Well sadly I'm back. Made it halfway to our destination when the 6 year old went projectile vomit all over herself and the car. So things didn't work out per plan today so we turned around and came home to regroup for a reset. No biggie. Just like a bad trade! Except this required baths and some laundry
Anyways, I do realize I got a little animated and should clarify some things and strategies. Nothing is absolute and bullet proof, and the biggest thing is that everyone is in different situations so we're all doing different things with advice, posts, etc.
So just a PSA, keep that in mind when I and others post. Do not take everything posted as if it is the gospel. None of us are gonna be right all the time. BUT I will say that there are always many right answers. Those answers will never be the same, and they can be vastly different while also all still being 'right'.
For some transparency, I am not a professional at all. Some of you guys are, and that is great. I want to learn from you guys. I do not have an 'algo', and I don't use one single indicator alone like EMAs. I use a few very simple rules and indicators, and if they conflict, I usually don't act on them. But when they all line up such as recently with SQ, ROKU and JD, I confidently use the indicators to make decisions with calculated risk, and I always have an exit plan. I am just a guy that digs this stuff and have found some methods that have paid off tremendously. I assume that most everybody outside of a select few like Daniel and Clay are like me. That is who I am putting stuff out there for. Not professionals managing loads of money or OTHER people's money.
I also agree that in the end and long run fundamentals absolutely matter. When I say I ignore them, I mean I ignore them for day to day, week to week, month to month. When fundamentals line up with technicals, that's when you take more drastic and decisive action. They are not lined up right now obviously. But they can stay misaligned for years and years. And things will change over time. Change a lot... You can miss massive opportunities just stubbornly following one thing. It's all a big puzzle that is ever changing just like Daniel says with the river analogy. I'm pretty sure we all agree, but like texting with your significant other, reading words on a screen leaves things up for biased interpretations.
I am also overall about 20% cash and will probably always be at least 10% because that is responsible investing. I want at least some amount of money sidelined at all times in case of rare opportunities such as what happened in March. I would only ever go 100% cash or 100% in equities in extreme events.
I also have a lot of core funds in S&P index. Flows go in monthly and I don't usually mess with it unless rebalancing for time to time. I am mid career so this is my opportunity to make retirement enjoyable. I started out 15 or so years ago managing a net worth below zero.
I only own 6 individual stocks right now as I've said a few times. I've sold a lot of JD last week over 68. I kept some too that I may sell out of completely if it starts to look bad. ROKU, SQ, NIO and AMZN have all at least doubled in short times so I am patiently watching those (except for AMZN) to execute an exit plan. I am constantly monitoring and changing my plan. I am letting them run right now and not fighting momentum. To me, that is responsible. Only other is AMD and just entered it so watching it closely right now. When I exit those runners, I will leave in cash for the next opportunity.
Hope this clarifies some stuff for you guys!
TLDR; I think we all agree. I'm not a professional. This place is great!