At which point you also realize who has the longest dong.He stole that from Warren Buffet.
Another Buffet quote appropriate for this market: "when the tide comes in, you realize who's not wearing their bathing suit".
At which point you also realize who has the longest dong.He stole that from Warren Buffet.
Another Buffet quote appropriate for this market: "when the tide comes in, you realize who's not wearing their bathing suit".
AVGO is a more sustainable value play than either of them.
Apple & 5G exposure at a reasonable priceA little insight into your reasoning?
He stole that from Warren Buffet.
Another Buffet quote appropriate for this market: "when the tide comes in, you realize who's not wearing their bathing suit".
Don't see the point of Bitcoin or the end game. Normal currencies are easily digitized. Seems like a fad that will be completely gone in 5-10 years.![]()
Tesla: Soaring share price creates army of 'Teslanaires'
Many people have become millionaires from Tesla's share price rocketing more than 700% this year.www.bbc.com
My nephew invested in November last year made him one. I want to tell him to sell some but I don’t feel I have the right. He also invest in Bitcoin. These are not what I would invest in.
Seems too many companies and big time investors are giving it credence to be just a fad.Don't see the point of Bitcoin or the end game. Normal currencies are easily digitized. Seems like a fad that will be completely gone in 5-10 years.
Does Berkshire Hathaway have any Bitcoin?Seems too many companies and big time investors are giving it credence to be just a fad.
CNBC guys were comparing it to TSLA, in that those that believe in it, take it almost to a religious level. Now maybe that gives it stability, or maybe they end up like Waco. But I am certainly willing to ride it for now.
Tom Lee said it will do better in 2021 then it has in 2020. Estimated 300% jump.
Not yet, but after years of denouncing gold as an investment they did go heavy on Barrick in the fall. Seems they may have chosen the wrong inflationary hedge.Does Berkshire Hathaway have any Bitcoin?
Or maybe the right one. We shall see. Crytos make no business sense. Big day tomorrow, time to start calculating my final 2020 return #. Yeah!Not yet, but after years of denouncing gold as an investment they did go heavy on Barrick in the fall. Seems they may have chosen the wrong inflationary hedge.
True maybe not. I've pivoted to gold as well, but I still hold some crypto.Or maybe the right one. We shall see. Crytos make no business sense. Big day tomorrow, time to start calculating my final 2020 return #. Yeah!
Not yet, but after years of denouncing gold as an investment they did go heavy on Barrick in the fall. Seems they may have chosen the wrong inflationary hedge.
Or maybe the right one. We shall see. Crytos make no business sense. Big day tomorrow, time to start calculating my final 2020 return #. Yeah!
I always ask Bitcoin enthusiasts what it’s worth and how they arrive at their value. To date, I’ve yet to hear a coherent response.
what’s the true value of TSLA right now?
Early close at 1pm.True maybe not. I've pivoted to gold as well, but I still hold some crypto.
As per tomorrow, full day of trading?
Well he asked about Berkshire, not Buffett.It‘s highly unlikely Buffett purchased Barrick. “They” was most likely either Combs or Wechsler, who operate independently of WEB. I’d also note purchasing shares of a miner isn’t the same as purchasing gold.
No different then gold, and that's been a thing for awhiles.I always ask Bitcoin enthusiasts what it’s worth and how they arrive at their value. To date, I’ve yet to hear a coherent response.
Well he asked about Berkshire, not Buffett.
No different then gold, and that's been a thing for awhiles.
It's worth what the market says it's worth.
Very true. I have read a lot about Bitcoin/cryos and still don't understand the value or business point of them. Bitcoin breaks a lot of basic rules of investing and seems more like gambling. What is the intrinstic value of Bitcoin? No freaking clue.I always ask Bitcoin enthusiasts what it’s worth and how they arrive at their value. To date, I’ve yet to hear a coherent response.
Very true. I have read a lot about Bitcoin/cryos and still don't understand the value or business point of them. Bitcoin breaks a lot of basic rules of investing and seems more like gambling. What is the intrinstic value of Bitcoin? No freaking clue.
Can't imagine this book will have a happy ending! 😂
Just set my allocations for 2021 (at least the start of the year):
Large US index - 30% (mostly S&P, but some Russell 1000 indexes)
Large US growth - 30% (index and managed funds)
Mid/small cap indexes - 10% (getting back into this more over the past few months, mostly indexes)
Mid cap growth - 5%
International - 5% (greatly reduced this over the past 3-4 years, started getting back into VWIGX and emerging market indexes)
Bond/Income funds - 15% (mostly BIV or DODIX)
MISC (REITs, Hedges, Alternatives) - 5% (mostly part of our backdoor Roth IRAs)
No individual stocks
No value indexes yet. Still tracking, but they continue to lag.
I'm no Crypto enthusiast, I'm just taking up the argument, but Bitcoin is supposed to be finite. Now there are other crypto's but Bitcoin, as I understand it, is finite.Id agree there is no objective way to value gold, but I would not say gold and cryptocurrency are the same. One has been money for millennium and has a finite amount on Earth while the other is new and really has no cap on its supply.
I'm no Crypto enthusiast, I'm just taking up the argument, but Bitcoin is supposed to be finite. Now there are other crypto's but Bitcoin, as I understand it, is finite.
As per gold, despite being finite in terms of what is on and in the earth, they have continuously added more to what is actually available.
There are certainly other crypto's out there, but bitcoin has the name recognition, it is the gold of the crypto's, the others will have to settle for the bronze.Perhaps bitcoin is finite, but since it was created digitally I have my doubts. There’s also no reason a rival crypto couldn’t become preferred at some point in time. Having multiple forms of exchange at one time isn’t unprecedented, but those ”bank note” eras typically don’t end very well. Of course, you could also argue that the dollar is theoretically infinite, though it is the Global reserve currency of choice. Let’s hope it remains such.
There are certainly other crypto's out there, but bitcoin has the name recognition, it is the gold of the crypto's, the others will have to settle for the bronze.
Somewhat related, something interesting I heard today is that countries around the world were not liking how strong their currencies were becoming relative to the dollar, and if that continued they would take measures, which I assumed meant print more money themselves.
I also figure that is a good thing for precious metals and cryptos.
Early close at 1pm.
Got it, guess I read that wrong:Stocks are open for the full trading day on New Year's Eve.
There are certainly other crypto's out there, but bitcoin has the name recognition, it is the gold of the crypto's, the others will have to settle for the bronze.
Somewhat related, something interesting I heard today is that countries around the world were not liking how strong their currencies were becoming relative to the dollar, and if that continued they would take measures, which I assumed meant print more money themselves.
I also figure that is a good thing for precious metals and cryptos.
I will reiterate that be very careful what you hear on TV especially guests on CNBC. I was off this week and decided to watch fast money. They had this guy on, James McDonald of some small investment company. He was pushing this very risky trading vehicle UVXY which is insane that it is even being mentioned on a show for general investors. He then was pushing Cheesecake factory (CAKE) as an awesome restaurant. Anyone who has eaten at Cheesecake factory knows that they are just asking for an heart attack. But the incredible part was then this shmuck calls bitcoin a dangerous investment. What a clown. Really, pushing UVXY, but bitcoin is dangerous???
+1The ones to listen to on CNBC are the ones who have no product to push. Daniel Yergin being the first to come to mind. And BTW, the history of bitcoin show it's indeed a dangerous investment.
It only has value if 1.) a critical mass of people adopt it as currency and 2.) it is more appealing compared to other stores of value.Crypto may end up being revolutionary, but I don’t understand how it will displace established mediums of exchange or stores of value. I think you’re spot on in classifying it as a speculation.
Gold isn’t something you can objectively value, since it will never throw off a a stream of cash. It does have the benefit of being money for most of civilized human history and has served as a store of value.
Hits the nail on the head. Good post.It only has value if 1.) a critical mass of people adopt it as currency and 2.) it is more appealing compared to other stores of value.
I don't see either of those happening unless there's anarchy-style revolution here in the US, but if that's the case we'd all have far bigger concerns than the composition of our investment portfolios.
The ones to listen to on CNBC are the ones who have no product to push. Daniel Yergin being the first to come to mind. And BTW, the history of bitcoin show it's indeed a dangerous investment.
Bitcoin may be difficult for people to invest. It makes little sense to most people since it does not create anything of true value. It is like gold, silver in that sense. It isn’t dangerous at this point, but highly volatile which makes it’s worth even more difficult to understand. If the dollar was that volatile then we would not use it as a form of currency. But that is a different conversation (ie dollar vs Bitcoin). It is not however a dangerous investment at this point. If you invested in Bitcoin 5 years ago and ignored the volatility then you would have been handsomely rewarded. UVXY is truly dangerous.
Recipe for success ^^^^^I like the philosophy of investing in what you understand, spreading your risk and making slow and steady consistent investments.
Add in keeping debt manageable to nonexistent when possible