Originally Posted by Buehler445:
STOCK TIP: Don't buy stocks.
If it truly is an ivestment buy mutual funds.
Truly. I'm actually going to build a portfolio. I'm going to have a couple financial advisers but I wanted some Chiefs Planet input. Besides what I do with the advisers I'll end up doing something on my own. Maybe I should do a small portfolio based on the advice from Chiefs Planet. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I believe that Step 3 should be prioritized over Step 2.
There's always room for tweaking based on the specific situation, but I don't disagree with it. There aren't many other ways to get a 100% rate of return immediately on an investment. Plus, it's good to break the ice on saving for retirement rather than saying "Someday, I'll start." [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I believe that Step 3 should be prioritized over Step 2.
Dave Ramsey would agree with you.
I would not, however. You are denying yourself free money without prioritizing Step 2. And If you don't start saving early, those people will never have anything. I will say it depends on how much high interest debt you have compared to your salary though. [Reply]
Originally Posted by philfree:
Truly. I'm actually going to build a portfolio. I'm going to have a couple financial advisers but I wanted some Chiefs Planet input. Besides what I do with the advisers I'll end up doing something on my own. Maybe I should do a small portfolio based on the advice from Chiefs Planet.
I got some good advice here about self directed stuff, and Vanguard has good performing funds with low fees, so that's as good of advice as I've gotten.
Naturally you won't hear a word about any of that from an adviser because they're after commission.
If you're looking for Industries to pile into mutual funds with:
I'd stay out of Health Care. It has made a killing, but with all the non-sense, it would scare me.
I'd be out on anything Ag. Monsanto may be in some shit with this extend bean and the chemistries shitstorm they've created. They probably won't hurt but they may. Sometime is the time to get into machinery, but I'd try to look for a bounce in the corn price first.
Oil industry is in the toilet, I thought there was a decent look there, but crude fell out of bed again, and my understanding is that it is a bloodbath. No idea WHEN to get in, maybe now.
I'd look at defense, maybe steel if you're willing to gamble.
Another thing I would look at is I wouldn't want to be really heavy in anything that is holding a lot of cash outside the US (Apple, for instance) That is a giant problem for lawmakers that they will at some point have to address, and it may get ugly for some of those companies.
Retail might be one to look at as the industry has gotten leaner.
I'm pretty dumb when it comes to stocks, but that's what I would do if I were trying to manage things intensively. [Reply]
Originally Posted by philfree:
I know NVIDIA makes video cards but I'd like to know what's driving their success.
GPUs taking over workloads from CPUs. AI Datacenter is what's driving their revenue growth right now I think. 50% rev growth last quarter
Originally Posted by :
"All of the world's major internet and cloud service providers now use Nvidia's Tesla-based GPU (graphics processing unit) accelerators," Chief Financial Officer Colette Kress said on a post-earnings call on Tuesday.
Kress said the major companies include Facebook Inc (FB.O), Alphabet Inc's (GOOGL.O) Google, IBM Corp (IBM.N), Microsoft Corp (MSFT.O) and Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (BABA.N).
Nvidia's chips, also used by Amazon.com Inc's (AMZN.O) Amazon Web Services, offer artificial intelligence and machine learning capabilities that are crucial for faster data analysis.
They're also at the forefront of powering autonomous vehicles. When the Audi A8 launches next year it'll be the first production vehicle with what's considered level 3 autonomous driving using Nvidia tech. Lots of companies competing for this market though [Reply]
The only downside I see is the expense ratio at .68, which is higher than the average for similarly indexed funds. But those funds don't have the performance this fund has shown. Whoever is picking the holdings has done well. [Reply]
On the other hand, if you were working with an advisor in a managed fund you'd be paying twice that. I blame Vanguard for offering us expense ratios of .15 in etf form and only slightly higher for mutual funds. They've really disrupted the industry in that area and skews our perspective on expense ratios. .68 is not that bad. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Demonpenz:
My plan is to park money there to see if I can grasp concepts. So I bougjt 70 dollars of this share. Should I schedule an appointment ar the lambo dealership now? Hopefully I can buy a mutual fund index fund idunno the difference. I don't make much money so it will take time
Who are you using for your brokerage?
I'd save up a couple hundred and then buy an etf rather than a mutual fund. They are cheaper to own, the biggest difference is that they are managed by a computer rather than a person so they don't have to forward that cost to you, but they hold the same stocks.
Start with something simple like an S&P indexed fund, they are companies that you've heard of. In that vein, you can pick larger or smaller companies (small cap, mid cap, large cap). Theoretically, small cap has the highest growth potential while large cap will perform whatever the general economy is doing. [Reply]