I’m a vanguard fan boy and I put all those tickers on my phone, now I know what I’m looking at and what is expensive and what is not from those ETFs. Thank you good stuff love it
I worked on learning java code. This is understandable. Now I’m using pluto trading as it is much more easier to understand and faster to try different automations without spending a ton of hours. I also used meta, etc. with so so results.
Good to remind people of this right now; you buy on fear and sell on greed or just hold through it all for the long term. It’s easy but lots of people forget.
This could be easy if you are unemotional towards the market, I always want to be trading something at my early stages of coming into the market which made me FOMO resulting to me loosing a lot of money.
@@franceslynn3257 Investing with an expert is a very good plan for a structured investment portfolio. That's why i have been conducting my trades with *Jessica Meador Jones* I've learnt to be patient with stocks since most traders tend to get into a stock and get out at a quick 10%, 20% profit. But they miss out the big gains because it trades at a P/E ratio of 40-50.
@@brunohart9744 This is great. Good for you. I have been holding back on investing in the stock market because I have little background knowledge and I don't know any credible brokers either. Do you have any ideas that could help?
@@militaryunit4145 I found out about her through a comment section on RU-vid and decided to do some digging on *Jessica Meador Jones* The information I found showed that she is a renowned broker with eons old experience. I didn't need much convincing to enroll with her afterwards and I have been benefiting ever since.
This is older so maybe youve formed an opinion on this matter but the best thing to do in this case is look at analyst estimates. If a company is 20x ltm sales but 15x forward earnings that company is still in the GARP stock range. Likewise, a company that is 15 p/e but has a 2 year forward earnings multiple of 25 is not a GARP stock because it's expected bottom line growth is not only non existent, it's in the negative territory.
What are your thoughts on changing investment strategy based on market conditions? For example, do you think it is better to pursue GARP stocks when the market is low (like March 2020), and then switch to a value investing strategy focused on defensive assets when the market is high (like now).
Hey that's a good question. I've noticed that there are different types of investors. Especially in the US that the tax on capital gains is high, investors tend to buy (low) and hold stocks for many years even if the market conditions change. And they do that by doing some dcf calcs and try to project revenues in 10,years horizon. From the other hand, if you don't pay that much of a capital gain tax, it'd be reasonable to try to follow the macroeconomic environment and adjust your strategy accordingly. So to answer your question, go check out the popular investor youtube channel. He follows that strategy. He recently made a video about his investment strategy so i suggest you check ot out
I'll second George that robert’s investing style aligns with yours. The popular investor is a scrappy investor and extremely knowledgeable. It would be great to hear both Jimmy and him
I don't see the value of using analysts predictions like this. Analysts average prediction is what is priced in to the stocks today. They work for large firms doing most of the buying and selling, so they set the price, so how could you hope to do better then the index by using the analysts own numbers and putting them into a over simplified model? The only use I see from watching analyst predictions is to look at their growth numbers and ask yourself if your own prediction is significantly higher then theirs, then the stock is a buy.
Jimmy. Could you comment on this thought? Over long periods of time it seems that risk does not exist, only volatility. Risk is then a singular moment of volatility which transpires at the wrong time for me as an individual.
I think that some od the stocks You listed are far from growth stocks Like XOM and GE. The issue with them that they were hit by Covid and now are simply catching up which increases their growth in a short term.
Some growth companies invest free cash to create growth leaving low profit. Does that muck up the peg ratio for these kind of growth companies? Is there some peg like growth measure for revenue and free cash ?
I agree that HPQ looks like a buy right now. PEG is very useful and easy to use tool if you want to spare yourself the stress of buying an overpriced stock.
I think the pandemic have really thought people the importance of multiple streams of income, unfortunately having a job doesn't mean security, thanks to Lisapetes her platform is top notch, she never disappoints.
Way better when every info was free… way less transparent. I feel like finance niche on yt is already very profitable I think it would be better to get some sponsors but give the research to everyone for free.