MoneyDiary
voted
Hello Mooers!
A short overview of equal weighted FANG, FAANG, the Magnificent Seven, the Fab Five, and the Fantastic 4 YTD performance, rounded to 2 decimal places.
A quick overview of the stocks and their YTD performance inside them is provided below.
Do you think their YTD will continue to rise next week (1 Apr to 5 Apr 2024)?
That's all for today, and always remember to DYODD (Do your own due diligence) when making any kind of inv...
A short overview of equal weighted FANG, FAANG, the Magnificent Seven, the Fab Five, and the Fantastic 4 YTD performance, rounded to 2 decimal places.
A quick overview of the stocks and their YTD performance inside them is provided below.
Do you think their YTD will continue to rise next week (1 Apr to 5 Apr 2024)?
That's all for today, and always remember to DYODD (Do your own due diligence) when making any kind of inv...
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MoneyDiary
liked
Today All-in! I have time to wait for a callback.
For me, the most painful thing about buying stocks is not the pullbacks, because after each pullback, they almost end up in waves. It's just a matter of time, as long as the direction is right, AI is the red train this year and Nvidia is the leading stock. Nothing else bothers me.
The most painful thing about buying stocks for me is that I don't get on the train every time I go up or even go up, watch the stock day after day, the news reports on how much someone else makes, and that agony is more painful than when it comes back. During a bull market, I choose to chase high and gladly accept the callbacks. But I don't want to wait to buy them all the time, I don't want to wait every day for a month, I don't want to sleep well, take stock on my own or even pay it back, and I regret not buying them at first.
Please don't teach me. I just chose to buy stocks the way that was most comfortable for me. For me, the recall is a loss. But earning less is also losing. Both opportunities are the same.
The pullback process often takes some time to go up and back, enough time to go up more, and then find my favorite price to sell, which is how I've been buying stocks to make money.
For me, the most painful thing about buying stocks is not the pullbacks, because after each pullback, they almost end up in waves. It's just a matter of time, as long as the direction is right, AI is the red train this year and Nvidia is the leading stock. Nothing else bothers me.
The most painful thing about buying stocks for me is that I don't get on the train every time I go up or even go up, watch the stock day after day, the news reports on how much someone else makes, and that agony is more painful than when it comes back. During a bull market, I choose to chase high and gladly accept the callbacks. But I don't want to wait to buy them all the time, I don't want to wait every day for a month, I don't want to sleep well, take stock on my own or even pay it back, and I regret not buying them at first.
Please don't teach me. I just chose to buy stocks the way that was most comfortable for me. For me, the recall is a loss. But earning less is also losing. Both opportunities are the same.
The pullback process often takes some time to go up and back, enough time to go up more, and then find my favorite price to sell, which is how I've been buying stocks to make money.
Translated
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MoneyDiary
voted
$Super Micro Computer(SMCI.US$
i feel that theres still some steam left to push this stock upwards.
what do you guys think?
i feel that theres still some steam left to push this stock upwards.
what do you guys think?
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$NVIDIA (NVDA.US) panic sold at the bottom and chased the pump. poor thing....
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$Palantir (PLTR.US)$ Slowly craw back to 25
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MoneyDiary
commented on
$Palantir(PLTR.US$ woah what to do now!!! wait or sell?
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