04-24-2021, 11:29 AM
(04-24-2021, 05:17 AM)fenders53 Wrote:(04-23-2021, 12:49 PM)divmenow Wrote:I need a pretty good dip to add more than a few shares. It's a lot easier after a 10% market pull back because some good stocks will be down 15%+ and that is a solid year in normal times. Trying not to look at every year like 2020. I may never see another year like that again.(04-23-2021, 12:18 PM)crimsonghost747 Wrote: He is addicted. He just can't stop.
This is so trueBut I always add on significant dips from my top 10 holdings. Even if you consider a $10 dip off the highs ?
And I still have my cash. Just not adding to any new positions unless they fall off the cliff. KMB on list but needs to go lower.
I watch a lot of Fast Graphs videos. Chuck has 100 examples of lost decades caused by buying when blue chips are trading way above historical valuation and that will happen again. We are set up for more of that now.
Those lost decades also involved interest rates returning to historical norms. Other than the Fed, large banks that participate in our fractional reserve banking system, and bond funds required to do so by their prospectuses, no one is buying bonds at these yields.
The “risk-free” rate of return is likely to remain effectively zero for a while. I doubt it rises much until at least the middle of the decade. The economy won’t be able to support it until then. The mid-2020s are essentially the mid-1980s from a demographic perspective. At that point, a solid % of Millennials will be in their 40s and peak earning years, just as Boomers were hitting that point in the mid-80s.
The small comparative size of Gen X has contributed to an economic lull. The past two decades have seen Boomers enter retirement (where people tend to spend/consume less), with not enough peak-earnings consumers to replace them. That dynamic is about to change in a big way.