His twitter is covered with replies that are scam accounts with his same profile pic and a foreign letter or wingding or whatever thrown in, they are not him
NRD09 said:
His twitter is covered with replies that are scam accounts with his same profile pic and a foreign letter or wingding or whatever thrown in, they are not him
FJ43 said:
Howdy gents. Great weekend with family and a wonderful wedding for our youngest son. Many thanks for all the kind words and wishes.
I'll be back in the saddle early AM on finding setups and trading plan for the week. So many posts since Friday morning on the forum I'll never catch up so don't think I'll even try. If I missed something I can't afford to miss or a question from someone please let me know.
Hope y'all kept the markets open and moving green.
Glad it went well! Remember the feeling when my daughter married 4 years ago. Welcome back!FJ43 said:
Howdy gents. Great weekend with family and a wonderful wedding for our youngest son. Many thanks for all the kind words and wishes.
I'll be back in the saddle early AM on finding setups and trading plan for the week. So many posts since Friday morning on the forum I'll never catch up so don't think I'll even try. If I missed something I can't afford to miss or a question from someone please let me know.
Hope y'all kept the markets open and moving green.
I'm not in CLOV yet but I think it tests $10, which is strong support. When/if it does, I'll be taking a sizeable postion, FWIW.Bob Knights Liver said:
One comment on $CLOV and a general comment - don't be afraid to take a loss if the pattern doesn't hold or if you no longer think the trade is successful. Knowing when to walk away from a loser is probably the hardest thing for me, but it's important to preserve capital. If you are honest with yourself and you wouldn't get in the trade today at the current price then you probably should change strategies or get out completely.
Killin Me Smalls said:
Can someone remind me what Burry is shorting this time?
Congrats!!FJ43 said:
Howdy gents. Great weekend with family and a wonderful wedding for our youngest son. Many thanks for all the kind words and wishes.
I'll be back in the saddle early AM on finding setups and trading plan for the week. So many posts since Friday morning on the forum I'll never catch up so don't think I'll even try. If I missed something I can't afford to miss or a question from someone please let me know.
Hope y'all kept the markets open and moving green.
FJ43 said:
Howdy gents. Great weekend with family and a wonderful wedding for our youngest son. Many thanks for all the kind words and wishes.
I'll be back in the saddle early AM on finding setups and trading plan for the week. So many posts since Friday morning on the forum I'll never catch up so don't think I'll even try. If I missed something I can't afford to miss or a question from someone please let me know.
Hope y'all kept the markets open and moving green.
Congrats Sir! We will see on the field of battle tomorrow.FJ43 said:
Howdy gents. Great weekend with family and a wonderful wedding for our youngest son. Many thanks for all the kind words and wishes.
I'll be back in the saddle early AM on finding setups and trading plan for the week. So many posts since Friday morning on the forum I'll never catch up so don't think I'll even try. If I missed something I can't afford to miss or a question from someone please let me know.
Hope y'all kept the markets open and moving green.
My best advice for this is to be able to be mobile with the vast majority of your wealth, able to shift on a dime from paper assets to physical assets, like gold, silver, etc. Both parties have put our asses in the target to **** us raw. The best thing you can do is stay attentive and choose your plays accordingly. With our debt load that continues to grow, both parties suck on this, it is the Achille's heal of your long term goals. The more everyone learns the market and be able to make their own financial decisions they will be ready, instead of a broker or FA calling them 4 weeks too late. JMO, but I'm impressed by the amount of market knowledge that everyone on this board gains everyday and that applies to everyone new or been here for years.Mostly Foggy Recollection said:
Anyone with half a brain can see the fiscal cliff on the horizon.... The '20s were never going to be a great decade for Americans due to the last 20 years. It lasted this long because our Central Bank wasn't as ****ty as other CBs. I posted this on another thread on Hop's board, but D.C. and our politicians are like a Doctor, a real ****ty one, but I digress....
The Country is the patient. Country comes in and has blood work and scans done. It comes back as cancer. Doctor asks if there are any symptoms. Country says, "yeah, nausea". So, instead of sending the Country to an oncologist, the doctor (D.C.) prescribes phenergan and sends the country on it's way to die. And there is D.C. in a nutshell. Treat the symptom, not the root cause, for short-term happiness (and votes) while the cancer spreads and grows and the core health of the country circles the drain. Both sides of the political spectrum are guilty of it, albeit one a lot more than the other, but they are both guilty.
The only question now is does the reset this decade happen sooner rather than later?
I'm very thankful I don't live in a city and have land.
A tragic story. OA tweeted about it earlier and I donated then. Hopefully others saw as well.ClutchCityAg said:
Have a favor to ask Ags... one of my coworkers works for Rice MBA program and forwarded this asking for any donations to help. Absolutely tragic story, local family here in Sugar Land that lost power during the freeze and were using their fireplace to keep warm and their house caught fire.
"On February 17th, a house fire in Sugar Land, Texas ended with the tragic loss of three beautiful children and their grandmother. Colette (5), Edison (8), and Olivia (11) will forever be remembered by their parents Jackie and Nathan, families, and friends as joyful, eternal sources of light and wonder."
https://gofund.me/3dfbb1fe
I cannot fathom...ClutchCityAg said:
Have a favor to ask Ags... one of my coworkers works for Rice MBA program and forwarded this asking for any donations to help. Absolutely tragic story, local family here in Sugar Land that lost power during the freeze and were using their fireplace to keep warm and their house caught fire.
"On February 17th, a house fire in Sugar Land, Texas ended with the tragic loss of three beautiful children and their grandmother. Colette (5), Edison (8), and Olivia (11) will forever be remembered by their parents Jackie and Nathan, families, and friends as joyful, eternal sources of light and wonder."
https://gofund.me/3dfbb1fe
The 20's are going to volatile but less so for the US than the rest of the world. The push towards globalization over the past 50 years has positioned us to export inflation vis a vis currency destruction. In a vacuum the gig would be up already but as long as we're the reserve currency we're going to have some stability compared to the rest of the world that absolutely must conduct business in dollars. No other currency is capable of dethroning the dollar so sadly enough we're it for at least the next 20 years. Doesn't mean we won't see asset inflation as we print more and more and more fiat currency to prop up the economy and most of that currency will flow to the one asset class still capable of growth which is the US stock market.Mostly Foggy Recollection said:
Anyone with half a brain can see the fiscal cliff on the horizon.... The '20s were never going to be a great decade for Americans due to the last 20 years. It lasted this long because our Central Bank wasn't as ****ty as other CBs. I posted this on another thread on Hop's board, but D.C. and our politicians are like a Doctor, a real ****ty one, but I digress....
The Country is the patient. Country comes in and has blood work and scans done. It comes back as cancer. Doctor asks if there are any symptoms. Country says, "yeah, nausea". So, instead of sending the Country to an oncologist, the doctor (D.C.) prescribes phenergan and sends the country on it's way to die. And there is D.C. in a nutshell. Treat the symptom, not the root cause, for short-term happiness (and votes) while the cancer spreads and grows and the core health of the country circles the drain. Both sides of the political spectrum are guilty of it, albeit one a lot more than the other, but they are both guilty.
The only question now is does the reset this decade happen sooner rather than later?
I'm very thankful I don't live in a city and have land.