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May 6, 2002
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You want to build wealth? Buy stocks of good companies with good dividends - and hold them for 20 years.
Different people have different styles.
Plus I have different portfolios for different approaches.
My IRA is like that, but why would my brokerage account be like that?

What's a good company today may not be a good company tomorrow.
What pays a dividend today may not pay a dividend tomorrow.

Over 20 years ago K Mart was the rage. Where is it now?
Sears was KING back in the 70s. Now, not so much...

You can't just say "buy good companies with good dividends". That's just asking for trouble. My major holdings are ALL good companies and they ALL pay 3-5%, but it doesn't mean I hold them no matter what, through thick and thin.
 
May 7, 2013
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www.hoescantstopme.biz
Did not short MNST (yet) - still reaching all time highs (are they shopping it?); may pull trigger soon

bought SDRL a while ago, looking for 20% gain before dump.

Contemplating a few other moves.

I am now >1000 shares INTC (I know, still a very small fish:siccness:)

-----

Some good sites to utilize for research:

finviz.com

briefing.com

forex.com
 
May 6, 2002
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Dumped TWTR too soon but it's OK. Rather not be too greedy.

SDRL looks interesting, I wanted to up my oil portofolio (even though I am already heavy) so I bought some more XOM (even though it's at a high) this morning.

Not really sure what my next move is. Looking for a big gap down so I can pick something up. I really want JNJ (Johnson & Johnson) but that's also too high. Just not much to pick from right now.

I don't know why I am playing it so safe. Dumped WDC early. Dumped TWTR early. It's just the market it too high right now. At least I haven't bought into ETF's like TVIX and TZA...even though it's super tempting.

Not sure what to do right now. Just going to wait.
12.5% sitting in cash, not too excessive but eventually I am going to need to put it to work.
 
May 7, 2013
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www.hoescantstopme.biz
Druckenmiller: Get out of the stock market, own gold



Legendary billionaire investor Stanley Druckenmiller told Sohn Investment Conference attendees to sell their equity holdings Wednesday.

"The conference wants a specific recommendation from me. I guess 'Get out of the stock market' isn't clear enough," said Druckenmiller from the conference stage in New York. Gold "remains our largest currency allocation."

The billionaire investor expressed skepticism about the current investment environment due to Federal Reserve's easy monetary policy and a slowing Chinese economy.
"The Fed has borrowed from future consumption more than ever before. It is the least data dependent Fed in history. This is is the longest deviation from historical norms in terms of Fed dovishness than I have ever seen in my career," Druckenmiller said. "This kind of myopia causes reckless behavior."




Here’s How George Soros’s Latest Predictions Have Played Out



George Soros, the 85-year-old billionaire who broke the Bank of England in 1992, is becoming more involved in day-to-day trading at his family office, taking a series of big, bearish bets.
Soros is best known for netting $1 billion as a hedge fund manager decades ago when he and his then-chief strategist Stan Druckenmiller wagered that the U.K. would be forced to devalue the pound. His predictions haven’t always played out so well.
Anticipating weakness in various global markets, his Soros Fund Management cut its publicly disclosed U.S. stock holdings by 37 percent in the first quarter while buying shares of gold miners and an exchange-traded fund tracking the price of the precious metal.
Since then, the S&P 500 Index has returned 3.1 percent. Barrick Gold Corp., his largest new position disclosed in the quarter, fared better, jumping 44 percent.
let the games begin

 
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May 6, 2002
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Up 10% on TZA. This hedge is miniscule compared to the beating my actual portfolio is taking. Although it helps...

Watching financials. Maybe BAC will hit $10. For sure I'm in a $9.
Also watching WDC and TWTR. Might jump back in. More comfortable with WDC than TWTR though.
 
May 7, 2013
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www.hoescantstopme.biz


Top Ten Holdings

Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Bank Of America Na 96.91%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Morgan Stanley & Co. International Plc 56.59%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Morgan Stanley & Co. International Plc - Cas 56.59%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Societe Generale 35.62%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Ubs Ag 5.16%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Deutsche Bank Ag 2.47%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Credit Suisse International 2.08%
Dj U.S. Real Estate Index Swap Goldman Sachs International 1.13%
Ishares U.S. Real Estate (Iyr) Swap Bank Of America Na 0.30%
Ishares U.S. Real Estate (Iyr) Swap Morgan Stanley & Co. International Plc 0.23%


What is an 'Inverse ETF'
An inverse ETF is an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that is constructed by using various derivatives for the purpose of profiting from a decline in the value of an underlying benchmark. Investing in these ETFs is similar to holding various short positions, or using a combination of advanced investment strategies to profit from falling prices.

Also known as a "Short ETF," or "Bear ETF."

BREAKING DOWN 'Inverse ETF'

One advantage is that these ETFs do not require the investor to hold a margin account as would be the case for investors looking to enter into short positions.

There are several inverse ETFs that can be used to profit from declines in broad market indexes, such as the Russell 2000 or the Nasdaq 100. In addition, it is possible to buy inverse ETFs that focus on a specific sector, such as financials, energy or consumer staples. Most investors look to purchase inverse ETFs so that they can hedge their portfolios against falling prices.
 
May 6, 2002
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Oh ya, bought TZA the day of Brexit, shot up, could have taken a little 1k profit, got greedy, didn't expect this Brexit bounce back (no one did) and dumped it later for a loss.

I should have known better for holding an triple ETF for too long.
 
May 7, 2013
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Puerto Rico Can’t—And Shouldn’t—Pay Its Debts Just to Enrich Wall Street Profiteers

JULY 1, 2016
With interest rates of 785 percent, the island got stiffed by the municipal equivalent of a payday loan


Puerto Rico defaulted on nearly $2 billion of debt payments this morning, including $780 million in constitutionally-guaranteed general obligation debt, almost exactly a year after the New York Times reported that Governor Alejandro García Padilla had declared that the island’s debt “not payable.”

Without a doubt, the debt is not payable because the Commonwealth cannot pay all of it. The Commonwealth’s per capita tax burden of $15,637 is more than 10 times higher than that of the average state ($1,419) and nearly three times higher than that of the highest state (Connecticut, with $5,491). But just as importantly, Puerto Rico should not pay everything that gets included in its total outstanding debt because much of that debt is illegitimate.

The ReFund America Project released a report yesterday, called Puerto Rico’s Payday Loans, that shows that $33.5 billion of the island’s so-called debt is actually interest on capital appreciation bonds (CABs)—the municipal version of a payday loan. The Commonwealth borrowed $4.3 billion in principal and has to pay it back with 785 percent interest. Moreover, because of the way these deals are structured, most of the $33.5 billion is interest that hasn’t even accrued yet. It is future interest. In other words, this is not money that anyone actually lent to Puerto Rico. It is pure investor profit.

Furthermore, 63 percent of Puerto Rico’s CAB debt belongs to its Sales Tax Financing Corporation, more commonly known by its Spanish acronym of COFINA. The COFINA structure was created to refinance what was considered at the time to be “extra-constitutional” debt—a term that no one has ever defined, but that sure doesn’t sound very legal. Although the Puerto Rico Commission for the Comprehensive Audit of the Public Credit’s Pre-audit Survey Report[ame="http://big.assets.huffingtonpost.com/Puerto_Rico_Interim_Debt_Report_FINAL.pdf"]Pre-audit Survey Report[/ame] did not discuss COFINA bonds specifically, it alluded to the fact that there could be potential grounds for legally voiding some or all of this extra-constitutional debt.

Finally, Puerto Rico’s CAB debt is currently trading on the secondary markets for as little as 5 cents on the dollar. That means that some of the bondholders who now own the debt bought it for 5 percent of its face value, but they still want to be paid back the full face value. The reason why they were able to buy the debt at such steep discounts was that the previous bondholders had already written down the loans as bad debt. They did not expect to be paid more than 5 percent of the principal, so they sold it to vulture hedge funds and other creditors who are now looking to make a large profit of as much as 1,900 percent.

Bondholders are trying to make such excessive profits at a time when Puerto Rico is in the throes of a devastating humanitarian crisis that is being exacerbated by the austerity measures put in place to enable the island to pay back its debt. It is bad enough to force the people of Puerto Rico to endure unconscionable cuts to pay off creditors. It is downright immoral to force them to endure pain and suffering so that investors can be paid triple-digit interest rates and get quadruple-digit returns on their investment for deals that may be illegal.

Congress passed the Puerto Rico Oversight, Management and Economic Stability Act (PROMESA) this past Wednesday, creating an unelected, colonial control board to oversee the Commonwealth’s finances and restructure its debt. The PROMESA control board will hold the future of Puerto Ricans in its hands, even though they will not have any representation on the board. The PROMESA control board must adopt principles that put Puerto Ricans’ needs ahead of investor greed. To this end, it should:

Cancel the $33.5 billion in payday interest that Puerto Rico owes on its CABs;
Investigate the legality of the extra-constitutional debt and take legal action to void any debt deemed illegal; and
Refuse to pay bondholders more than they paid to purchase the CABs.
These principles are a first step in ensuring that Wall Street investors are not able to profiteer off the CAB debt on the backs of the people of Puerto Rico. Legally and morally, that debt is not payable.
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Saqib Bhatti is a fellow at the Roosevelt Institute and Director of the ReFund America Project.
 
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May 6, 2002
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Sold LB at a 7% gain. Not something I wanted to get stuck with. Rode the "great sales for June" news as far as I wanted to take it. Pretty much just covered my previous TZA loss.

Have some divi's coming in. Think I am just going to add to my DIS holding.

I don't know much about GILD. I stayed away from the whole biopharm sector, from the ride up to the ride down.

Not sure what I am going to do now. Just wait for something...
 
May 22, 2006
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Alright! A stock thread. I bought nugt at 90$ and sold today for 160. I bought more nugt at 158 and sold for 161. Made roughly 700$ on that. Ill wait for it to take a big drop and then throw my "house money" at it. I also bought 20 more shares of nvda yesterday. That has been my favorite stock this year. Im ready to make a decent size play on oil. I was in cabo a few weeks ago and a guy at the pool told me to buy rlyp, he said he had a bunch and was hoping for a buyout. I bought 20 shares at around 20$ each and less than a week later the buyout happened at 32 a share. Cool story bro