*I will forever be in-depted to you 😇 you've changed my life I'll continue to preach about your name for the world to hear,* *you've saved me from a huge financial debt with just little investment, Thanks Ms Karen Investment* 🇺🇸🇺🇸
I heard about Karen Investment that was about some couple of months ago,I felt she’s not recognized and I felt reluctant cos I really don’t believe on this brokers nowadays.
After researching the history of great assets such as real estate, dividend-paying stocks, gold, oil, and other commodities, I've come to the conclusion that most excellent assets never come down to the price you want to acquire them at. Simply get the ones you can afford right now.
The difficulty with most investors is that they choose rapid gratification over patience. In the financial market, patience is a characteristic that comes in handy. It's not a get-rich-quick plan, so don't expect to get rich immediately.
My method is to buy quality firms, anticipate to hold them regardless of what happens, pay up but not too much, keep track, sell only when necessary, and be ready to course correct.
@@jameswood9772 The long term is the ideal goal and working with 'Katherine Rae Lobe' a FA has made me understand that strategy is key, so i do not worry about short term performance that's why i follow her trades, which made me get a profit of $17,300 from $2,740 within 5 months. slow and steady!
Whats his ROI for his customers because multiple sources and stars say that the indexes following the SP500, NASDAQ, DOW beat out 70% (maybe 80%) of active fund managers over a 10 to 20 year period.
@@young_speculator9144 he is a desaster fanatic. He bets on the party literally exploding or getting shut down by weather, authorities, or running out of booze
I love when financial advisors always want to protect their jobs and try to tell you not to do this at home and you should hire an advisor that will charge you crazy fees
You don’t realize a) you’re assets are too small for him to manage b) this is one of the best managers or risk in the world c) what he does you can’t do - you don’t understand anything about this video yet you have a strong opinion. Critical thinking is important: in investing and in life.
Ah, I bet you wouldn't say that about DIY surgeries/treatments. For a reason, there are professionals available. Just so u know, there are different levels of advisors available based on one's wealth.
So sick of listening to this guy. . Constant dangling carrots with no meat. He has no interest in actually helping the average retail investor although he loves to pose that way in his books. He is clearly only interested in trying to lure in institutional clients with his "secret tactics" as this is the only way that hedge funds make their money.
The best thing a investor can do to reduce risk is take long term approach at the market level. Let the traders out 'trade each other out of business' is OK with me. Keep their fees for yourself.
So, what’s a guy to do? My financial advisor got me into a large bond fund a few years ago. Last year I told him I should be selling out and doing something else in what we knew would eventually become an increasing interest rate cycle with some level of inflation based on how much governments the world over pumped into the economy during Covid. He talked me out of selling as I am retired and my funds are 1) creating cash flow to live on, and 2) invested for the long term, ie 20+ years. Recently we had the same discussion but the bond fund has of course lost value due to both speculation of interest rate increases and recent actual interest rate increase(s). My question remains, should I sell and take the capital loss (on a bond fund for craps sake), or hang in for the long term with the expectation that in 5 to 10 years the bond fund will recover NAV as two things happen, new bonds are constantly replacing maturing bonds in the fund, and inevitably interest rates will be set downward again in the future based on usual economic cycles. Thoughts anyone?
in my humble experience look for a fund which trades long-short volatility using options , in 2008 maximum dd (i.e. worst loss) is 8% - 9 % (so you will be recouping your losses in maximum one year to six-months in to the future ) , while multi-factors short-long was in the range of 12-13 % , if you are in to sports betting , then there a chance you can do something there as market is not crowded, otherwise build and rent , but make sure that you study the geographical location well, if you can afford another 5-10 years , then you move in to new technologies stocks and wait , probably we will be seeing a new class of FAANGs , but that would take time , best
Translation: Yes, there is a risk of a market crash, but you can't time it. Therefore, you should mitigate your exposure to the risk of a downside in the market.
Why do we have this third guy asking inane questions, disturbing Eric and Mark with random interjections which Mark is kind enough to interpret his nonsense in some meaningful way.
This interview is full of b.s., no useful insights at all. Bloomberg people didn’t ask one single important question, Spitznagel didn’t offer one bit useful advice like what to…, how to….He was there just to sell his book and services. Totally a waste of my time 👎👎👎👎👎
in this long 9 minutes clip, the only point makes a little sense to me is the dept amount, all other of what he said sounds professional and suprium expert but no real content, Usually prophet is good at that. And the only meaningful point of debt, if that bursts, all assests will sink, including your cash in chequeing account or your physical cash in your pocket.