I'm reading his book A random walk down Wall Street and Benjamin G's the intelligent investor. Definitely must reads if you would like to familiarize yourself with positioning yourself for the future, for example retirement
You all probably dont care but does someone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account..? I was dumb forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me
I have bought the S&P500 index funds and achieved quite good gain! This index fund is in fact updated all the time, comprises hundreds of best stocks and performs better than many funds.
Not sure about the Chinese stocks, LK just drop massively. It is easy for millionaires to recoup, but for small time traders not so good... specially beginners. Safer for US stocks - Blue chips- not penny stocks.
I guess for a US investor you could use a Vanguard global or total international index fund as part of your equity exposure, combined with S&P 500 or total US stock index fund. Then combine with an intermediate US treasury index fund or Vanguard total US bond index fund for example. If your 80% or 60% equities maybe put just 20% in the international fund ex US to give some extra diversification. Then you won't be taking on to much currency or Volatility risk. This could help if the US market doesn't do very well, which has happened during some periods in the past
READ FIRST 1. BOGLE ON MUTUAL FUNDS. and all other 9 books by jack Bogle .2.A Random walk on wall Street. 3. 4 Pillars of Investing .4. Devil takes the hind most .I get all my books from amazon.com ,at my doorstep.
I'm finding reading to much of these investing books can cause confusion on what to actually do And it's not just a case of using low cost index funds or etfs. There's a whole passive strategy to follow which isn't as easy as it sounds to stick with in psychological terms. And how do you decide for example how much exposure to the UK stock market or not, should a UK investor have, and how much in equity, how much in bonds. Which bond indexes to use. Do we need inflation protected bonds , or just use a UK government bond index fund or global bond index fund hedged to Stirling to cut out currency risk etc
Oh, this is crap. He manages to be both vague and to make investing sound complicated. Yesterday I watched a video called Passive Investing: The Evidence, also on You Tube. The people on that documentary make a lot of sense! This man makes no sense.
I watched that video some time ago. It's very interesting and informative. The only thing is deciding whether to have bonds in your portfolio or not, and how much ie how much in equities and how much in bonds. Also how much exposure should you have to uk equities or not, and which bond fund or funds to use. Do you just use a UK gilt index fund or something like Vanguard global bond index fund, and what about inflation protected bonds. Also the behavioural part of investing is harder than it sounds, sticking to a strategy and resisting temptation to play with your portfolio, instead of just rebalancing6once a year etc
Elements of investing is my favorite book. Short and full of knowledge.
I'm reading his book A random walk down Wall Street and Benjamin G's the intelligent investor. Definitely must reads if you would like to familiarize yourself with positioning yourself for the future, for example retirement
I'm reading them too and I can aswell do nothing but highly recommend them!
You all probably dont care but does someone know of a tool to get back into an instagram account..?
I was dumb forgot the login password. I would appreciate any tips you can offer me
Don't know much about Burton, but I sure like Eric's shirt/tie combo. Where'd you get it?
Great interview.
Great book. It's my go to motivational publication.
I have bought the S&P500 index funds and achieved quite good gain! This index fund is in fact updated all the time, comprises hundreds of best stocks and performs better than many funds.
True sage here comparing to the Tesla AI robotics scam
What a nice video of people being such nice people... Money!
Not sure about the Chinese stocks, LK just drop massively. It is easy for millionaires to recoup, but for small time traders not so good... specially beginners. Safer for US stocks - Blue chips- not penny stocks.
I guess for a US investor you could use a Vanguard global or total international index fund as part of your equity exposure, combined with S&P 500 or total US stock index fund. Then combine with an intermediate US treasury index fund or Vanguard total US bond index fund for example. If your 80% or 60% equities maybe put just 20% in the international fund ex US to give some extra diversification. Then you won't be taking on to much currency or Volatility risk. This could help if the US market doesn't do very well, which has happened during some periods in the past
To be lowest cost buy stocks directly
Aduhh pengen tau.. Tapi gak bisa bahasanya 😁😆
READ FIRST 1. BOGLE ON MUTUAL FUNDS. and all other 9 books by jack Bogle .2.A Random walk on wall Street. 3. 4 Pillars of Investing .4. Devil takes the hind most .I get all my books from amazon.com ,at my doorstep.
I'm finding reading to much of these investing books can cause confusion on what to actually do
And it's not just a case of using low cost index funds or etfs. There's a whole passive strategy to follow which isn't as easy as it sounds to stick with in psychological terms. And how do you decide for example how much exposure to the UK stock market or not, should a UK investor have, and how much in equity, how much in bonds. Which bond indexes to use. Do we need inflation protected bonds , or just use a UK government bond index fund or global bond index fund hedged to Stirling to cut out currency risk etc
Oh, this is crap. He manages to be both vague and to make investing sound complicated.
Yesterday I watched a video called Passive Investing: The Evidence, also on You Tube.
The people on that documentary make a lot of sense! This man makes no sense.
I watched that video some time ago. It's very interesting and informative. The only thing is deciding whether to have bonds in your portfolio or not, and how much ie how much in equities and how much in bonds. Also how much exposure should you have to uk equities or not, and which bond fund or funds to use. Do you just use a UK gilt index fund or something like Vanguard global bond index fund, and what about inflation protected bonds. Also the behavioural part of investing is harder than it sounds, sticking to a strategy and resisting temptation to play with your portfolio, instead of just rebalancing6once a year etc