I'm just trying to gamble, ok?
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Stock Trading -or- ReconSWS's Bane
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Originally posted by Terry A. DavisGod said 640x480 16 color was a covenant like circumcision.
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Casinos in my area opening up next week, looks like I'm done with the options gambling, gonna hope my experiences in the market will translate into table games. Gonna just whip my entire stim into a single hand of black-jack, ez double, then not do it again and leave the table and hit up some steak and lobster.
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Originally posted by Myrkul View PostIf $100,000,000,000 dollars can't get the job done, I sure as hell can't either. I'm going to buy and hold and just bank on the statistics that it will outperform active management over 95% of the time.
For my personal accounts, it's 100% index funds and ETFs all the way and I have never once regretted it. I check my personal performance maybe once or twice a year. Having seen 1000s of portfolio performance numbers, I can say with a great deal of confidence that sitting on my ass doing nothing has had by far better returns then any "strategy" I've ever seen. Just set your allocation right, do it cheaply, shovel as much cash as you can into it, and then walk away.
There is of course a diminishing return to this and risk tolerance goes down as your account balance goes up but there are still smart plays out there to be made. Maybe the majority of retail traders aren't smart enough to beat the market but there will always be those that are smart enough to beat it on a regular basis. Not to mention derivatives and other incomes streams to be made off of stock holdings. Heck, just in income made off of selling covered calls and cash secured puts on my *largely S&P tracking* stock portfolio I've beaten the S&P this year.
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Oh man, I'd love to see who those are!
Do you think you could name a few for me to research? Should be easy if there are lots of them.
To compare apples to apples, lets say a 10 year time horizon and risk adjusted. The risk adjusted piece is especially important. Hedge funds are inherently risky. That's why they aren't offered to your typical retail investor. The average person can't take hedge fund level losses and be fine. It seems like you are equating raw returns to "performance", especially your comment about "Risk tolerance goes down as the portfolio grows".
So be sure when you share the funds and the returns that you include the beta.
My suspicion is that you are looking at short time horizons, and as you mentioned lots of people can beat it short term with some regularity. It always breaks down over time though, and that's the key.
Also super curious where you are getting that statistic about 80% of the market being hedge funds a few years ago. I can find a lot of statistics that INSTITUTIONS controlled 80% of the market a few years ago, but there are a ton of institutions that are not hedge funds... Not saying you are wrong, just saying I would love a source for that statistic.
Final point: There is more to indexing then just buying the S&P. You can buy small cap index funds, mid cap index funds, international index funds, developing markets index funds etc etc. Litterally just dumping everything into SPY isn't really indexing.
IMO hedge funds stopped being compelling the minute the SEC started to cracked down on them for insider trading. At the end of the day though, the beautiful part of investing is it's still your money. Do as you will with it. For me though, I'm going to just save aggressively, take the average for my allocation, and play paintball with all my free time instead of pointlessly trying to aquire alpha when it's not really possible or needed in the first place.Last edited by Myrkul; 07-15-2021, 01:26 AM.
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Yes, I meant institutions in that 80% statistic. My larger point though is that the market isn't the same one that you're referencing. The tables have turned and now we're seeing outsized returns by sheer volume of retail traders moving company valuations around.
I'm not saying you're wrong for the average person. If you're not chasing alpha and doing a lot of research then sure you will not out-perform the market. I can point to funds like Berkshire or ARK or Pershing Square as having out-performed easily. They are the big ones but even if you look at retail traders there's a good 10% that have made such outsized gains making pure plays that even if they returned zero over the next 9 years they still will beat the market. Lots of people making pure plays and using leverage to do so and making pretty massive returns. Sure they lose some but it's a different approach.
You can harp on "short term" gains all you want or a 10 year time horizon but when it comes to beating the market it's what you're doing on a month-to-month basis that matters. You build gains a percentage at a time until you get 10 years down the road and look back at a successfully built account that has had market beating gains.
You're pretty obtuse in how you actually measure "the market". If you're not using the S&P as a standard to beat, what are you using? How do you define "the market'? You're awfully coy about your "allocation" as well. So you just save money and stick it in some index? Which index? What are you doing to at least track the market and beat inflation? How do you hedge against inflation? If you're a "financial expert" then surely you have some better advice for us than just stash money away and stick to the indices.
Plus I'm not sure what you're doing in this thread. Not to make you feel unwelcome but it's just a little strange to barge into a stock trading thread and say "you're all dumb for even trying, you can't beat the market". Chad move but still a little bit odd.
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Originally posted by gabe View Post
Yes, I meant institutions in that 80% statistic. My larger point though is that the market isn't the same one that you're referencing. The tables have turned and now we're seeing outsized returns by sheer volume of retail traders moving company valuations around.
I'm not saying you're wrong for the average person. If you're not chasing alpha and doing a lot of research then sure you will not out-perform the market. I can point to funds like Berkshire or ARK or Pershing Square as having out-performed easily. They are the big ones but even if you look at retail traders there's a good 10% that have made such outsized gains making pure plays that even if they returned zero over the next 9 years they still will beat the market. Lots of people making pure plays and using leverage to do so and making pretty massive returns. Sure they lose some but it's a different approach.
Originally posted by gabe View Post
You can harp on "short term" gains all you want or a 10 year time horizon but when it comes to beating the market it's what you're doing on a month-to-month basis that matters. You build gains a percentage at a time until you get 10 years down the road and look back at a successfully built account that has had market beating gains.
*(If your effective tax rate is under the long term capital gains rate you really can't afford much, if any risk. If you are doing this in a qualified account (IRA/401K/Roth/Etc.) Those are retirement accounts....please don't gamble with your retirement.)
Originally posted by gabe View Post
You're pretty obtuse in how you actually measure "the market". If you're not using the S&P as a standard to beat, what are you using? How do you define "the market'?
Originally posted by gabe View Post
You're awfully coy about your "allocation" as well. So you just save money and stick it in some index? Which index? What are you doing to at least track the market and beat inflation? How do you hedge against inflation?
Originally posted by gabe View Post
If you're a "financial expert" then surely you have some better advice for us than just stash money away and stick to the indices.
Originally posted by gabe View Post
Plus I'm not sure what you're doing in this thread. Not to make you feel unwelcome but it's just a little strange to barge into a stock trading thread and say "you're all dumb for even trying, you can't beat the market". Chad move but still a little bit odd.Last edited by Myrkul; 07-05-2022, 02:47 AM.
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Originally posted by Myrkul View PostOh man, I bet your CPA loves you. What does your tax situation look like shifting everything around once a month? If you hold a position for over a year you pay long term capital gains rates. So 15%-20% on the gains. Under a year, you are paying short term capital gains, which are identical to your ordinary income tax rates (30%?). So you aren't just trying to beat an index now, now you are trying to beat the tax code too.* So now your gains are getting hit with a 30% tax bill, is your performance good enough to overcome the tax code as well?
In terms of tax liability you are right but you're also overstating the situation. In the end we all pay taxes if we make money. Obviously using tax shelters like a 401K or HSA (both of which I do) is a great avenue but you can also use real estate (which I do a LOT of) to write off quite a bit of W2 income as losses and greatly reduce tax liability. Sure long-term capital gains are taxed at a lower rate but if I'm making money the gov is making money so whether it's 15% for long term or 22-28% for short term the % in the middle isn't sinking the ship. It might be a major concern if you're swinging around a super large day trading account but for the average Joe throwing a few grand back and forth it's not going to amount to even a grand in taxable gain which even that you're throwing just $150 on your tax bill. I swing trade and make perhaps $5k a year on swing trades and another $2k on options premiums which does bump my taxes up but again, between RE write offs and tax-advantaged account contributions I'm still in a low tax bracket and taxed at the same 22%. Not saying taxes are my favorite thing, just that you have to pay to play.
If you want a justification for generating tax liability, it allows me to raise funds to invest in long term investments much faster. I can sell monthly options contracts against many of my holdings and make 10x back passively on those holdings than I would have on dividends. Something like PLTR or SPCE are gambling stocks sure, but you can run an options wheel on them selling cash secured puts, getting assigned then selling covered calls until you get assigned to drum up a couple hundred dollars per month per position in cashflow and capital gains. It's a very efficient way to build an account's cash position to then roll into long term dividend yielding stocks.
At the end of the day...that's my way of doing things. For a lot of investors it IS a casino and it's a fun thing to throw a little cash at. You can't demean them for simply using the market in that way because it's a free market and free individuals are free to gamble on risky positions. If only straight laced serious investors got into stock investing (trading) then things would be boring and the market would be run by crooked ass hedge funds who manipulate the market on CNBC. Instead we have a now very democratic market run largely by retail investors who do things like run up meme stocks to squeeze out greedy hedge funds. Aside from being fun to watch it gets the average person involved in the stock market and maybe some of those will turn into "serious" investors and leverage the market to improve their financial situation. It's different things to everyone and that's the beauty.
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Holy FUCK dude I am so fucking pissed of. I missed by a WEEK. ONE FUCKING WEEK.
All my SPXS shit missed last week, coulda been yuuuuuge.
Thankfully, I had my VIX calls set out anouther 7-days, so those got a nice 3x pop and saved me 50% of my funds.
So now I've got 450CAD to blow on something.
I'm thinking, THIS AIN'T NO CRASH, I'm buying this dip.Making new mods.
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Okay my play this week is :
SPXL 125.00c x15 (FOR AUGUST)
VIX 18.00p x 9 (for wednsesday)
So these are all bullish as you can get with options (as the opposite of my bearish crap), 3x and VIX, when this shit moves, it moves. But, I think this move, has moved, and there is no more moving left to be had to the down-side for now.
(MIND YOU, I SAID SEVERAL TIMES, THE MOMENT I GO FULL BULL IS THE MOMENT IT ALL COMES DOWN). But then gain, this is small change, I need a big win, then to go full bull all-in, then it crashes on me is usually the way to plays out.
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I actually managed to do it... I managed to psyche myself out and actually TRUELY execute an 'inverse yourself' strategy. I actually felt the play this morning, I felt it through my bones, and woulda made it if I could have but was distracted. Did the complete inverse at the perfect bottom.
Unfortunately, we still playing with trash out-of-the money 3 day expiry trash, but literally just need 2% up to make like 1000%.
SPY 445c x100 7/26Last edited by ReconSWS; 07-22-2021, 08:26 PM.Making new mods.
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Good play. Seems the WSB crowd is really down on it but tbh it is one of the best trading platforms.
I switched my smaller trading portfolio back into cash secured puts and covered calls. Trying to stay cash rich and keep the income coming in. I don't forsee this market holding out much longer. Not normally bearish but I'm hoping for a flatter year or two in the market to even out this explosive growth caused by Jpow and his money printers.
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Hows the gang? Recon you still with us?
Been running covered calls and cash secured puts on MMAT, EMAN, and SNDL. Basically all trash companies with negative earnings but massive implied volatility so the option premiums are huge. Reasoning is that even if they drop below my strike I'm still at a very low cost basis and can turn around and sell options to get rid of the shares at the cost basis and collect premium again. God I love options.
*edit* oh and I love crypto. Etherium has really brought my account back to life.
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Yeah, it's been a good couple weeks. I sold some shares to cover a few expenses, but the account balance is roughly back to what it was before the withdrawals.
And second on Ethereum. I have currently doubled my investment, which was free gubmint stimulus money in the first place 🤘Dulce et decorum est pro comoedia mori
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Originally posted by Axel View PostI just checked the rest of my posted dividends for the month and they come to... $10.99... lol
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I like to have both but I only run covered calls on non-dividend paying companies. Your dividends should add up as you grow your account. I've pushed for yield with some energy and telecom holdings and get about 4% yearly which amounts to about $100 a month in dividends. In addition to dividends, I add at least $100 per week to my account on a scheduled deposit it adds up to a nice account growth. I'm going to start looking at adding to the JP Morgan covered call fund JEPI to boost dividend yield to get to $200 per month by the end of the year.
In my little $2500 "day trading" or play money account though...I'm ruthless about yield. I'm writing covered calls and cash secured puts like crazy on some pretty awful little dollar stocks with super high IV. So far it's worked out just writing puts, getting assigned, writing a call all at the same strike and collecting premium only at a 10-15% yield per month on each contract. I'll probably get bit if one of these companies tanks but I guess that's how you learn. My favorite right now is MMAT with a nice big $60 premium on a monthly put contract that costs $400 to secure.
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