IronWing
No Lifer
- Jul 20, 2001
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A total rate cut of 1.5% this year would be irresponsible. If the market makers really thought that, they were not being realistic. The Feds' days of blowing bubbles are over for a bit.
I can't see how anyone would actually predict that much of a drop. The fed itself said up to 3 cuts (0.75%) could be possible but it is too soon to talk about it because the data points the other direction. Anyone that gets 6 cuts from that message is just delusional. Especially in an election year when the fed tries not to make many rate changes.Yeah, that was definitely the consensus - 1.5% seemed overly optimistic.
I can't see how anyone would actually predict that much of a drop.
Two totally separate groups. The fed is independent from the US government. Even if the US government needs something, the fed doesn't care.I can. We are going back to zero. The US Govt can't afford otherwise. A few cuts might ease the pain a bit.
I had some money I received last year from a relative who passed, and I've just been doing automatic investments from my settlement fund every 2 weeks. I figured with the 5+% the settlement fund is making, it wasn't such a big deal to do some mild dollar cost averaging.I wish there was a market drop. I have the entirety of my yearly bonus I'd like to average in.
Dollar cost averaging is a nice tool, but it certainly isn't a universal win. Since stocks tend to go up, the best route is almost always to invest as soon as you have money. That is the exact opposite of dollar cost averaging.Depending on your time horizon, you'd probably be fine just investing it all at once. Yes, it would stink if there is a short term drop, but you also get access to dividends that would be paying out once you start investing it.
Great job.Bought 1000 shares SAVE at 6.50, sold today's 7.50 call for $220.
Up $500 so far. 😀
Yeah, took me a while to make an Excel sheet to cover Schedule D. But now, I just check that the form hasn't changed and go with that. Just a few minutes of work a year now.I received a modest inheritance last year in the form of a bond fund. I get to file f8949 and Schedule D to show a 19¢ loss. Yeah me. The instructions for Schedule D are epic.
It worked well for me in Sept. when I had over $200K to average in. Averaged it in over September, October, and November.Dollar cost averaging is a nice tool, but it certainly isn't a universal win. Since stocks tend to go up, the best route is almost always to invest as soon as you have money. That is the exact opposite of dollar cost averaging.
That said, with stock markets currently at or above their all time highs (as I type this the S&P 500 just crossed higher than it's all time highest closing price), investing it all now just seems difficult to swallow. So, there is nothing wrong with diversifying the strategy. Invest about half now into stocks. Put the rest into 5% short term CDs or liquid funds which are paying ~5%. Then dollar cost the rest in. You won't get the mathematically best possible outcome. But that requires a fully functioning crystal ball.
That is ~$9 billion if there was no discount. NVDA valuation is going up ~$48 billion today. Not even remotely sufficient of an order to justify that bump in stock price.It was reported that Meta was actively buying 350,000 H100 GPUs. nVidia sells each one at about $25K to $30K.
That's a good buy. I'm sure Amazon with their top tier lawyers can get the ball moving again. Stock is bound to go back up.Also bought IRBT at 16.50 for a trade. Stupid EU regulators blocked purchase by Amazon.
Not for new money. If you want to get 20K of new money into your Roth, you have to do a super backdoor Roth from your 401k. Last year I backdoored about 80k into our Roths.Backdoor Roth question: I know the backdoor gets one around the income eligibility limit for Roth IRAs. Does it also get around the contribution limit? Could one roll $20,000/year into a Roth?
Two totally separate groups. The fed is independent from the US government. Even if the US government needs something, the fed doesn't care.
I only bought 100 shares for safety sake. From what I was hearing on CNBC, the EU gave Amazon until November to address concerns they had regarding the buyout. Amazon refused to address them. Therefore with the conditions unmet, they may just walk away from the $51.75 share buyout.Also bought IRBT at 16.50 for a trade. Stupid EU regulators blocked purchase by Amazon.
Great job.
I've been toying with the idea of SAVE. It is down 66% in a year and currently at half the valuation of just liquidating it. Meaning if they just liquidated now, you'd double your money (minus expenses). But, I'm worried that they'll drag out the losses until there is nothing left worth liquidating.
Short term gamble opporunity only.