No wonder you're broke. You're drinking the banquet beer!
i would almost bet we go back and touch the Feb/March 2020 pre sell off high. 339.50$30,000 Millionaire said:
I'm going to post more about this tomorrow. I have been thinking about our current predicament and I talked to an older trader I know that's been in the game since the 70s. Our current situation reminds me a lot of 2007/2008 even though the common comparison is 2000/2001.
Think about it:
- easy credit
- not hard to get a job
- any idiot succeeds at investing in anything
- insane asset prices
- $4 gas
- bank stocks at ATH
- high consumption and high consumer confidence
- high government debt burden
There is another very important piece of information to consider when comparing the present to past corrections that I never hear the pundits talk about. The sheer number of people that are in the market has increased exponentially since even the .com bomb.BaylorSpineGuy said:
How long and extended of a correction did he think is coming? The difference between the crises in the early 2000s and now is that our federal debt as percentage of GDP is so much higher now and money printing/govt bailout is not likely gonna be there.
The DJIA looks absolutely horrible right now. It closed literally on the neckline. Failure of a rally now and we could be looking at 20% further correction or possibly more.
I'm looking at DXD and some other inverse dow funds to buy shares and options once the reversal is confirmed.
Ragoo said:i would almost bet we go back and touch the Feb/March 2020 pre sell off high. 339.50$30,000 Millionaire said:
I'm going to post more about this tomorrow. I have been thinking about our current predicament and I talked to an older trader I know that's been in the game since the 70s. Our current situation reminds me a lot of 2007/2008 even though the common comparison is 2000/2001.
Think about it:
- easy credit
- not hard to get a job
- any idiot succeeds at investing in anything
- insane asset prices
- $4 gas
- bank stocks at ATH
- high consumption and high consumer confidence
- high government debt burden
ProgN said:There is another very important piece of information to consider when comparing the present to past corrections that I never hear the pundits talk about. The sheer number of people that are in the market has increased exponentially since even the .com bomb.BaylorSpineGuy said:
How long and extended of a correction did he think is coming? The difference between the crises in the early 2000s and now is that our federal debt as percentage of GDP is so much higher now and money printing/govt bailout is not likely gonna be there.
The DJIA looks absolutely horrible right now. It closed literally on the neckline. Failure of a rally now and we could be looking at 20% further correction or possibly more.
I'm looking at DXD and some other inverse dow funds to buy shares and options once the reversal is confirmed.
My mom and dad bought series EE savings bonds with some of every paycheck because their parents bought war bonds so it's what they knew. When I told my dad I was going to be a broker he called me ****ing idiot because he wasn't familiar with it. He passed away 2 years ago, but the 15 years before that he watched the stock market more than I did. The bar he frequented put CNBC on for him as soon as he walked in. I know, dear diary/cool story bro, but here's the point.
I was raised to buy series EE savings bonds but I chose a different path. The youth today, and young professionals, have been raised in households whose parents are in the market. Hell, you have kids trading on Robinhood in high school now. The pool of individuals that are in the market is massive even compared to the '90s and getting larger everyday. That's why corrections no longer have a timeframe because when sentiment changes FOMO is real and they turn into piranhas.
Sorry for the long post but had a good day and a few beers.
I'm just going to cut them up into pieces that I throw in the truck and dump in my backyard, then I can use my smaller chainsaw to cut them into smaller sizes for the splitter. I needed something that could handle large mature trees quickly.theNetSmith said:
Tho skeptical, I bought a battery powered chainsaw a few months ago and I was very impressed by what it could do. Granted, the chain arm is like 1/3 the length of yours.
I believe it will be the exact opposite. They're young and have tasted success and felt the rush, they'll regroup and get back in.DavysApprentice said:
Great post here!
We really don't know what to expect but I am certain there are high school students buying and selling stocks and crypto on Robinhood. I think the 20-21 market year where you won no matter what drew a lot of people in. Last year with small caps getting crushed probably demoralized a lot of people trying to find the next big thing. If the sell off continues there is no telling how the new investors will respond but it would not be surprising to see them get out of the market if they get burned too bad.
Also, something to think about that isn't discussed much on here ( which makes sense because it's a stock market thread) but there are a ton of young people buying and selling nfts using crypto ( mainly ethereum)
I have talked with former students of mine who are living the NFT life. I still don't get it but it is another place where money is moving
Charismatic Megafauna said:
https://twitter.com/oldarmy1/status/1494356454874226691?cxt=HHwWhoC5yefRgr0pAAAA
Ostk for $35 is sell your kids territory, right?
BaylorSpineGuy said:
I was invited to my neighbor's 50th birthday party tonight. They rented out a local event center and had a casino night. Love me a good crown and sprite (especially when no bourbon is available). Her husband introduced me to one of their good friends, a guy they call "The Money Man". He's the senior guy at one of the local Merrill sites.
I half-jokingly said to him, "are you ready for the excitement on Tuesday?" He looked at me like he had no idea what I was talking about. I then showed him the DJIA chart over the last 6 months. I then said…."does this not look ominous to you? Am I totally wrong?"
His comment was, "we don't really follow the technicals." I said…so you're based on fundamentals, then? He replied, "we are hedged any way, so we're not really that concerned."
Wow. Literally they guy the call "Money Man" hasn't noticed the most bearish pattern seen on the DOW in the last 15 yrs. Hmmmm, ok. Don't they say crashes happen when people least expect it? Count me spooked. The greed-fear index isn't blown out either like it was in September. I'm not going long or short till the market shows its cards, but I'm at least aware of the situation.
Not surprising at all really. I've posted this before but it was way before you joined our club. NO ONE, that follows this thread should rely on someone else for their own financial future because you're intelligent enough to do it yourself. Brokers, money managers, advisors want to out pace the S&P so you won't leave and they make a percentage off your account. That's their main priority. Everyone that religiously opens this thread daily, both active and lurker, can do better because nobody cares about your money more than you. You just have to learn to separate and control your impulses and emotions. Keep retirement account decisions there and risk to your trading account and never mix the two. I may be wrong but I think it was 30K that way outperformed his advisor in his own account over the same period. Apologies if it wasn't 30K but it was someone and I'm not going back to find it. JMO, take it how you will.BaylorSpineGuy said:
I was invited to my neighbor's 50th birthday party tonight. They rented out a local event center and had a casino night. Love me a good crown and sprite (especially when no bourbon is available). Her husband introduced me to one of their good friends, a guy they call "The Money Man". He's the senior guy at one of the local Merrill sites.
I half-jokingly said to him, "are you ready for the excitement on Tuesday?" He looked at me like he had no idea what I was talking about. I then showed him the DJIA chart over the last 6 months. I then said…."does this not look ominous to you? Am I totally wrong?"
His comment was, "we don't really follow the technicals." I said…so you're based on fundamentals, then? He replied, "we are hedged any way, so we're not really that concerned."
Wow. Literally they guy the call "Money Man" hasn't noticed the most bearish pattern seen on the DOW in the last 15 yrs. Hmmmm, ok. Don't they say crashes happen when people least expect it? Count me spooked. The greed-fear index isn't blown out either like it was in September. I'm not going long or short till the market shows its cards, but I'm at least aware of the situation.
that's what she said!theNetSmith said:
Tho skeptical, I bought a battery powered chainsaw a few months ago and I was very impressed by what it could do. Granted, the chain arm is like 1/3 the length of yours.
BaylorSpineGuy said:
Not sure I follow….