Originally Posted by Hog's Gone Fishin:
(BSX) Boston Scientific is a medical device manufacturer.
Currently at 42.69
Mkt cap 59 B
32,000 employees
1 yr return 28%
3 yr avg 27%
5 yr avg 45%
10 yr avg 39%
Yeah, medical device/equipment is a nice segment. Make tons of money and aren't targets of politicians like PBM's, pharma, etc. IHI is a good index, you can look through the holdings for other opportunities. ISRG is one of the holdings and I think you've mentioned it in the past or someone did. Just holding that index has returned about 30% a year the last 5. XHE is another
Originally Posted by scho63:
Don't they also build like 50% of all the cable TV boxes? :-)
I think that's Scientific Atlanta(?) which Cisco owns [Reply]
Originally Posted by Iowanian:
I'm batting a thousand.
Etrade has been a shit in my pants so far. Every single stock I've purchased so far is down between 30 and 58%.
Good times.
I've never done trades on my own. I have a guy that manages my stuff, and I don't generally ask him to invest in specific stocks. I've thought about taking some money and playing with it on my own via E-Trade/Other. Your thoughts on E-Trade? [Reply]
The money I have other people working for me in the market is doing well....I've tried to do some homework and have had reasons why I purchased every stock I selected.
Every single one has been a dismal loser.
Etrade itself is easy to operate and I don't have any issues with that....I'm just really shitty at picking individual stocks. The good news is every dime I've put into it was "extra" money I've gotten in side hustles, wagers won etc.
I guess I need to spend more time learning.
I'm the only one at my deer camp and inner circle who didn't buy into bitcoin and shitcoins and this was my test to show them how stupid they were......it's been pretty comparable outcomes so far, but I'm waiting on that upswing on my selections that hasn't come yet. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Iowanian:
The money I have other people working for me in the market is doing well....I've tried to do some homework and have had reasons why I purchased every stock I selected.
Every single one has been a dismal loser.
Etrade itself is easy to operate and I don't have any issues with that....I'm just really shitty at picking individual stocks. The good news is every dime I've put into it was "extra" money I've gotten in side hustles, wagers won etc.
I guess I need to spend more time learning.
I'm the only one at my deer camp and inner circle who didn't buy into bitcoin and shitcoins and this was my test to show them how stupid they were......it's been pretty comparable outcomes so far, but I'm waiting on that upswing on my selections that hasn't come yet.
There is a lot to be said for a manager who is excellent. Mine does an amazing job and for that I am thankful. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Iowanian:
The money I have other people working for me in the market is doing well....I've tried to do some homework and have had reasons why I purchased every stock I selected.
Every single one has been a dismal loser.
Etrade itself is easy to operate and I don't have any issues with that....I'm just really shitty at picking individual stocks. The good news is every dime I've put into it was "extra" money I've gotten in side hustles, wagers won etc.
I guess I need to spend more time learning.
I'm the only one at my deer camp and inner circle who didn't buy into bitcoin and shitcoins and this was my test to show them how stupid they were......it's been pretty comparable outcomes so far, but I'm waiting on that upswing on my selections that hasn't come yet.
That's my problem as well, but part of the issue is that I just DGAF - not passionate about it. I'm passionate about making money, but that's why I've invested my money into what I do with my businesses. Now that I have whittled my business dealings into one entity, and my day-to-day with it is much less than it used to be, I have the time to focus a little more into analyzing what I might want to invest in. I'll probably open an account sometime this month and give it a go with my slush fund. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Hog's Gone Fishin:
OKay, I have a really stupid question. I know some of you like stocks that pay dividends. (Rainman). How long do you have to own the stock to receive the dividend? I know it pays out qtrly.
So ,really my question is .... if a stock has a declared date of say 7/1 and a payable date of 7/20 does that mean you can acquire the stock on 6/25 and get the dividend and then dump it after 7/20 and move to the next stock.
Greedy bastards want to know.
I've never quite figured out how that works. It seems logical that you could take $XX and invest it in twelve different stocks that each pay out a dividend on a different month, and pretty much have a guaranteed high return. But that's so obvious that I have to think that the market corrects for it.
It seems that the common theory is that a stock price naturally fluctuates to take into account the fact that a dividend is about to be paid, and it does so in a way that corrects for the differences. That seems kind of suspicious to me, because it still seems like you could take advantage of that since it's a known future change in the stock price. But I've never studied it to see if there's a predictable change. Maybe I should, but it seems that if there was something that simple and predictable, Wall Street would be all over it.
Short answer: I don't know, and it's a good question. It seems like there should be a way to game the system, but I suspect there's some rule that keeps us from doing it. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I've never quite figured out how that works. It seems logical that you could take $XX and invest it in twelve different stocks that each pay out a dividend on a different month, and pretty much have a guaranteed high return. But that's so obvious that I have to think that the market corrects for it.
It seems that the common theory is that a stock price naturally fluctuates to take into account the fact that a dividend is about to be paid, and it does so in a way that corrects for the differences. That seems kind of suspicious to me, because it still seems like you could take advantage of that since it's a known future change in the stock price. But I've never studied it to see if there's a predictable change. Maybe I should, but it seems that if there was something that simple and predictable, Wall Street would be all over it.
Short answer: I don't know, and it's a good question. It seems like there should be a way to game the system, but I suspect there's some rule that keeps us from doing it.
I'm hoping wall street people don't have common sense like us regular people. [Reply]