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What are people liking to have these days for stocks? Any good ideas for opportunity? Decent speculations?
Sort of related to the topic. My BIL's company just went public yesterday on NASDAQ. Watched the bell ringing live. Was pretty cool to see.
Real estate I can see. Savings accounts when interest rates are this low?Just heard a piece on NPR yesterday where they were discussing investing, and only about 50% of people between 18-30 thought that investing in the market was a good idea. More popular answers? Real estate and savings accounts. Crazy kids.
Just heard a piece on NPR yesterday where they were discussing investing, and only about 50% of people between 18-30 thought that investing in the market was a good idea. More popular answers? Real estate and savings accounts. Crazy kids.
Just heard a piece on NPR yesterday where they were discussing investing, and only about 50% of people between 18-30 thought that investing in the market was a good idea. More popular answers? Real estate and savings accounts. Crazy kids.
I started a thread on this back during the crisis...the topic was a lead balloon.
Anyways, real estate! Buy it, pay cash and make over 10% on your money on a secure asset.
Beyond that, I'm:
Long Amazon - will win American retail...to say nothing of its global opportunity
Long GE - diversification in one stock, good earning today i heard
Short the Euro - hedges both the fact the markets up pretty high and the fact that Europes in trouble
Obviously there are a few of us in the Café that hadn't yet joined the site, not to mentioned discovered each nook and cranny, so that's probably why it tanked. Not to mention, that wasn't the time to invest. I know I didn't start until March 2009.
Seems to me like you may want a little more diversification, grab a few more things. Obviously not TOO much, but 3 stocks (especially shorting a currency, and be careful because there is a commission you'll be charged each month for that short) seems a little meh. This is a good time to get back in oil, as many of the companies are coming off a low; just be careful you don't get one that's too much into natural gas. Although Cramer keeps yelling it like it's a godsend company, SLB was actually the first stock I ever bought.
Health care's also looking good.
I messed a bit with ETF's and found out about commissions early. I have been told that DRR (Euro short) is used for hedging currrencies and doesn't have the commissions burden.
Ultimately, I don't have much in the market these days (most in real estate)...and the Euro short is large part hedge on european property. If I had money, I'd probably look at banks.
Also remember that this is the feel-good 90's kids who were given a "be safe" societal message. My ex-girlfriend didn't want to invest in the stock market, or even a 401k or IRA (and let's just say I received quite a few tongue lashings about it, I'm glad we broke up) because she was taught that it equated to gambling, similar to throwing a couple hundred down on the craps table in the casino. Obviously there's some risk involved, but if you pay attention, and there are a lot more "tells" in this game, you can turn the game in your favor (similar to counting cards at the blackjack table, only the investment boss won't ask you to leave). Throw in what happened in 2008, and you could easily understand why they'd feel they want more liquid capital.
Once again the sandwich heavy portfolio pays off for the hungry investor!
I have to figure someone on this thread is Romney. My guess is its you.
This is a good time to get back in oil, as many of the companies are coming off a low
Once again the sandwich heavy portfolio pays off for the hungry investor!
A year ago they were coming off of a low, now they've risen a bit since then (CVX has done well for me). With the way oil prices have risen a lot recently, plus the fact that supply is actually high for this time of year, a lot of people are wondering if the price may dip a little in the immediate future, which would affect those companies' stock.s
As for me, I'm currently heavily blue-chip: INTC, KFT, PEP, GE, CVX, COP, JNJ, PCG, MSFT, etc. I should definitely move towards more growth stocks, I will admit, but with the way the market has been so risk-on risk-off the past few years you're really playing the market moves as a whole than you are the moves in individual stocks or industries. (Not to say every single stock moves in tandem, but moreso than usual.) Given that, blue chips have less downside when the market as a whole moves. That said, we will get out of that at some point and it would make sense for me to be more growth-oriented when that occurs. Plus, those stocks I mentioned are dividend heavy, and while that makes sense now in an era of little yields on savings or bonds, if dividend taxes go up that could push investors away from them and result in a price hit.
In this case does "Europe" mean the frogs are going to elect a red who will then doom the Euro?More overreacting about Europe!