I have my interests set on key sectors based on performance and projected growth. i made my first million from my portfolio ranging from the EV sector, renewable energy, Tech and Health alongside coins, and gold. I'm also working on an investment plan that includes NFTs with my FA Olivia Rene Reyes. It's been a year and half of steady growth...i have no doubt investing more.
Impressive!! Also, I did read about Olivia Rene Reyes on the web, I was able to find her webpage and leave a mail. I'm willing to make consultations to improve my portfolio
Great video as ever Sasha! Would be really interesting to see a video on how you value stocks (on excel) similar to what you have done in previous videos.
I am an income investor. My goal is to increase my income every year. Most of my stocks have developed over the long term. They gradually increased in value, and they have returned dividends year over year. That is my focus, and it has worked well. I am not into growth companies except in the short term. For those I usually sell short term covered calls to again create income.
For me, the question remains to be that unless you have an idea of what that price should be, you can't make an informed decision on when to sell, and I still don't have a relatively simple way to calculate that. If anyone has a template that they'd be willing to share, I'd be very grateful!
Same objectives, sure, to get the highest possible return, but I’d argue there are a vast more amount of long term value investors than traders.. take a look at some of the worlds most wealthiest individuals and go figure, they fall under the investment category. From there, they are typically in it for the longer hall and invested into high quality growth plays.. Buffett says it best with his buying a farm analogy in that you wouldn’t buy a farm to sell it by next week… but you buy a farm to grow crops, for maybe even generations of wealth.. magic is in the formula: patience + consistency = wealth!
This is exactly right. I have my longs and short term equities and treat them as distinct entities. Money moves and we have to adapt to how certain markets respond. If you understand why certain things are happening you are better informed to know when to drop out or jump in - or stay in. I was long on mrna and sold when earnings missed because I knew that's what the rest would do even though NOTHING changed fundamentally. gotta play psychological aspects of it all. Spot on re: TSLA. People who have no exit plan are nutz
Excellent advise! Do your research. Develop a plan including buy and sell price targets. Keep your eye on the ball, frequently re-evaluating your plan as new information comes in. Stick to the plan and buy or sell when your targets are reached....
Disclaimer and then counterargument: First, everyone should learn how and do their own company valuations. However, I think my own long-term-holder mentality is: 1) valuations are imprecise, 2) the market won't price at the correct valuation anyway, even if one could determine that value precisely, 3) I can't predict when the market will change its mind about what an appropriate multiple is, 4) if I try to duck-in-duck-out of a company stock over time, I'll probably blow it (hey, I'm not saying YOU can't do this successfully!), and 5) I can make money and minimize cognitive load by identifying and holding great companies with long growth runs ahead of them (and save on taxes too!). This is an argument of degrees, of course. I'll sell if I lose confidence that a company will grow into its current market cap.
Nice analysis, thanks. Personally I would sell TSLA @$5k before 2026, and @$10k prior to 2030. Not because there is no further upside, but because I could comfortably retire with intergenerational wealth. There would be little point in risking anything more.
Why not leave the money invested and just take profits every month to fund a comfortable lifestyle? If the money is sitting in the bank it will surely just be losing value?
I like this take. I let the stock determine how long I hold it for. I may like something long term but if it doubles in a week or month you better believe I’m swing trading out of at least part of that position.
Thanks for this. I was struggling recently after I sold a few stocks that went up 50-100% within 1-3 months (eg. Upstart, Atlassian, Nvidia) as they went up a lot more after I sold them. On one hand, they would balance my portfolio nicely against the losers, on the other hand they might have dropped back down and would've missed my chance to sell at a good price. I realised that there's no straight way of playing this game. You have to make a plan beforehand and stick with it. Otherwise you'll find yourself going in "what if" circles.
That is also what I thought, and I would have been a millionaire if Didn't. Sold tesla prematurely, could have been a millionaire. Now I work a 9 to 5.
Very informative video Sasha, soaking up all the knowledge I can. I’m only investing on a smaller scale right now as a beginner, these tips are great to ensure I can make profits & not become one of those who holds on just that little bit too long.
What about dividends? Holding a stock for the dividend. Agree with growth stocks having an exit strategy makes sense otherwise you never know when to sell. Tesla to $3k, who's left to buy?!
Absolutely loved your videos this week. So much information, needed to take notes. Yes we are investing (........term) , but also took some profit today. Also waiting to buy the dip.
Best video, people always tell me active funds suck and I should long term invest in index funds. My goal is to not to live when I am 70. I will when I feel I have made enough gains or something about my active finds has changed sell and pocket the profits
I bought 200 shares in Lucid (bought at $19.40), soon as I hit just over 100% profit I sold half..... I have faith Lucid will do great things, but its still better knowing now I am doing it relatively risk free and can invest my stake again else where..
I just invest in a world ETF and a world momentum ETF and hope for the best for the next 15 or so years. Stock picking looks fun (which is why I follow a few stock-picking UA-camrs) but also somewhat time consuming and very easy to fail at.
Very true, if Tesla goas up to £3k, I would sell way before e.g. £2.5-2.7k as everyone else is aiming for that magical number and the price would drop quite quickly!
What about companies like Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, etc. - cant we hold it till retirement? Wont it always increase because the stock market will also go up all the time? There might be dips but, the stock market in the long run always go up.
My issue, as a relatively new investor is that I can perhaps find companies that seem to be a good value based on my target price calculation, but then I wonder - I'm pretty inexperienced, I must be missing something that the broader market has factored in. How do I gain confidence other than time and back-testing?
I'm not a fan of long term investing (5 to 10 yrs) I'm in the stock market to earn a profit... meaning I will sell when I've hit my target price then re-evaluate to buy back in.
Ok Sasha I am investing mostly for my future retirement (30-40 years). I invest mostly in companies which I follow and S&P 500 Other thing is I keep money in stock market because it is better than keeping money in bank account where inflation eats. I know there is a risk that my money will go down and up but in long term based on data it will go keep.
In that case, you're better off keeping your money in the stock market. Depends on your investing strategy, if you're a passive inverstor i.e putting money into a few growth stocks or ETF's for the long term then you might as well keep it there. Like you said it will most likely beat inflation that way whilst also most likely growing. It's not guaranteed to grow but lets be honest the stock market only goes up in the long term
10:19, You are so right. "Don't be greedy". If you keep waiting and never sell then you will meet "the crash" that makes you want to sell. :) Well, guess what? -78% (minus) on your account and you want to sell it. :)
If you began investing in Apple when it became public, and you did not need the money from profits, at which point in time was the best time to sell your shares?
That’s a very calculative move . I was just thinking that one should look at their investment only after certain time but maybe the amount estimates may not be there or same amount is earned before
Excellent video Sasha! You nailed it with the "different flavours of the same game" comment. A good one I've heard and think of often is "We’re all playing a different game on the same field." People need to remember that there is information relevant to 'day traders' that's not relevant to so called 'long term investors' in any way. “Personal Finance is much more personal than it is Finance". There really is no one right answer as to what you should do with your money. 👌
Good advice, I’ve only once had what I considered a ‘nice’ exit I either end up selling wayyyy to early early or hold with no exit price and hence no profit.
I invested about $400k some years back into ETFs, some bluechip and individual stocks which makes me about $20k monthly ROI still the best way to build up if you can afford that much
Hi Sasha, so what happens beyond that point you've sold and taken your returns? Do you buy back in at a lower price, or put your money into other assets/stocks?
that's what I want to know too. I bought a company for long term. Price has gone up 100%.it's a good growth company that most Analysts forecasted it will grow even further. Really dont know how to determine the target price, Any template /rules for that would b nice to have.
I remember you talked about what will happen to those that has fractional share liner example if someone holds 5.3 shares and if stock split happens by1:10 stock, what we’ll have outcome ? Remember you mentioned .3 value will be credited to our account but what about the rest5 shares? They credit or they split it automatically and reflect in our account holdings ? Please talk this example as world says Tesla share split can happen n do we sell????
@@SashaYanshin Cool, thanks for your reply. Still, there's always gotta be room for others. 😝 Since you're reading these things at the moment, I might as well mention my admiration for your command of English, which is obviously not your mother tongue. I'm not sure one in a hundred people native to North America has attained the same sort of mastery.
Would you suggest it's the same with index funds? I personally don't see myself selling my indexes any time soon, at that point I'm betting the entire market grows.
I'm the worst investor out there, but every time I've sold something it has shot up. So now I have decided to never sell anything. And... they all went down. I'll figure it out one day.
I sold Lucid during their bull run. Just felt it still has too many hurdles. I've sold tesla 3 times. I regret selling as I could have made alot more holding although I've doubled my money every trade.
Love it. I always say, nobody ever made a penny buying stocks. You make your money SELLING them. Say that in an AMC video and watch the attacks on you. "Shill", "paper hands" etc.
"You only make money when you sell" - that is a very wrong statement, sr. Dividends are the answer for that. I think that you forgot to compare companies of value versus companies of growth. J&J is a company of value, they own a very large portion of the market. You will not see their shares skyrocketing. But you will receive dividends and feel secure to hold their shares for a long time because we know (by many factors) that they won't break. Tesla is very different. They are a growth company, they will not give you dividends because they re-invest the profit. But, one day, they will not be able to sell cars as much as they do. So they will give dividends. The real secret is: build a portfolio that has both types of companies so you can gain value from both. One day, they should all give you dividends and you won't need to sell any shares.
Very Good points Sasha about long term investing (fan club - outstanding). However, I would rather invest 'Long Term' (i.e. Long enough to get my price point for selling) than do 'Day Trading' - dude I don't have the time. I don't see LT investing as a 'Never Sell' concept, there must be some due diligence before you invest and an exit strategy for gains and losses. It's the game we must play. Great stuff dude...keep Krankin!
I bought Quantumscape at $15 with a 3 year price target of $45. I sold out at $55 2 months later. I might buy back in, but maybe never. BTW, my exit price for Tesla is $10,000
You’re amazing. You explained the strategy I use in crypto. What is the strategy you talk about called? Meaning long term investor with specific buying and selling date (I follow the 4-year cycle). With crypto there is a great advantage which is missing to stocks: you can know when to buy low and sell high according to the 4-year cycle.
Nobody should just do the same as someone else. I sold because the share price got to my target price and I redeployed my money - something I would do every single time regardless of which company it is. 👍
It depend how much money you invest. If I plan to invest £500 in a single company and let says I'm lucky to find a good one from few checked. The time I would spend in evaluation and knowing those companies will cost me more that the profit I may get from few hundred invested. How much money you need to have on side to worth investing years in education and research to eventually multiply those?
Well I think the main point of the video was something different - I wasn't advocating that people wait a few years until they are educated to invest. The main point really was for people not to get married to stocks and not to join a fan club, but always be looking to improve their understanding and always be looking to optimise their portfolio.
The thing with Tesla is some of us see it as a way to support a certain objective to make the world transition to sustainable energies faster and see how far Elon can get with his missions. It is very nice getting a good return on the money but it’s not the only goal.
Oh but when you sell you will have to pay taxes! But you trade so often you will pay higher taxes! And all those returns you got selling off all those spikes and rebuying make so much taxes!. This is the crap I hear!. So you know, don't work! Because you will pay taxes! And if you are so concerned about investing taxes have an IRA, trade all you want! Can no one understand this ? Love your video, so true! Lots got rewarded for dumb investing in 2020
Long term investing for me and others I guess ? I'd not be looking at my stocks daily or even weekly. Monthly? Maybe. But its long term so its out of my worry to panic myself looking too often.
I'm investing for making $$$$ and has been doing in the past , doing now & will be doing 2moro. I only fall in love with the stocks that give me profit , will keep investing in it as long as there R profit---------- will sell it if I feel that it's falling & will buy back when it's recovering. The only reason that I can do this - is I'm a small player that only buy 10,000 shares max. The Big fund $$$ cannot do this. They have to think a long term But we small investors can do as we please as long as make $$
my experience: investing is easy, having an exit strategy is not…
How come?
Both are hard
Don't get married to a stock. Have a definitie exit strategy. Sasha, this video is sage wisdom :)
Thanks Brendon! Appreciate that!
Marry the whole market
Mustapha - that’s stupid listen to warren
I have my interests set on key sectors based on performance and projected growth. i made my first million from my portfolio ranging from the EV sector, renewable energy, Tech and Health alongside coins, and gold. I'm also working on an investment plan that includes NFTs with my FA Olivia Rene Reyes. It's been a year and half of steady growth...i have no doubt investing more.
Nicely done. love diversity.
Impressive!! Also, I did read about Olivia Rene Reyes on the web, I was able to find her webpage and leave a mail. I'm willing to make consultations to improve my portfolio
i'm happy there are lots of people doing so well...Love this channel for the transparency
I had to Google to be sure, she has a great resume
I’ve been watching UA-camrs on investing for 4 years now and you are the best I have ever seen.
Stock Moe, Chicken Genius Singapore, Stealth Wealth investing, Andrei Jikh are also very good!
Your passion shows you really care about your viewers journey into finance. 🤟
Great video as ever Sasha! Would be really interesting to see a video on how you value stocks (on excel) similar to what you have done in previous videos.
I am an income investor. My goal is to increase my income every year. Most of my stocks have developed over the long term. They gradually increased in value, and they have returned dividends year over year. That is my focus, and it has worked well. I am not into growth companies except in the short term. For those I usually sell short term covered calls to again create income.
For me, the question remains to be that unless you have an idea of what that price should be, you can't make an informed decision on when to sell, and I still don't have a relatively simple way to calculate that. If anyone has a template that they'd be willing to share, I'd be very grateful!
Sasha, video on this pleaseeeeeeee
Being in a fanclub is spot on. So you can tell other people that you invest in a specific thing
Very true
Great video. This is why I’m sticking with ETFs for the time being with some set aside for “play money”
This is what ive been dooing for years and i think its such an underrated strategy. Very essy for mental aswell.
Agree
Same objectives, sure, to get the highest possible return, but I’d argue there are a vast more amount of long term value investors than traders.. take a look at some of the worlds most wealthiest individuals and go figure, they fall under the investment category. From there, they are typically in it for the longer hall and invested into high quality growth plays.. Buffett says it best with his buying a farm analogy in that you wouldn’t buy a farm to sell it by next week… but you buy a farm to grow crops, for maybe even generations of wealth.. magic is in the formula: patience + consistency = wealth!
This is exactly right. I have my longs and short term equities and treat them as distinct entities. Money moves and we have to adapt to how certain markets respond. If you understand why certain things are happening you are better informed to know when to drop out or jump in - or stay in. I was long on mrna and sold when earnings missed because I knew that's what the rest would do even though NOTHING changed fundamentally. gotta play psychological aspects of it all. Spot on re: TSLA. People who have no exit plan are nutz
You’re always opening my eyes and these not only apply to investment but anything we do in life
Hi Sasha another great video. I'm really glad I found your channel. Keep up the great work many thanks👍
👍
Do you have a video explaining how you calculate the target price of a stock? Or books that explain how one would go about calculating it?
Yes please! I don't want to pay for some shit course or a paywall to see some "guru's" "price target".
+1!
Great conclusion in dismantling some of the common fallacies with investing. Really good content.
Thanks Julian! Appreciate that!
Excellent advise! Do your research. Develop a plan including buy and sell price targets. Keep your eye on the ball, frequently re-evaluating your plan as new information comes in. Stick to the plan and buy or sell when your targets are reached....
Excellent narrative. An exit strategy for all positions is a must at all times.
Disclaimer and then counterargument: First, everyone should learn how and do their own company valuations. However, I think my own long-term-holder mentality is: 1) valuations are imprecise, 2) the market won't price at the correct valuation anyway, even if one could determine that value precisely, 3) I can't predict when the market will change its mind about what an appropriate multiple is, 4) if I try to duck-in-duck-out of a company stock over time, I'll probably blow it (hey, I'm not saying YOU can't do this successfully!), and 5) I can make money and minimize cognitive load by identifying and holding great companies with long growth runs ahead of them (and save on taxes too!).
This is an argument of degrees, of course. I'll sell if I lose confidence that a company will grow into its current market cap.
Nice analysis, thanks. Personally I would sell TSLA @$5k before 2026, and @$10k prior to 2030. Not because there is no further upside, but because I could comfortably retire with intergenerational wealth. There would be little point in risking anything more.
Why not leave the money invested and just take profits every month to fund a comfortable lifestyle? If the money is sitting in the bank it will surely just be losing value?
I like this take. I let the stock determine how long I hold it for. I may like something long term but if it doubles in a week or month you better believe I’m swing trading out of at least part of that position.
INVESTING IN CRYPTO NOW IS VERY COOL EXPECIALLY WITH THE CURRENT RISE IN THE MARKET NOW.
Most intelligent words I've heard,
Crypto is the new gold,
I'm a huge fan of crypto, I hold some few coins in my wallet.
The rich get wealthier as they trade, the poor remain and get even more poorer because of skepticism and fear of taking risk,
The fruitfulness of your trading lies on the account manager or the expert,
Thanks for this. I was struggling recently after I sold a few stocks that went up 50-100% within 1-3 months (eg. Upstart, Atlassian, Nvidia) as they went up a lot more after I sold them. On one hand, they would balance my portfolio nicely against the losers, on the other hand they might have dropped back down and would've missed my chance to sell at a good price.
I realised that there's no straight way of playing this game. You have to make a plan beforehand and stick with it. Otherwise you'll find yourself going in "what if" circles.
Hi
Thanks for telling the truth on how to manage our stock portfolio!
Never let a good pump go to waste!
That is also what I thought, and I would have been a millionaire if Didn't. Sold tesla prematurely, could have been a millionaire. Now I work a 9 to 5.
Very informative video Sasha, soaking up all the knowledge I can. I’m only investing on a smaller scale right now as a beginner, these tips are great to ensure I can make profits & not become one of those who holds on just that little bit too long.
What about dividends? Holding a stock for the dividend.
Agree with growth stocks having an exit strategy makes sense otherwise you never know when to sell.
Tesla to $3k, who's left to buy?!
Incredibly valuable video once again Sasha, smashing the content recently!👏🏾
BHM
Thanks is my second month in stock market I don't have experience.but this information give me a good idea.
You've gotten more natural at this. Glad I subscribed.
Thank you!
Absolutely loved your videos this week.
So much information, needed to take notes. Yes we are investing (........term) , but also took some profit today. Also waiting to buy the dip.
Hi Sasha, you did a good job on this topic . Many long-term investors don't often discuss this topic
Thanks!
Best video, people always tell me active funds suck and I should long term invest in index funds. My goal is to not to live when I am 70. I will when I feel I have made enough gains or something about my active finds has changed sell and pocket the profits
I bought 200 shares in Lucid (bought at $19.40), soon as I hit just over 100% profit I sold half..... I have faith Lucid will do great things, but its still better knowing now I am doing it relatively risk free and can invest my stake again else where..
Man its a good thing you sold haha
@jsf11fra sold them all ages ago, bought back in a few weeks ago...this was a very old post...
I just invest in a world ETF and a world momentum ETF and hope for the best for the next 15 or so years. Stock picking looks fun (which is why I follow a few stock-picking UA-camrs) but also somewhat time consuming and very easy to fail at.
Yup never buy with the 🏦. And never ever buy any Penny stonks that is recommended by a fake investment newsletter.
1000% this is amazing advice. Thought of Tesla immediately when I saw the title.
Very true, if Tesla goas up to £3k, I would sell way before e.g. £2.5-2.7k as everyone else is aiming for that magical number and the price would drop quite quickly!
What about companies like Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, etc. - cant we hold it till retirement? Wont it always increase because the stock market will also go up all the time? There might be dips but, the stock market in the long run always go up.
Im assuming this doesn't apply to index funds like the VUSA s and p 500 as you should allow your investment to compound am I right?
My issue, as a relatively new investor is that I can perhaps find companies that seem to be a good value based on my target price calculation, but then I wonder - I'm pretty inexperienced, I must be missing something that the broader market has factored in. How do I gain confidence other than time and back-testing?
Nobody has a clue what is going on in the market. We are all clowns (from a certain perspective) just with different models and clothes.
Great video as ever Sasha!
Thanks!
I'm not a fan of long term investing (5 to 10 yrs) I'm in the stock market to earn a profit... meaning I will sell when I've hit my target price then re-evaluate to buy back in.
Couldn't agree more, smashed like so hard it exploded!!!
Thanks!
Ok Sasha
I am investing mostly for my future retirement (30-40 years). I invest mostly in companies which I follow and S&P 500
Other thing is I keep money in stock market because it is better than keeping money in bank account where inflation eats. I know there is a risk that my money will go down and up but in long term based on data it will go keep.
and of course power of compound interest
In that case, you're better off keeping your money in the stock market. Depends on your investing strategy, if you're a passive inverstor i.e putting money into a few growth stocks or ETF's for the long term then you might as well keep it there. Like you said it will most likely beat inflation that way whilst also most likely growing. It's not guaranteed to grow but lets be honest the stock market only goes up in the long term
@@FHDOnTheStreet Thank you
Good points! I have up trying to outsmart the market. I’m super happy with “average” long term returns.
Helpful. I needed to hear this.
I have a sell price for Lucid as well, but it's not less than $100.
10:19, You are so right. "Don't be greedy".
If you keep waiting and never sell then you will meet "the crash" that makes you want to sell. :)
Well, guess what? -78% (minus) on your account and you want to sell it. :)
If you began investing in Apple when it became public, and you did not need the money from profits, at which point in time was the best time to sell your shares?
That’s a very calculative move . I was just thinking that one should look at their investment only after certain time but maybe the amount estimates may not be there or same amount is earned before
Your videos are useful, but are also gold. Respect
Thank you!
Excellent video Sasha! You nailed it with the "different flavours of the same game" comment. A good one I've heard and think of often is "We’re all playing a different game on the same field."
People need to remember that there is information relevant to 'day traders' that's not relevant to so called 'long term investors' in any way. “Personal Finance is much more personal than it is Finance". There really is no one right answer as to what you should do with your money. 👌
Great chat Sasha
Good advice, I’ve only once had what I considered a ‘nice’ exit I either end up selling wayyyy to early early or hold with no exit price and hence no profit.
I invested about $400k some years back into ETFs, some bluechip and individual stocks which makes me about $20k monthly ROI still the best way to build up if you can afford that much
Hi Sasha, so what happens beyond that point you've sold and taken your returns?
Do you buy back in at a lower price, or put your money into other assets/stocks?
nice question
that's what I want to know too. I bought a company for long term. Price has gone up 100%.it's a good growth company that most Analysts forecasted it will grow even further. Really dont know how to determine the target price, Any template /rules for that would b nice to have.
@@ckent8513 sell a third and keep the rest, that way you get best of both.
Sacha - in investing, goal posts do change. Also, please mention the changes in the company strategy/factors etc.
I remember you talked about what will happen to those that has fractional share liner example if someone holds 5.3 shares and if stock split happens by1:10 stock, what we’ll have outcome ? Remember you mentioned .3 value will be credited to our account but what about the rest5 shares? They credit or they split it automatically and reflect in our account holdings ? Please talk this example as world says Tesla share split can happen n do we sell????
Who’s here now cuz of Tom Nash? I do, allegedly 😁... loving the content sasha newly subs here
There must be so many other things that investors say and do that bug you. Let's hear more. Your style of explication is great.
I have quite a few videos in this “The X Problem” mini series :))
@@SashaYanshin Cool, thanks for your reply. Still, there's always gotta be room for others. 😝
Since you're reading these things at the moment, I might as well mention my admiration for your command of English, which is obviously not your mother tongue. I'm not sure one in a hundred people native to North America has attained the same sort of mastery.
Hi sasha what do you think of Elon Musk tweet about selling shares. Should I sell while got some good profit?
Would you suggest it's the same with index funds? I personally don't see myself selling my indexes any time soon, at that point I'm betting the entire market grows.
I'm the worst investor out there, but every time I've sold something it has shot up. So now I have decided to never sell anything. And... they all went down. I'll figure it out one day.
I sold Lucid during their bull run. Just felt it still has too many hurdles. I've sold tesla 3 times. I regret selling as I could have made alot more holding although I've doubled my money every trade.
Love it. I always say, nobody ever made a penny buying stocks. You make your money SELLING them. Say that in an AMC video and watch the attacks on you. "Shill", "paper hands" etc.
Good companies keep on winning that's why I buy and hold. Dividends pay me while I wait for the growth.
Only two stocks you mentioned were my top two investments beside btc. I like your taste.
What would have been a good time to sell Amazon or Apple? Do tell.
I would love to see a video explaining what sources to use for company news and quarterly reports etc
"You only make money when you sell" - that is a very wrong statement, sr. Dividends are the answer for that.
I think that you forgot to compare companies of value versus companies of growth. J&J is a company of value, they own a very large portion of the market. You will not see their shares skyrocketing. But you will receive dividends and feel secure to hold their shares for a long time because we know (by many factors) that they won't break.
Tesla is very different. They are a growth company, they will not give you dividends because they re-invest the profit. But, one day, they will not be able to sell cars as much as they do. So they will give dividends.
The real secret is: build a portfolio that has both types of companies so you can gain value from both. One day, they should all give you dividends and you won't need to sell any shares.
So glad I discovered your channel! Great content :)
Thank you!
Ngl investing my time into watching this channel has really paid off.
What's your take on getting out of a stock according a a specific event:
TSLA/5 years after autonomy is granted.
One needs to have a goal. That defines the type of investor one is.
whats your price to trigger you to buy back into Lucid?
You leave it in the company you believe in because it makes you feel safe when it’s down, and that is something to consider Seth
Nice advice but you sound like doing the perfect timing in your exit strategy. Would love to see your actual portfolio.
Very Good points Sasha about long term investing (fan club - outstanding). However, I would rather invest 'Long Term' (i.e. Long enough to get my price point for selling) than do 'Day Trading' - dude I don't have the time. I don't see LT investing as a 'Never Sell' concept, there must be some due diligence before you invest and an exit strategy for gains and losses. It's the game we must play. Great stuff dude...keep Krankin!
Sasha Sasha Sasha keeps it real and that's a big deal.
What's your new target price for AMD Sasha? Did you make a video?
I bought Quantumscape at $15 with a 3 year price target of $45. I sold out at $55 2 months later. I might buy back in, but maybe never. BTW, my exit price for Tesla is $10,000
You’re amazing. You explained the strategy I use in crypto. What is the strategy you talk about called? Meaning long term investor with specific buying and selling date (I follow the 4-year cycle). With crypto there is a great advantage which is missing to stocks: you can know when to buy low and sell high according to the 4-year cycle.
If you wouldn't buy a stock you own at the current price, you sell. Treat a hold as a buy. It's really that simple.
Exactly!
Why did you sell out of lucid?? I have 1k down in lucid as well?? Should i do the same
Nobody should just do the same as someone else. I sold because the share price got to my target price and I redeployed my money - something I would do every single time regardless of which company it is. 👍
It depend how much money you invest. If I plan to invest £500 in a single company and let says I'm lucky to find a good one from few checked. The time I would spend in evaluation and knowing those companies will cost me more that the profit I may get from few hundred invested. How much money you need to have on side to worth investing years in education and research to eventually multiply those?
Well I think the main point of the video was something different - I wasn't advocating that people wait a few years until they are educated to invest. The main point really was for people not to get married to stocks and not to join a fan club, but always be looking to improve their understanding and always be looking to optimise their portfolio.
Love it just love it
Thanks!
Sasha, Thank you again for sharing your investment strategies. They have been very helpful in my decision making.
I'm glad Neil! Thank you!
@@SashaYanshin thanks for joining Tom’s call yesterday 😀
The thing with Tesla is some of us see it as a way to support a certain objective to make the world transition to sustainable energies faster and see how far Elon can get with his missions. It is very nice getting a good return on the money but it’s not the only goal.
Out of topic, where did you get your intro jingle from, very old school and catchy
This makes sense, but none of it applies to world tracker funds - does it?
Hi Sasha, I wonder whether you can give some idea how to decide a company target price.
Sasha Can you do a detailed video on how to value a stock please?
Oh but when you sell you will have to pay taxes! But you trade so often you will pay higher taxes! And all those returns you got selling off all those spikes and rebuying make so much taxes!. This is the crap I hear!.
So you know, don't work! Because you will pay taxes!
And if you are so concerned about investing taxes have an IRA, trade all you want! Can no one understand this ?
Love your video, so true! Lots got rewarded for dumb investing in 2020
I only sell if I need the money for things that come up in life and I need it, don't sell just cause Im up.. probably many do this
Long term investing for me and others I guess ? I'd not be looking at my stocks daily or even weekly. Monthly? Maybe. But its long term so its out of my worry to panic myself looking too often.
Great content 👌
Some of my stocks I don't buy with a target price in mind. Rather a target date.
I'm investing for making $$$$ and has been doing in the past , doing now & will be doing 2moro. I only fall in love with the stocks that give me profit , will keep investing in it as long as there R profit---------- will sell it if I feel that it's falling & will buy back when it's recovering. The only reason that I can do this - is I'm a small player that only buy 10,000 shares max. The Big fund $$$ cannot do this. They have to think a long term But we small investors can do as we please as long as make $$
Im up 300%+ on AMC. I still see more upside, people tell me to sell and take my profits, but why would I when it has so much more to run
Put stop losses in to secure some profit.