The Rolex Forums   The Rolex Watch

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX


Go Back   Rolex Forums - Rolex Watch Forum > General Topics > Open Discussion Forum

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 9 May 2022, 10:34 PM   #9451
Uggi
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: HOME!
Posts: 1,175
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
I’m not fearful of it’s lack of backing. I think that’s one of the big selling points.

I’m more fearful in that if I lose my password, my money goes bye bye. Or if a hacker gets at it. Or it can simply be wiped out like just happen during that thing with the virtual real estate.

The idea of owning virtual “property” such as art or real estate is foreign to me, and I believe signified the beginning of the end. It signified that there simply was too much money out there and folks were literally inventing things to spend money on.

That’s why we are here now. At the beginning of a great big bear. Too much money gone rampant in all markets. Real estate, financial, crypto, luxury, etc.
Strongly agree with this. Include Rolex watches and sports cars in there too. Too much printed money, backed by nothing, so folk have had to invent “value” where it doesn’t exist to justify a use for all that money.
Crazy times.
Uggi is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9 May 2022, 10:44 PM   #9452
scarlet knight
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: USA
Watch: Good ones
Posts: 8,154
On the “money” analysis.

Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
I’m not fearful of it’s lack of backing. I think that’s one of the big selling points.

I’m more fearful in that if I lose my password, my money goes bye bye. Or if a hacker gets at it. Or it can simply be wiped out like just happen during that thing with the virtual real estate.

The idea of owning virtual “property” such as art or real estate is foreign to me, and I believe signified the beginning of the end. It signified that there simply was too much money out there and folks were literally inventing things to spend money on.

That’s why we are here now. At the beginning of a great big bear. Too much money gone rampant in all markets. Real estate, financial, crypto, luxury, etc.
What goes up must go down. No one sees it coming, they plan on permanently rising prices. Bitcoin, momo stocks, real estate going down. When no one thinks they can possibly go up, they do.
scarlet knight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9 May 2022, 10:50 PM   #9453
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by Uggi View Post
Strongly agree with this. Include Rolex watches and sports cars in there too. Too much printed money, backed by nothing, so folk have had to invent “value” where it doesn’t exist to justify a use for all that money.
Crazy times.
Quote:
Originally Posted by scarlet knight View Post
What goes up must go down. No one sees it coming, they plan on permanently rising prices. Bitcoin, momo stocks, real estate going down. When no one thinks they can possibly go up, they do.
Agreed on all.

And that’s why I put luxury goods. Watches and sports cars are some of most egregious examples of the challenges we are now facing.

People don’t think they will tank. I do. I think they will both tank hard. Along with everything else.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 9 May 2022, 11:13 PM   #9454
huncho
2024 Pledge Member
 
huncho's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: nyc
Posts: 6,347
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
Agreed on all.

And that’s why I put luxury goods. Watches and sports cars are some of most egregious examples of the challenges we are now facing.

People don’t think they will tank. I do. I think they will both tank hard. Along with everything else.
it's interesting how literally everything is crashing at the same time, and crashing hard. imagine the safest thing right now is to hold cash during 8% inflation (and that number is tweaked for the better for sure). nothing is safe and to me that's the craziest part of it all
huncho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 12:56 AM   #9455
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by huncho View Post
it's interesting how literally everything is crashing at the same time, and crashing hard. imagine the safest thing right now is to hold cash during 8% inflation (and that number is tweaked for the better for sure). nothing is safe and to me that's the craziest part of it all
Sure is ugly today. But everything tanking still once is the cheapest indicator pointing to the fact that literally everything is overweight.

I’ve saved a small fortune by going to cash. But my fear is I didn’t liquidate enough. Debating pulling more out. But I don’t want to be out of equities completely.

I think we have another 15% to go. Easy.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:02 AM   #9456
huncho
2024 Pledge Member
 
huncho's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: nyc
Posts: 6,347
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
Sure is ugly today. But everything tanking still once is the cheapest indicator pointing to the fact that literally everything is overweight.

I’ve saved a small fortune by going to cash. But my fear is I didn’t liquidate enough. Debating pulling more out. But I don’t want to be out of equities completely.

I think we have another 15% to go. Easy.
yeah it's worrying to see how far there is to go still but just insane that we've now had 5 weeks of red and no signs of relief anywhere for more than a few hours
huncho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:12 AM   #9457
jaisonline
2024 Pledge Member
 
jaisonline's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2015
Location: USA
Watch: 5 digit models
Posts: 1,515
Talking Stocks 2.0

Quote:
Originally Posted by huncho View Post
yeah it's worrying to see how far there is to go still but just insane that we've now had 5 weeks of red and no signs of relief anywhere for more than a few hours

I’m sure people are getting hit with margin calls while others are cutting their losses. Lots of selling. I’m an idiot for not holding SARK over the weekend as my hedge. At least I still have over 20% in cash. Although I don’t see it being used anytime soon. When the tech biggies finally are getting hit hard (AMZN, APPL, etc…), you know the market is F’d for a while.

I’m thinking this will be like 2000 & 2008 but w/ inflation, COVID lockdowns, and Russia/ China mixed in. Brutal.
jaisonline is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:28 AM   #9458
scarlet knight
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: USA
Watch: Good ones
Posts: 8,154
Everyone laughs, but municipal bonds now yield 4-4.25%. Buy some now, buy some over the next few months as rates rise. If the Fed breaks inflation, the munis will look good.
scarlet knight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:35 AM   #9459
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by huncho View Post
yeah it's worrying to see how far there is to go still but just insane that we've now had 5 weeks of red and no signs of relief anywhere for more than a few hours
Kevin O'Leary says you are losing 8% in a bank account.

Instead should put it into a low cost fund.

Is he out of his mind? These funds have all lost circa 15%. So then you are losing the 8% of inflation and the circa 15% and then some depending on the next few months...

c'mon. thats just dumb.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:35 AM   #9460
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by scarlet knight View Post
Everyone laughs, but municipal bonds now yield 4-4.25%. Buy some now, buy some over the next few months as rates rise. If the Fed breaks inflation, the munis will look good.
This is my current plan.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:53 AM   #9461
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by jaisonline View Post
I’m sure people are getting hit with margin calls while others are cutting their losses. Lots of selling. I’m an idiot for not holding SARK over the weekend as my hedge. At least I still have over 20% in cash. Although I don’t see it being used anytime soon. When the tech biggies finally are getting hit hard (AMZN, APPL, etc…), you know the market is F’d for a while.

I’m thinking this will be like 2000 & 2008 but w/ inflation, COVID lockdowns, and Russia/ China mixed in. Brutal.
my split is as follows:

38% equity
32% cash
21% fixed income
9% gold

I really think I should be selling more equities.

If I believe it is going down further, and I do, I don't understand why I would keep it. But I am hesitant because I do think I should stay active too.

I suppose I am thinking long term with what is in there now. And I do agree that timing the market is near impossible to do typically...

But I also think that these are different times. and that history is not the best indicator....And if you know its going down, why the name of all the financial gods should I keep it just to watch it go down?

Truly on the fence here.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 01:57 AM   #9462
Alan111
"TRF" Member
 
Alan111's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: NYC
Posts: 1,605
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
This is my current plan.
Quote:
Originally Posted by scarlet knight View Post
Everyone laughs, but municipal bonds now yield 4-4.25%. Buy some now, buy some over the next few months as rates rise. If the Fed breaks inflation, the munis will look good.
What's the easiest way to go about this? Is there an ETF?
Alan111 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:09 AM   #9463
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by Alan111 View Post
What's the easiest way to go about this? Is there an ETF?
I dont think it is very difficult, but not sure the best way. My FA will buy it.

But we now meet weekly to discuss what is happening. and our last conversation revolved around the fact that as rates go up, so will fixed income opportunities.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:31 AM   #9464
hkuo
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2019
Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 86
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
my split is as follows:

38% equity
32% cash
21% fixed income
9% gold

I really think I should be selling more equities.

If I believe it is going down further, and I do, I don't understand why I would keep it. But I am hesitant because I do think I should stay active too.

I suppose I am thinking long term with what is in there now. And I do agree that timing the market is near impossible to do typically...

But I also think that these are different times. and that history is not the best indicator....And if you know its going down, why the name of all the financial gods should I keep it just to watch it go down?

Truly on the fence here.
Superdog, just curious what yours and your FA’s thoughts are on buying puts if your view is that the market will continue to decline? I’ve never bought puts before so this is more me trying to learn.
hkuo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:52 AM   #9465
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
Quote:
Originally Posted by hkuo View Post
Superdog, just curious what yours and your FA’s thoughts are on buying puts if your view is that the market will continue to decline? I’ve never bought puts before so this is more me trying to learn.
that is just too risky for me. I don't play with any of that. I don't have the stomach for it.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:55 AM   #9466
SDGT3
"TRF" Member
 
SDGT3's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2019
Real Name: Phillip
Location: Right here
Watch: SD43 Daytona Blusy
Posts: 1,807
Quote:
Originally Posted by huncho View Post
it's interesting how literally everything is crashing at the same time, and crashing hard. imagine the safest thing right now is to hold cash during 8% inflation (and that number is tweaked for the better for sure). nothing is safe and to me that's the craziest part of it all
Holding cash perhaps means losing 8%+ with inflation but how good does that cash look now that equities are on sale for 17-50% off and still declining? I too think there's some ways to go on the downside. We still haven't seen the panic selling yet.
SDGT3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:58 AM   #9467
m j b
"TRF" Member
 
m j b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Real Name: Michael
Location: RTP, NC, USA
Watch: ♕& Ω
Posts: 5,108
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
that is just too risky for me. I don't play with any of that. I don't have the stomach for it.
I've bought puts in the past.

Consistently, without fail, I've lost money on it.
__________________
Enjoy life - it has an expiration date.


Disclaimer: Please note that the avatar is not an accurate representation of how I look. The camera adds 10 pounds...
m j b is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 02:59 AM   #9468
huncho
2024 Pledge Member
 
huncho's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: nyc
Posts: 6,347
Quote:
Originally Posted by SDGT3 View Post
Holding cash perhaps means losing 8%+ with inflation but how good does that cash look now that equities are on sale for 17-50% off and still declining? I too think there's some ways to go on the downside. We still haven't seen the panic selling yet.
i think we're definitely in the panic selling and margin calls phase right now, but that was my point. how crazy is it that there's not a single thing safe from the chaos and inflation right now

the last few days are just scenes from the movie "margin call"
huncho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 03:10 AM   #9469
hkuo
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2019
Location: SF Bay Area
Posts: 86
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
that is just too risky for me. I don't play with any of that. I don't have the stomach for it.
Got it and thank you!
hkuo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 05:46 AM   #9470
superdog
2024 Pledge Member
 
superdog's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Real Name: Seth
Location: nj
Watch: Omega
Posts: 24,703
BTC is down just about 10% today.

Apparently all of crypto is pretty far down.

Just too volatile for me right now. Massive amounts of wealth have literally been wiped away in the last few months. Yikes.
__________________
If happiness is a state of mind, why look anywhere else for it?

IG: gsmotorclub
IG: thesawcollection

(Both mostly just car stuff)
superdog is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 06:57 AM   #9471
scarlet knight
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: USA
Watch: Good ones
Posts: 8,154
The best way is to buy individual municipal bonds.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Alan111 View Post
What's the easiest way to go about this? Is there an ETF?
If you buy a muni bond ETF or mutual fund, the price of the fund will go down as interest rates go up. You will lose money.

If you buy an actual bond, the interest is fixed and you get your principal back when the bond matures.

You can buy these bonds from brokers who specialize in munis. You need $5000-10,000 per bond.
scarlet knight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 07:06 AM   #9472
huncho
2024 Pledge Member
 
huncho's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2017
Location: nyc
Posts: 6,347
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
BTC is down just about 10% today.

Apparently all of crypto is pretty far down.

Just too volatile for me right now. Massive amounts of wealth have literally been wiped away in the last few months. Yikes.
crypto is tanking hard for multiple reasons. basically whales and funds are forced to liquidate btc and eth to keep a protocol running otherwise there will be a mass liquidation. i can go into more details but not sure if anyone cares lol. the stock market definitely doesn't help but that was the reason it was down over 10% over the weekend

here's a twitter thread explaining it in short (9 tweets, continues if you click on the 4/)

https://twitter.com/blockworks_/stat...347196928?s=21

your point still stands of course, every week something ridiculous happens in that space to cause volatility
huncho is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 07:58 AM   #9473
Laszlo
2024 ROLEX DATEJUST41 Pledge Member
 
Laszlo's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: San Francisco, CA
Watch: Date & No Date
Posts: 10,857
It kinda feels like 1929, 2000, and 2008 all combined into one &@$t show.
__________________
"You might as well question why we breathe. If we stop breathing, we'll die. If we stop fighting our enemies, the world will die."

Paul Henreid as Victor Laszlo in Casablanca
Laszlo is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 08:10 AM   #9474
SDGT3
"TRF" Member
 
SDGT3's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2019
Real Name: Phillip
Location: Right here
Watch: SD43 Daytona Blusy
Posts: 1,807
I remember in 2000 when the Nasdaq was at 5000 and dropped to around 2500ish... maybe lower, don't remember exactly. Never sold to lock in those losses. Wasn't easy and it took years but held them for the ride back up and beyond.

Nearly every asset class has declined now with the exception of RE. Wonder how that's going to look in 6 months.
SDGT3 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 08:22 AM   #9475
scarlet knight
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: USA
Watch: Good ones
Posts: 8,154
A real estate decline is baked in because….

Quote:
Originally Posted by SDGT3 View Post
I remember in 2000 when the Nasdaq was at 5000 and dropped to around 2500ish... maybe lower, don't remember exactly. Never sold to lock in those losses. Wasn't easy and it took years but held them for the ride back up and beyond.

Nearly every asset class has declined now with the exception of RE. Wonder how that's going to look in 6 months.
Mortgage rates are zooming higher. Reflexively, housing prices have to go down.
scarlet knight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 12:54 PM   #9476
EndlessEight
2024 ROLEX DATEJUST41 Pledge Member
 
EndlessEight's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: NJ, USA
Watch: Hulk, BLRO
Posts: 1,595
Quote:
Originally Posted by m j b View Post
I've bought puts in the past.

Consistently, without fail, I've lost money on it.
The algorithms push the money into max pain every time.


Anyway. It will be interesting to see which big player collapses first.
EndlessEight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 12:55 PM   #9477
EndlessEight
2024 ROLEX DATEJUST41 Pledge Member
 
EndlessEight's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2019
Location: NJ, USA
Watch: Hulk, BLRO
Posts: 1,595
Quote:
Originally Posted by Laszlo View Post
It kinda feels like 1929, 2000, and 2008 all combined into one &@$t show.
Yes. Burry thinks this one will eclipse those.
EndlessEight is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 03:51 PM   #9478
330ci
"TRF" Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2020
Location: michigan
Posts: 2,289
Quote:
Originally Posted by Laszlo View Post
It kinda feels like 1929, 2000, and 2008 all combined into one &@$t show.
Who could've seen any of it coming *sarcasm*

Its pretty bad out there right now.

We haven't seen anything yet though
330ci is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 04:45 PM   #9479
Uggi
Banned
 
Join Date: Apr 2018
Location: HOME!
Posts: 1,175
Quote:
Originally Posted by SDGT3 View Post
I remember in 2000 when the Nasdaq was at 5000 and dropped to around 2500ish... maybe lower, don't remember exactly. Never sold to lock in those losses. Wasn't easy and it took years but held them for the ride back up and beyond.

Nearly every asset class has declined now with the exception of RE. Wonder how that's going to look in 6 months.
This is a good point. I too held through 2000 and also through 2008 and ultimately it will swing back upwards if you have the time to ride it out. Obviously nicer if you can liquidate before it happens then buy back in at the bottom but I can’t liquidate my pension and don’t want to liquidate other positions either (I have liquidated some).
The big problem is for those who don’t have time and need their nest eggs in the next 5 years. That is going to hurt. If you have a 10+ years outlook there is still an argument to just hold through it, adding where possible.
Uggi is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 10 May 2022, 09:23 PM   #9480
m j b
"TRF" Member
 
m j b's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2011
Real Name: Michael
Location: RTP, NC, USA
Watch: ♕& Ω
Posts: 5,108
Quote:
Originally Posted by superdog View Post
BTC is down just about 10% today.

Apparently all of crypto is pretty far down.

Just too volatile for me right now. Massive amounts of wealth have literally been wiped away in the last few months. Yikes.
I read in one of my newsletters this morning (Morning Brew, I believe) that 40% of BTC holders are currently under water.

There's really no way to know this, it can only be speculation (or based on reports from dealers like Coinbase) but since (my guess) 90% of crypto investors are too young to have lived through a bear market, it will be interesting to see how long they can HODL out. LOL.

I sold out of my Cardano position at a loss a couple of months ago, but saved myself a 45% haircut. So I guess that's something to be happy about.

Don't ask me about my biotech.

I also started buying SPY yesterday. Since we (well, me anyway) can't find the bottom until a month after it happens, it's time to start dipping the toes back in, just one toe at a time.
__________________
Enjoy life - it has an expiration date.


Disclaimer: Please note that the avatar is not an accurate representation of how I look. The camera adds 10 pounds...
m j b is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 4 (0 members and 4 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump

OCWatches

DavidSW Watches

Takuya Watches

My Watch LLC


*Banners Of The Month*
This space is provided to horological resources.





Copyright ©2004-2024, The Rolex Forums. All Rights Reserved.

ROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEXROLEX

Rolex is a registered trademark of ROLEX USA. The Rolex Forums is not affiliated with ROLEX USA in any way.