Originally Posted by Rain Man:
It's an odd stock market day. Most of the market is down considerably, but a few of the chip companies are destroying worlds. NVDA is going supernova, but AMD and TSM are also up huge.
I have a lot of all three of them. :-) NVDA has rocketed up to where it's only a hair down from being my largest single holding now.
I've been long NVDA since 2017. My four largest positions, NVDA, GOOGL, SNPS, and TSM, are all up big today.
As long as demand for AI stays high, I'm hopeful they will continue to grow. [Reply]
Originally Posted by ReynardMuldrake:
I've been long NVDA since 2017. My four largest positions, NVDA, GOOGL, SNPS, and TSM, are all up big today.
As long as demand for AI stays high, I'm hopeful they will continue to grow.
I've been in a bit of a conundrum recently. My biggest holdings are GOOG, NVDA, and MSFT. They're done really well for me.
I'm wanting to pivot more conservative, and I feel like I should lock in some of the gains, but man, I hate paying capital gains tax. I don't want to sell and pay taxes, especially when I'll probably put them in more conservative stocks. Mathematically, I should just keep riding them, but a tech crash would be painful if they were to drop 30 or 40 percent.
In full disclosure, I've been buying CDs like crazy recently, at an average rate of about 5.1 percent. If you add all those up, it's about the same amount that I have (combined) in GOOG and NVDA. So I have a conservative counterbalance.
I'm talking myself into not selling as I type this, but I really don't want to ride into a bear market with so much tech. I'd rather avoid big losses these days than make big gains. I'm torn. [Reply]
I'm beginning to regret buying that stock. I think I'm down around 60 percent on it. I need to look up the person on here who first mentioned them to me and neg rep them. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I'm beginning to regret buying that stock. I think I'm down around 60 percent on it. I need to look up the person on here who first mentioned them to me and neg rep them.
Pretty sure it was hog. Man. Her Star fell hard. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I've been in a bit of a conundrum recently. My biggest holdings are GOOG, NVDA, and MSFT. They're done really well for me.
I'm wanting to pivot more conservative, and I feel like I should lock in some of the gains, but man, I hate paying capital gains tax. I don't want to sell and pay taxes, especially when I'll probably put them in more conservative stocks. Mathematically, I should just keep riding them, but a tech crash would be painful if they were to drop 30 or 40 percent.
In full disclosure, I've been buying CDs like crazy recently, at an average rate of about 5.1 percent. If you add all those up, it's about the same amount that I have (combined) in GOOG and NVDA. So I have a conservative counterbalance.
I'm talking myself into not selling as I type this, but I really don't want to ride into a bear market with so much tech. I'd rather avoid big losses these days than make big gains. I'm torn.
I actually rebalanced my portfolio earlier this year into 50/50 growth portfolio vs. dividend portfolio as a hedge per guidance from my advisor. CDs/bonds have been crazy this year. I've been putting some money in for the first time this year.
All of this is pre tax Roth for me so taxes aren't a factor. I think there are transaction fees involved but those are all a flat fee.
Personally, I wouldn't liquidate your positions, but selling off a chunk after a growth spurt is not a bad idea to lock in some of your gains. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buehler445:
Pretty sure it was hog. Man. Her Star fell hard.
Yes it has. She used to have a crazy fan base that followed everything she does, hell I even remember seeing T shirts with her face on them. Seems like the big thing she did was own TSLA before it went apeshit and split a couple years ago. Lots of people did and didn't get their face on a T shirt.
Since you brought up NVDA, for anyone interested in any tickers like TSLY, there was a new one based on NVDA recently called NVDY that came out. Not sure what the dividend will be since it just opened and I'm not in it.
I'm out of work for a few weeks now that I've had surgery on my elbow and wrist so I decided to get back into trading more to ease the boredom. Bought LYFT a couple days ago for 8 and sold it this morning for 8.20. It's not crazy great, but it helps to pass the time I guess. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Buehler445:
Pretty sure it was hog. Man. Her Star fell hard.
Yeah. I really like her philosophy of investing in innovation. It seems like a great idea. Of course, those were the companies that got clobbered the most in 2022, so to some extent she or I or both got nailed by bad timing. But it seems like she's also made far bigger strategic mistakes, because I shouldn't still be down by 60 percent.
Originally Posted by ReynardMuldrake:
I actually rebalanced my portfolio earlier this year into 50/50 growth portfolio vs. dividend portfolio as a hedge per guidance from my advisor. CDs/bonds have been crazy this year. I've been putting some money in for the first time this year.
All of this is pre tax Roth for me so taxes aren't a factor. I think there are transaction fees involved but those are all a flat fee.
Personally, I wouldn't liquidate your positions, but selling off a chunk after a growth spurt is not a bad idea to lock in some of your gains.
Yeah, I might trim a little off. I have a feeling that there'll be another bump when/if the debt ceiling stuff gets taken care off. There'll be a huge fall if it doesn't, but I've got to think it'll get resolved. I might wait a week and then sell off a little profit.
Dang, I hate paying taxes on those gains, though. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Yeah. I really like her philosophy of investing in innovation. It seems like a great idea. Of course, those were the companies that got clobbered the most in 2022, so to some extent she or I or both got nailed by bad timing. But it seems like she's also made far bigger strategic mistakes, because I shouldn't still be down by 60 percent.
I had no experience in investing and decided to dip my feet in the water maybe a year ago with some airline and cruise stocks thinking they'd rebound after COVID (stupid lol).
I'm no day trader and realize I know absolutely jack and shit about any of this, so I recently parked some cash into VOO. I hope to be able to just keep that money in there for the next 30 years and see some growth. I've been considering other ETFs as well.
Is that an advisable course of action in the eyes of the financial gurus of CP? [Reply]
Originally Posted by ThaVirus:
I had no experience in investing and decided to dip my feet in the water maybe a year ago with some airline and cruise stocks thinking they'd rebound after COVID (stupid lol).
I'm no day trader and realize I know absolutely jack and shit about any of this, so I recently parked some cash into VOO. I hope to be able to just keep that money in there for the next 30 years and see some growth. I've been considering other ETFs as well.
Is that an advisable course of action in the eyes of the financial gurus of CP?
I think that's a reasonable course if you don't want the adrenalin rush and occasional horror of playing with individual stocks.
The cruise lines are all up notably this month. I hope that's a trend that will continue. If they ever get back to pre-pandemic levels, they'll double in price. I could really use that since I rode them all the way down in 2020. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
The cruise lines are all up notably this month. I hope that's a trend that will continue. If they ever get back to pre-pandemic levels, they'll double in price. I could really use that since I rode them all the way down in 2020.
Hah, yeah, I'm actually up on Royal Caribbean, which is encouraging, but down on all the others. At this point, I've been holding the bag so long that I will likely just continue to do so. [Reply]