Absolutely loved the video! This is such an important lesson for investors to keep in mind. I was genuinely surprised by the significant jump in performance for both Apple and Microsoft with the improved P/E ratio. I never expected the difference to be so dramatic.
Excellent video! It must become mandatory for every new retail investor, who uses Robin Hood and Co. for trading.....the biggest risk is the price (to value)!
convinced that investing $50k-100k in the right company before it goes big is better than just saving for retirement. But since picking the right company is hard, saving might be safer-who would’ve guessed SPGI? I have $200k in a HYSA and want to invest. What are the best opportunities now?
I find it more productive and safe to buy growth/blue-chip stocks rather than etfs. It's advisable to work with a fiduciary advisor for well-diversified portfolios instead of relying solely on speculations.
Accurate asset allocation is crucial, I used hedging strategies to allocate part of my portfOlio to defensive assets for market downturns. Expert guidance is vital for achieving this. This approach has helped me stay finan-cially secure for over five years, yielding nearly $1 million in returns on invest-ments.
Melissa Elise Robinson is the licensed advisor 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.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
My portfolio of 200k is not increasing any more than 5% and we seem to be facing a massive crash now. I cant tell where the market is headed, or perhaps I should just sell off and avoid the panic.
I am considering subscribing to your website, once there I saw 7 features that will be very useful BUT it says "coming soon"...mmm any ideas when is that, thanks for your videos theyre great!
Hey, where did you see the coming soon features? I went to double check to let you know about the timeline, but I can't find where it says that on the site? can you share the link with me? Thanks so much 👍
I'm not sure if youtube will let you share a link, but if you could just let me know where it is, i can make sure that info is up to date and i'll let you know.
This totally makes sense but if you buy something that is cheap in relative basis you run the risk for overpaying for company because it was more expensive earlier. Feel like that's not a good way to analyze companies. Not sure if someone have tested this out on the big companies if buying on relative basis long term big companies will result in above avg annualized returns. If something like this is done for let's say the last 20-30 years would be cool to analyze the results.
For sure, this is 100% correct. That’s why I usually like to confirm the fair value calculation with something like discounted free cash flow or perhaps even the industry or sector average to have another comparison point. So yes I did simplify this a bit, perhaps a bit too much 😬
So buy low sell high? Is that the message? What happened to time in the market beats timing the market? Not saying you're wrong, just saying it's not always that simple.
Hi Jimmy, what about Nvidia? If we wait for a “good price” we would have missed the recent run up and the “opportunity cost” of Nvidia. Can we overpaid and let earning and fundamental catch up to the valuation?
NVDA is a great example, but if we look at a chart of their PE Ratio, the PE ratio has swung from the 30x range to over 175x. and even as late as the end of 2023, the PE Ratio once again fell below their 5 year average, so if we had bought then, we likely would have done quite well, considering what the stock has actually done since then. So I think one thing to consider, is that just because a stock is climbing, doesn't necessarily mean that its overvalued. sometimes the growth of the fundamentals can outrun the stock price, and many times that can a great opportunity. That's what I was hoping to show with the Microsoft and Apple examples. Even NVDA, if you look at a chart of NVDA over the past 3 months, there were some decent pullbacks in the stock price and the PE Ratio swings were even better because although NVDA's stock has kind of moved sideways over the past three months, their EPS has climbed, so depending on our analysis of NVDA, or whatever stock we're looking at, there are opportunities in many places.
This is all well and good and I do agree with you but all of this is sounding a bit like you need to time the market. Remember Buffett also says he would rather buy a great company at decent prices than a decent company at great prices. If you bought these companies whenever and just DCA down you would be smiling ear to ear right now.
I like that you give examples of using this method to pick when to buy, but what I don’t like is you seemingly cherry pick the top vs the bottom. On hindsight you might not know that is the bottom 🙁 nonetheless I really value your opinion keep it up!
That argumentation in some cases has no sense. I repeat, in some cases. The goal is not to buy the stock on a lower multiple. But to pay less for more value (even if that value will come in the future). That's why you can't look at a stock from a one graph or one side perspective, but as a multitude of factors, values and metrics. Imagine that you have 1000 dollars and you want to buy Costco, a low margin low growth company, at 15 PE. What is the reasoning of it when you have the money when the company was 200 per share, and now they're near 1000 and still it didn't go down to low multiples?? I bought MSFT at 140 when the dip of covid happened. If I would've wait until the stock was cheap, that means I should've bought it 2 or 3 years later, when the multiples were better but the price doubled?? That has no sense Jimmy you are smarter than that. I can not believe you fold to that reasoning
This is a fair point 🎯 and I clearly did a poor job of explaining my intentions with this video. I sincerely apologize for that! I never intended to imply that a single metric could tell investors if a stock was a good buy or not. I was simply trying to point out that when we buy a stock is also important AFTER we've done an analysis of the business itself. To illustrate what I was hoping this video would show, using your Microsoft example as a great example. Back in 2020 when Microsoft dropped below 150, the PE ratio for MSFT at that time was 26X. But right before covid, the PE ratio was closer to 35x and by 2021, it was back up in the high 30's and low 40x range. So buying the pullback as you did was a brilliant move and supports the intention (although poorly explained I've now realized) of the video. Buy great companies a good prices and our returns will add up in the long run. Costco is another great example. Over the past five years, its stock price has risen from $300 to $900. However, during that time, its PE ratio fluctuated from the low 30s to the high 50s. What I wanted to illustrate in the video is that the difference in returns can be significant depending on whether you buy when the stock is closer to the bottom or the top of its PE range. Again, I apologize for the lack of clarity. I'll work to present this information better in the future to provide a fuller understanding of the concept. 😬👍🎯
@LearntoInvest Don't apologize, you're the best. I've been following you since the beginning. You're the reason I thought about opening a YT channel. Keep doing what you do. We do appreciate you a lot
I usually like your videos, but there is a lot of bad advice to be inferred here. If you can time the market perfectly, which IS being implied by comparing the lows, you should already be the richest person in the world. Better teachings say that time in the market always beats timing the market. Also, buying good companies at bad prices, is better than buying bad companies and good prices. Although, these teachings are long term investing mindsets, not
This is a great point, and I apologize I didn’t clarify a few points a bit more. For example, dollar cost averaging on a great company simplifies this whole process. I should have spent some time with that. And when I was working through what I wanted to talk about in the video, I was afraid it might come off as promoting trying to time the market. That wasn’t my intention. I was more trying to point out that the idea of buying a company at any price and trying to ride it “to the moon” doesn’t really play out that way much of the time. Im a big fan of buffets saying, buy great companies at good prices or even a decent prices and in the long run we’ll do well. But if we pay 700x for Tesla, we’re making our journey a bit tougher. I apologize that I wasn’t clearer with my intention, and not stating up front things like DCA, I was hoping to just bring up something for investors to keep in the back of their mind when they do their analysis. 😬 thanks for the feedback and I’ll make sure I do better next time 👍
Recently bought some recommended stocks and now they are just penny stocks. There seems to be more negative portfolios in 2024 with the markets tumbling, soaring inflation, and banks going out of business. My concern is how can the rapid interest-rate hike be of favor to a value investor, or is it better avoiding stocks for a while?
Simply "buy and hold," dude. It will be worthwhile in the long run. Although higher interest rates typically translate into lower stock prices, investors should be wary of the bull run. To reach your growth objectives and prevent mistakes, it's best to speak with an experienced adviser.
Very true, you can be passively involved in the markts and still amass wealth-gains using an investment advisor. I first dabbled in stocks late 2019, just before the pandemic, and that same year gained over 150% with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was following directions of my advisor. We are working on a retirement ballpark of $3m and I’m certain my goal isn’t farfetched after subsequent investments and tremendous returns so far.
This is quite remarkable! Would you kindly provide your advisor's details? My portfolio is currently experiencing severe retrogression, thus I must decide whether to sell some of my holdings or hang onto them. I am in desperate need of asset allocation.
One well-known person in her field is my CFA *Layan Talia Chokr.* I suggest looking over her credentials in more detail. Her extensive knowledge makes her an invaluable asset to anyone attempting to manage the financial market.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her a outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her
Absolutely loved the video! This is such an important lesson for investors to keep in mind. I was genuinely surprised by the significant jump in performance for both Apple and Microsoft with the improved P/E ratio. I never expected the difference to be so dramatic.
I appreciate the kind words!
Excellent video! It must become mandatory for every new retail investor, who uses Robin Hood and Co. for trading.....the biggest risk is the price (to value)!
Love the passion you put in the video, and certainly appreciate such important points.
Great video! Should've closed out with S&P 500 example with almost 28 PE!
Ahhh, that actually would have been a perfect ending. And the point is well taken 👍😀
Thanks for the great examples and detailed explanations 😃
Great video Jimmy! Thanks
Thanks for the kind words. I really appreciate it!!! 👍😀
Awesome analysis. Great content like always jimmy!
convinced that investing $50k-100k in the right company before it goes big is better than just saving for retirement. But since picking the right company is hard, saving might be safer-who would’ve guessed SPGI? I have $200k in a HYSA and want to invest. What are the best opportunities now?
I find it more productive and safe to buy growth/blue-chip stocks rather than etfs. It's advisable to work with a fiduciary advisor for well-diversified portfolios instead of relying solely on speculations.
Accurate asset allocation is crucial, I used hedging strategies to allocate part of my portfOlio to defensive assets for market downturns. Expert guidance is vital for achieving this. This approach has helped me stay finan-cially secure for over five years, yielding nearly $1 million in returns on invest-ments.
Pls how can i meet this advis0r? i want someone to help me invest an Inheritance, i dont want to lose it to inflation
Melissa Elise Robinson is the licensed advisor 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.
Thanks for sharing. I curiously searched for her full name and her website popped up immediately. I looked through her credentials and did my due diligence before contacting her.
My portfolio of 200k is not increasing any more than 5% and we seem to be facing a massive crash now. I cant tell where the market is headed, or perhaps I should just sell off and avoid the panic.
Hedge or set stricter stops or reduce portfolio n raise cash to 29-25%
i'd advise you redistribute assets in your portfolio with the help of a license professional so you don't get burnt in this volatile market
@arlenehill4ril very encouraging for newbies like myself, mind sharing advisor info please? in dire need of proper asset allocation
very encouraging for newbies like myself, mind sharing advisor info please? in dire need of proper asset allocation
thankfully googled Karen Lynne Chess and at once spotted her consulting page, she seems highly professional from her resumé
Investment success doesn't come from “buying good things,” but rather from “buying things well. -Howard Marks
Great point, Buffett says to buy great companies at a good price. Either way, buying right is key!!!
Very good video Jimmy.
Enjoyed this one!
Jimmy! Please please please look into CVNA!
TSLA is too speculative for me, overvalued and not so sure about electric cars, but interesting nonetheless of course, thanks, Jimmy!
Loved the video mate
Any chance we can take a look at APD?
I am considering subscribing to your website, once there I saw 7 features that will be very useful BUT it says "coming soon"...mmm any ideas when is that, thanks for your videos theyre great!
Hey, where did you see the coming soon features? I went to double check to let you know about the timeline, but I can't find where it says that on the site? can you share the link with me? Thanks so much 👍
I'm not sure if youtube will let you share a link, but if you could just let me know where it is, i can make sure that info is up to date and i'll let you know.
Great video!
This totally makes sense but if you buy something that is cheap in relative basis you run the risk for overpaying for company because it was more expensive earlier. Feel like that's not a good way to analyze companies. Not sure if someone have tested this out on the big companies if buying on relative basis long term big companies will result in above avg annualized returns. If something like this is done for let's say the last 20-30 years would be cool to analyze the results.
For sure, this is 100% correct. That’s why I usually like to confirm the fair value calculation with something like discounted free cash flow or perhaps even the industry or sector average to have another comparison point. So yes I did simplify this a bit, perhaps a bit too much 😬
So buy low sell high? Is that the message? What happened to time in the market beats timing the market? Not saying you're wrong, just saying it's not always that simple.
Hi Jimmy, what about Nvidia? If we wait for a “good price” we would have missed the recent run up and the “opportunity cost” of Nvidia.
Can we overpaid and let earning and fundamental catch up to the valuation?
NVDA is a great example, but if we look at a chart of their PE Ratio, the PE ratio has swung from the 30x range to over 175x. and even as late as the end of 2023, the PE Ratio once again fell below their 5 year average, so if we had bought then, we likely would have done quite well, considering what the stock has actually done since then. So I think one thing to consider, is that just because a stock is climbing, doesn't necessarily mean that its overvalued. sometimes the growth of the fundamentals can outrun the stock price, and many times that can a great opportunity. That's what I was hoping to show with the Microsoft and Apple examples. Even NVDA, if you look at a chart of NVDA over the past 3 months, there were some decent pullbacks in the stock price and the PE Ratio swings were even better because although NVDA's stock has kind of moved sideways over the past three months, their EPS has climbed, so depending on our analysis of NVDA, or whatever stock we're looking at, there are opportunities in many places.
This is all well and good and I do agree with you but all of this is sounding a bit like you need to time the market. Remember Buffett also says he would rather buy a great company at decent prices than a decent company at great prices. If you bought these companies whenever and just DCA down you would be smiling ear to ear right now.
I like that you give examples of using this method to pick when to buy, but what I don’t like is you seemingly cherry pick the top vs the bottom. On hindsight you might not know that is the bottom 🙁 nonetheless I really value your opinion keep it up!
Can you do SOFI evaulation?
That argumentation in some cases has no sense. I repeat, in some cases. The goal is not to buy the stock on a lower multiple. But to pay less for more value (even if that value will come in the future). That's why you can't look at a stock from a one graph or one side perspective, but as a multitude of factors, values and metrics. Imagine that you have 1000 dollars and you want to buy Costco, a low margin low growth company, at 15 PE. What is the reasoning of it when you have the money when the company was 200 per share, and now they're near 1000 and still it didn't go down to low multiples??
I bought MSFT at 140 when the dip of covid happened. If I would've wait until the stock was cheap, that means I should've bought it 2 or 3 years later, when the multiples were better but the price doubled?? That has no sense
Jimmy you are smarter than that. I can not believe you fold to that reasoning
This is a fair point 🎯 and I clearly did a poor job of explaining my intentions with this video. I sincerely apologize for that! I never intended to imply that a single metric could tell investors if a stock was a good buy or not. I was simply trying to point out that when we buy a stock is also important AFTER we've done an analysis of the business itself.
To illustrate what I was hoping this video would show, using your Microsoft example as a great example. Back in 2020 when Microsoft dropped below 150, the PE ratio for MSFT at that time was 26X. But right before covid, the PE ratio was closer to 35x and by 2021, it was back up in the high 30's and low 40x range. So buying the pullback as you did was a brilliant move and supports the intention (although poorly explained I've now realized) of the video. Buy great companies a good prices and our returns will add up in the long run.
Costco is another great example. Over the past five years, its stock price has risen from $300 to $900. However, during that time, its PE ratio fluctuated from the low 30s to the high 50s. What I wanted to illustrate in the video is that the difference in returns can be significant depending on whether you buy when the stock is closer to the bottom or the top of its PE range.
Again, I apologize for the lack of clarity. I'll work to present this information better in the future to provide a fuller understanding of the concept. 😬👍🎯
@LearntoInvest Don't apologize, you're the best. I've been following you since the beginning. You're the reason I thought about opening a YT channel. Keep doing what you do. We do appreciate you a lot
why do you compare 2021 - 2024 stock price to 2019 - 2024 other metrics?
Dont think people like tesla as much as they use to. Seeing someone drive a tesla is like seeing someone support elon.
I usually like your videos, but there is a lot of bad advice to be inferred here.
If you can time the market perfectly, which IS being implied by comparing the lows, you should already be the richest person in the world.
Better teachings say that time in the market always beats timing the market. Also, buying good companies at bad prices, is better than buying bad companies and good prices.
Although, these teachings are long term investing mindsets, not
This is a great point, and I apologize I didn’t clarify a few points a bit more. For example, dollar cost averaging on a great company simplifies this whole process. I should have spent some time with that.
And when I was working through what I wanted to talk about in the video, I was afraid it might come off as promoting trying to time the market. That wasn’t my intention. I was more trying to point out that the idea of buying a company at any price and trying to ride it “to the moon” doesn’t really play out that way much of the time.
Im a big fan of buffets saying, buy great companies at good prices or even a decent prices and in the long run we’ll do well. But if we pay 700x for Tesla, we’re making our journey a bit tougher.
I apologize that I wasn’t clearer with my intention, and not stating up front things like DCA, I was hoping to just bring up something for investors to keep in the back of their mind when they do their analysis. 😬 thanks for the feedback and I’ll make sure I do better next time 👍
Do you need a professional thumbnail designer
Elon being acting like a pet dog on Twitter. I wouldn’t touch Telse until it’s around 150-170😂
Recently bought some recommended stocks and now they are just penny stocks. There seems to be more negative portfolios in 2024 with the markets tumbling, soaring inflation, and banks going out of business. My concern is how can the rapid interest-rate hike be of favor to a value investor, or is it better avoiding stocks for a while?
Simply "buy and hold," dude. It will be worthwhile in the long run. Although higher interest rates typically translate into lower stock prices, investors should be wary of the bull run. To reach your growth objectives and prevent mistakes, it's best to speak with an experienced adviser.
Very true, you can be passively involved in the markts and still amass wealth-gains using an investment advisor. I first dabbled in stocks late 2019, just before the pandemic, and that same year gained over 150% with no prior investing experience, basically all I was doing was following directions of my advisor. We are working on a retirement ballpark of $3m and I’m certain my goal isn’t farfetched after subsequent investments and tremendous returns so far.
This is quite remarkable! Would you kindly provide your advisor's details? My portfolio is currently experiencing severe retrogression, thus I must decide whether to sell some of my holdings or hang onto them. I am in desperate need of asset allocation.
One well-known person in her field is my CFA *Layan Talia Chokr.* I suggest looking over her credentials in more detail. Her extensive knowledge makes her an invaluable asset to anyone attempting to manage the financial market.
I just looked her up on the internet and found her webpage with her credentials. I wrote her a outlining my financial objectives and planned a call with her