Totally agree Richard Hopkins. It really made me appreciate the process of looking into the quantified results of a business, whilst placing less emphasis on pure speculation.
Hi Richard I have a question that is irrelevant to this video, but please answer if you can. The Nasdaq 100 is made up with the top 100 tech companies right. I want to figure out which of lets say the top 5 or even 10 of these 100 companies would you say drives the price the Nasdaq 100. How would you approach it. Do I look a those with the highest market cap or with highest volume or would you say it is a combination of both.
What I'm trying to figure out is at the 13:30 Gmt per stock market open. Nasdaq gets volatile and spikes up or down, so what I look at is the main companies like Appel, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, FB etc. I look at the % change and if they are all green I will buy and if they are all red I will sell Nasdaq for sort period of time. But sometimes there is a mix of green and red. That is what I am trying to figure out.
Hi Deuyren, I looked for a resource that would help you with this but I cant find one unfortunately. However I think your plan isn't going to work long term. I would suggest modelling after billionaires like Warren Buffett the way I do :)
@@deuyrenslavers3519 Are u buying a stock that's green every time and checking everyday? That's a losing technique, u need to buy stocks that are undervalued and most often u end up buying them when they are in red. The increase in price per day can happen to any stock , giving each company an equal opportunity to shine. This may be due to tailwinds in the sector. Market cap and market volume has nothing to do with finding the best stocks, u need to start reading financial statements and make your decision.
So right now the majority of my net worth is in Berkshire Hathaway (purchased in March/April of 2020) and NVR which I've been purchasing since 2018. I also own a bit of Snap-On, Texas Pacific land Corp, and Facebook. NVR is still an okay buy right now at it's current price :) Thanks for all your support.
That's a very good result, esp if u can maintain over a long period, and when the market goes sideways. Tracking precisely should be easy w a spreadsheet i would think. All the best w your channel.
@@randomstuff-cd6oq Thanks :) If I can average 15% annually over the course of multiple decades I will feel successful. I'm aiming for 20% annual returns though :)
If you don't mind, can you tell me what part it bothered you at / you noticed it and it was distracting? I've noticed some music increases retention on videos but I also don't want to take away from you being able to get the information out.
@@IntelligentStockInvesting I feel a bit distracted when you add music during your explanation and also the songs I've heard in your recent videos feel like the same you hear on motivational videos. I'm not against adding music in videos but during your explanation, I don't think it's necessary but hey it's just my opinion😃. I love watching your videos and I've learned a lot through them. Sorry if I make you feel bad man, It wasn't my intention. Appreciate the knowledge you share about investing. Keep up the good work👍🏾
Here's how you can pick and analyze undervalued stocks strategically and systematically: th-cam.com/video/46OIdfGaK-Q/w-d-xo.html
This is what we all needed to listen!
🙌🙌
Likewise Richard Hopkins... i canned my price charts off a long time ago.
Beauty Stew! Happy to hear that :) Thinking about stocks as business ownership is the way to go :)
Totally agree Richard Hopkins. It really made me appreciate the process of looking into the quantified results of a business, whilst placing less emphasis on pure speculation.
You are a smart man. Keep up the great content. Thanks
Thanks, will do!
This is great information thanks!
Glad it was helpful! Big up!
Hi Richard I have a question that is irrelevant to this video, but please answer if you can. The Nasdaq 100 is made up with the top 100 tech companies right. I want to figure out which of lets say the top 5 or even 10 of these 100 companies would you say drives the price the Nasdaq 100. How would you approach it. Do I look a those with the highest market cap or with highest volume or would you say it is a combination of both.
What I'm trying to figure out is at the 13:30 Gmt per stock market open. Nasdaq gets volatile and spikes up or down, so what I look at is the main companies like Appel, Microsoft, Google, Amazon, FB etc. I look at the % change and if they are all green I will buy and if they are all red I will sell Nasdaq for sort period of time. But sometimes there is a mix of green and red. That is what I am trying to figure out.
Hi Deuyren, I looked for a resource that would help you with this but I cant find one unfortunately. However I think your plan isn't going to work long term. I would suggest modelling after billionaires like Warren Buffett the way I do :)
@@deuyrenslavers3519 Are u buying a stock that's green every time and checking everyday? That's a losing technique, u need to buy stocks that are undervalued and most often u end up buying them when they are in red. The increase in price per day can happen to any stock , giving each company an equal opportunity to shine. This may be due to tailwinds in the sector. Market cap and market volume has nothing to do with finding the best stocks, u need to start reading financial statements and make your decision.
Great Knowledge ! We would like to see your investment portfolio .
So right now the majority of my net worth is in Berkshire Hathaway (purchased in March/April of 2020) and NVR which I've been purchasing since 2018. I also own a bit of Snap-On, Texas Pacific land Corp, and Facebook. NVR is still an okay buy right now at it's current price :) Thanks for all your support.
What % gains have u made since starting this channel ? Are u getting results walking the talk ?
Hard to keep track exactly because I add money regularly but well over 40% a year
That's a very good result, esp if u can maintain over a long period, and when the market goes sideways. Tracking precisely should be easy w a spreadsheet i would think. All the best w your channel.
@@randomstuff-cd6oq Thanks :) If I can average 15% annually over the course of multiple decades I will feel successful. I'm aiming for 20% annual returns though :)
Thanks from Nepal
👋🏻 Hi Raju
Hey man
Can you please stop adding music during your explanation?
If you don't mind, can you tell me what part it bothered you at / you noticed it and it was distracting? I've noticed some music increases retention on videos but I also don't want to take away from you being able to get the information out.
@@IntelligentStockInvesting I feel a bit distracted when you add music during your explanation and also the songs I've heard in your recent videos feel like the same you hear on motivational videos. I'm not against adding music in videos but during your explanation, I don't think it's necessary but hey it's just my opinion😃.
I love watching your videos and I've learned a lot through them.
Sorry if I make you feel bad man, It wasn't my intention.
Appreciate the knowledge you share about investing. Keep up the good work👍🏾
You don't need technical analysis as an investor. Fundamental analysis is the WTG.
All the way!