I think it's important to stick to stocks that are immune to economic policies. AI stocks that have the potential to power and transform future technologies. It seems AI is the trajectory most companies are taking, including even established FAANG companies. Maybe there are other recommendations?
I bought into NVIDIA around September last year because my financial advisor recommended it to me. She said the company is selling shovels in a gold rush. It accounted for almost 80% of my market return this year.
@@EhadBartzsch That's a great analogy and I love the insight. Professionals could make a really big difference in investing, and I think everyone should have one. There are aspects of market trends that are difficult for the untrained eyes to see.
@@LoumaWuske MARGARET MOLLI ALVEY is a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and is a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
Appreciate the detailed breakdown! I need some advice: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
Thanks for sharing different perspectives on Nvidia’s potential. It truly is the ultimate disruptor! Through active trading, l've grown my portfolio. Big thanks to Alfred Thomas for his invaluable expertise!
The market, whether in recession or not, will always be positive to shrewd investors. You just have to know your way around the market. The recent Fed cut is a big advantage also that any serious person will take advantage of. No better time to let the economy work for you than now.
Same thing I keep saying. Choose quality stocks and follow them up keenly. If you're not one for such complexities, then work with an Adviser to grow your portf0lio. You can't go wrong with a seasoned CFA. Things will become bullish in no time and the diligent inveestors will smile to the bank. Don't forget the last quarter of the year is upon us.
You're right, I and a few colleagues in NY work with a CFA who prefers we DCA across a number of prospective sectors instead of a lump sum purchase. Following this, my account grew by more than 40% in this 4th quarter.
Becky Lou Gordon is the advisr I use and im just putting this out here because you asked. You can Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
You make me laugh - becaue of the way you laughed. I did the same thing = bought the dip. It's not down much for this company. It will be back in the GREEN tomorrow. Let's see! Thanks for your analysis and commentary.
I don’t understand people saying “I’m tired of this bullish market” Like how does it in any way negatively affect you? Unless you’re intentionally trying to go against the curve. Buy shares and make money like normal fkn human jesus
It fights inflation from coming down. Some of us want affordable groceries, but the government keeps kicking the problems down the road and it makes us poorer.
@darknova3591 so people with fat gains aren't looking to spend any of those gains? And spending those gains doesn't support current high prices? And supporting high prices isn't supporting inflation? Demand up=inflation up.
@@Motorrad127 you have it backwards bud, stocks typically fall as inflation rises as they have an inverse relationship. All of it stems from inflation though, not the stock market. It’s just economics. The only real problem with absurdly high valuation is the risk attached to said investors. When a stock is overvalued it puts a lot more pressure on the company to meet demands of the market resulting in more volatility. I just don’t see the point in begging for a crash and praying on the downfall of others. When the economy is performing poorly there is less purchase of luxury goods and the demand for basic needs becomes more competitive and that’s when things get ugly. I agree that inflation is a problem but the stock market itself is definitely not to blame.
@darknova3591 just to be clear, I wasn't saying the stock market is the only variable driving inflation. Being that the "economic numbers" have all been cooked and the economic definitions have been changed to fit whatever narrative they want, everything is so out of balance. We need to squash the problem at the roots, not just keep pumping money at it, but that's what they want because it keeps us poor and them rich. Thank you for your collaboration though 🫡
I think it's important to stick to stocks that are immune to economic policies. AI stocks that have the potential to power and transform future technologies. It seems AI is the trajectory most companies are taking, including even established FAANG companies. Maybe there are other recommendations?
I bought into NVIDIA around September last year because my financial advisor recommended it to me. She said the company is selling shovels in a gold rush. It accounted for almost 80% of my market return this year.
@@EhadBartzsch That's a great analogy and I love the insight. Professionals could make a really big difference in investing, and I think everyone should have one. There are aspects of market trends that are difficult for the untrained eyes to see.
@@BajramFatmir That's a great tip. I'm setting out 50k to invest in the market this year. Any particularly useful tips you could offer to me?
@@LoumaWuske MARGARET MOLLI ALVEY is a highly respected figure in her field. I suggest delving deeper into her credentials, as she possesses extensive experience and is a valuable resource for individuals seeking guidance in navigating the financial market.
@@BajramFatmir I looked up her name online and found her page. I emailed and made an appointment to talk with her. Thanks for the tip.
When everyone is buying you sell. When everyone is selling you buy
Excellent coverage!
👍👍👍 nice Ricky
THANKS FOR BEING LIVE
Appreciate the detailed breakdown! I need some advice: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
Thanks for sharing different perspectives on
Nvidia’s potential. It truly is the ultimate disruptor! Through active trading, l've grown my portfolio. Big thanks to Alfred Thomas for his invaluable expertise!
He mostly interacts on Telegrams, using the user-name,
@Alfietao. He is verified.
@ alfietao
do we see a drop to 130 zone fill my order & bounce back up?
Why does NVDA drop when the earnings are positive? I don't understand.
It could be people sailing and not holding it’s stock
Billons in options expire worthless.
It’s overvalued and can’t get more of a bubble. Wait one month and see if it pops
@@dcreech500 NVDIA is a $$$$ company, their stock is still undervalued, you're just spouting something you don't understand.
Over $25000 last week with sqqq shorting election rally to the gaps down
NVDA 150 THEN TO 160
The market, whether in recession or not, will always be positive to shrewd investors. You just have to know your way around the market. The recent Fed cut is a big advantage also that any serious person will take advantage of. No better time to let the economy work for you than now.
Same thing I keep saying. Choose quality stocks and follow them up keenly. If you're not one for such complexities, then work with an Adviser to grow your portf0lio. You can't go wrong with a seasoned CFA. Things will become bullish in no time and the diligent inveestors will smile to the bank. Don't forget the last quarter of the year is upon us.
You're right, I and a few colleagues in NY work with a CFA who prefers we DCA across a number of prospective sectors instead of a lump sum purchase. Following this, my account grew by more than 40% in this 4th quarter.
This is very insightful. Hope you don't mind me asking you to recommend your CFP
Becky Lou Gordon is the advisr I use and im just putting this out here because you asked. You can Just search the name. You’d find necessary details to work with to set up an appointment.
Thank you for the lead. I searched her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.
You make me laugh - becaue of the way you laughed. I did the same thing = bought the dip. It's not down much for this company. It will be back in the GREEN tomorrow. Let's see! Thanks for your analysis and commentary.
$mstr is going to 1500 or more by the end of 2025
Is that true. Should I buy it now, thanks
Nvidia about to sit here at this price for a week or two while all the options contracts expire useless.
You're shorting mstr?ballsy...
No no don't risk that
Bullish
.81
?
I made $2300 Monday trading sqqq on overbought and $958 today trading tqqq to the bottom of the gap fill
I don’t understand people saying “I’m tired of this bullish market”
Like how does it in any way negatively affect you? Unless you’re intentionally trying to go against the curve. Buy shares and make money like normal fkn human jesus
It fights inflation from coming down. Some of us want affordable groceries, but the government keeps kicking the problems down the road and it makes us poorer.
@ stock market does not affect inflation. Inflation affects the stock market.
@darknova3591 so people with fat gains aren't looking to spend any of those gains? And spending those gains doesn't support current high prices? And supporting high prices isn't supporting inflation? Demand up=inflation up.
@@Motorrad127 you have it backwards bud, stocks typically fall as inflation rises as they have an inverse relationship. All of it stems from inflation though, not the stock market.
It’s just economics. The only real problem with absurdly high valuation is the risk attached to said investors. When a stock is overvalued it puts a lot more pressure on the company to meet demands of the market resulting in more volatility. I just don’t see the point in begging for a crash and praying on the downfall of others.
When the economy is performing poorly there is less purchase of luxury goods and the demand for basic needs becomes more competitive and that’s when things get ugly.
I agree that inflation is a problem but the stock market itself is definitely not to blame.
@darknova3591 just to be clear, I wasn't saying the stock market is the only variable driving inflation. Being that the "economic numbers" have all been cooked and the economic definitions have been changed to fit whatever narrative they want, everything is so out of balance. We need to squash the problem at the roots, not just keep pumping money at it, but that's what they want because it keeps us poor and them rich. Thank you for your collaboration though 🫡
Bullish