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It does exist right now. The problem is that neither you nor I are very likely to be the ones to find it. :-/ |
I would stay away from Geno's stock. That shit is going to go down like a East Buch freshman.
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The only guys left in the game at this point should be the arbitrageurs. You're basically betting $1,200 to make, what? About a buck? Current stock price is $72.49 and Buffet's purchase price is $72.50 and you own like 80 shares if my math adds up. If you have to pay separate transaction costs for each sale then you're really being silly. IMHO, next time, take the money and run Lebowski. EDIT: Sorry, don't mean to be Debbie Downer -- congrats! It's certainly a very sweet moment of victory. |
Okay, I got my $5,000 back and I just put $2,000 into Carnival Cruise stock. It's down 5% in two days, and all they have to do is fix the engine and hose the ship down. I bought a smidgen of Carnival stock last year after that ship tipped over in Italy, and have made 33% on it in 13 months.
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In 1991 and 1992, I bought Dell stock twice when it was a very young company. I was living in Austin at the time, and it wasn't a lot of money, but I was a poor grad student. Both times, I doubled my money, sold out, and thought I was a genius. However, if I hadn't sold, that $4,000 in stock would've been worth $250,000 by the end of the 90s. I was standing in the middle of a gold mine, and I walked out. It. Kills. Me. So now I have a strategy, and I stick to it religiously. I buy stock in lumps of $4,000 or $5,000. When I get to the point where I've made 20%, I sell out my original share and leave the profit in. That way, if the stock goes down I haven't lost any of my principal, and if the stock goes all Dell I'll still get the upside, albeit in a smaller dose. But I won't completely miss the boat. I've been using this system for about 6 or 7 years now. The result is that I'm slowly building my own mutual fund of dividend-paying stocks with growth potential that I've hand-picked. It disseminates my risk but also gives me enough concentration that I have the potential to beat the market significantly. |
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Back in 2009, I looked at all the mandates hospitals were facing (and incentives they were receiving) to go to electronic medical records and upgrade their information systems. There just happens to be a local company (Cerner) that is in that market. Not only did it present a unique opportunity to root for a local company, I knew a few people who worked there and it seemed to be a very solidly run organization. I bought about as much Cerner stock as I could afford at that time. As of today, it's up 167%. That situation is unique in that it all lined up so nicely for me, but it's an example of understanding what you're buying. If you don't know the company, you're not really investing. You're gambling. |
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There's precisely TWO things that can happen here with Heinz. ONLY TWO. 1. deal closes. You make a buck more than you would have if you'd sold now. 2. the deal doesn't close, and the stock tanks. That second part isn't speculation. If the deal doesn't close FOR ANY REASON the stock will tank. Given that, you can buy the shares back cheaper if the deal doesn't close so you don't miss your Dell opportunity. Of course, Heinz is to young electronic growth stock what Cassel is to young growing quarterbacks, but I digress... So yeah, I think you need a small carve-out from your normal rule, and you can even include the caveat that you will buy back in with profits if the deal tanks. |
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Hell yeah. All that ketchup would go great on a Cheeseburger in Paradise. Love Buffet
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I aspire to be that cat. He looks like he's really got life under control. |
My 401k are all packaged funds setup through the program.
My roth is where I play with my selected mutual funds & stocks. I wish I could put more than the $5-5.5k per year in there because there are several companies I'd like to invest in. Right now I don't want to do that with my non-retirement accounts. |
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We own Berkshire as a long term investment. :thumb: Like it.
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