some started are trying to start reopening. I was updating my accounts yesterday, and realized that they're looking much more "normal" again. Still off about 6-7% from the high, but that's almost small beans.
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Originally posted by kork13 View PostHas anyone noticed that the S&P500 is nearly back to the level of Oct'19? Much less, up 2.5% on the day that announced 4.8% contraction in the US GDP! But honestly, that kinda makes sense... Doomsday folks were saying -10% or worse. Even as bad as it is, clarity brings confidence when it comes to the markets. And some started are trying to start reopening. I was updating my accounts yesterday, and realized that they're looking much more "normal" again. Still off about 6-7% from the high, but that's almost small beans.
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Originally posted by kork13 View PostHas anyone noticed that the S&P500 is nearly back to the level of Oct'19?
I just checked based on your question. This isn't a 100% accurate number but it's very close (and it's based on the midday numbers right now) but at the moment, we are now down $37,000 YTD. So yes, a pretty nice recovery. Of course, that also includes some new contributions since the last update but that's just a couple thousand, not $135,000.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Our retirement is down $100k still and we've been contributing about $4k/month still. Our portfolio considering what we are saving is probably still down about $100k. And I've moved a lot into our investment portfolio.
I am very hesitant to buy more stocks and I'm still holding substantial amounts of cash in our EF and our investment portfolio. I've got $100k in taxable waiting and more than that in cash for us to ride out stuff. I worry about jobs. I also would like to buy an investment property but I think it'll get hit next year.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View PostOur retirement is down $100k still and we've been contributing about $4k/month still. Our portfolio considering what we are saving is probably still down about $100k. And I've moved a lot into our investment portfolio.
I am very hesitant to buy more stocks and I'm still holding substantial amounts of cash in our EF and our investment portfolio. I've got $100k in taxable waiting and more than that in cash for us to ride out stuff. I worry about jobs. I also would like to buy an investment property but I think it'll get hit next year.
I have an old 301K that I have been cautiously buying stocks back again. The rest is all cash. Today's rise seems to be a combination of FOMO + Vaccine hope.
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Originally posted by Scallywag View Post
4k/month? Is this a 401K?Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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Isn't there a limit to how mich you can contribute to a 401K? We only contribute enough to get the match and then put the rest into maxing out our ROTH IRAS. So not familiar with 401K rules but wow! Good for you & Living Almost Large!
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Originally posted by Scallywag View PostIsn't there a limit to how mich you can contribute to a 401K?
$26,000/year if you are 50 and above.
I'll max out sometime in the fall.
After that, I continue to put away the same amount but I do it into our taxable account. We're not eligible for Roths.Steve
* Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular.
* Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything?
* There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going.
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We do the max 401k and then after tax contributions to $57k so I think it's like $900 a pay period every two weeks for 401k and then after tax. We have contributed I think $27k this year already and will add till the max. Roth, 529, ESA go in January usually lump sum. Hence why I ended up screwing myself when I invested about $100k in jan/feb. Sigh. Anyway it doesn't matter. And typically more into a taxable account. I guess DH has a match I don't recall it's like 3%.Last edited by LivingAlmostLarge; 04-29-2020, 03:22 PM.
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