McGarnagle
Yes.
- Aug 5, 2017
- 30,340
- 41,620
29-Mar-20 | Today | Change | |
S&P | 2,541.47 | 4,027.81 | 58.5% |
HSGFX | 6.11 | 6.85 | 12.1% |
HSIEX | 8.03 | 7.82 | -2.6% |
HSAFX | 9.74 | 9.52 | -2.3% |
I would like to know who this poster is.Three years ago today (on March 29th, 2020), I said in a post that "Now is probably a good time to buy [stocks] since everything is much cheaper than it was a month ago". One person argued with me, primarily drawing on research from hedge fund manager John Hussman, to suggest that the stock market was overvalued. I'm not going to name the poster, because I'm not trying to embarrass him. Instead, I'm trying to show people why listening to "perma-bears" (like Hussman) is generally a bad idea.
To quote myself: "I've been investing in the market long enough to know that every time there's a correction, the "this time is different" crowd shows up. There were people who said in 2008 that "this time is different" - that the stock market was shown be a sham, the economy's foundation was faulty, and it would taken decades to recover. It took about six years (before taking into account dividends). People said the same thing in 2001. And in 1987." And that's exactly what happened - people argued that this correction was somehow different than all the others.
The person I was debating didn't specify which of Hussman's three equity funds was the best. So let's look at all three, and compare it to the S&P 500 as a whole (which can easily be tracked through a number of index funds and ETF's):
29-Mar-20Today Change S&P 2,541.47 4,027.81 58.5%HSGFX 6.11 6.85 12.1%HSIEX 8.03 7.82 -2.6%HSAFX 9.74 9.52 -2.3%
If you didn't panic during the "COVID crash" of March 2020, and did nothing more than buy a fund tracking the S&P as a whole, you would have gained almost 60% in three years. If you bought equal amounts of Hussman's three funds, you would have gained less than 3% in three years (which, obviously, is well below the rate of inflation). There's really no comparison.
I'm not posting this to show how smart I am. Just the opposite - I'm not smart enough to time the stock market, which is why I mostly invest in general funds that track the market as a whole. Be careful of perma-bears like John Hussman. He's been calling for a stock market crash almost every year since 2000. And sometimes he's right (2001, 2008-09, 2020) - but he loses so much ground in the years he's wrong, that it's a bad investment strategy.
(In case anyone accuses me of cherry-picking the data, look at this link, which is from Hussman's own website. Since the fund's inception, it's annualized return has lagged the S&P by more than 5.5% - which works out to roughly a 330% difference in total).
History shows that stonks always go up in the long run, even if it's not a straight path to get there. What I remember from three years ago is fighting with all the TSLA IS OVERVALUED REEEEEEEEEEEE posters.Three years ago today (on March 29th, 2020), I said in a post that "Now is probably a good time to buy [stocks] since everything is much cheaper than it was a month ago". One person argued with me, primarily drawing on research from hedge fund manager John Hussman, to suggest that the stock market was overvalued. I'm not going to name the poster, because I'm not trying to embarrass him. Instead, I'm trying to show people why listening to "perma-bears" (like Hussman) is generally a bad idea.
To quote myself: "I've been investing in the market long enough to know that every time there's a correction, the "this time is different" crowd shows up. There were people who said in 2008 that "this time is different" - that the stock market was shown be a sham, the economy's foundation was faulty, and it would taken decades to recover. It took about six years (before taking into account dividends). People said the same thing in 2001. And in 1987." And that's exactly what happened - people argued that this correction was somehow different than all the others.
The person I was debating didn't specify which of Hussman's three equity funds was the best. So let's look at all three, and compare it to the S&P 500 as a whole (which can easily be tracked through a number of index funds and ETF's):
29-Mar-20Today Change S&P 2,541.47 4,027.81 58.5%HSGFX 6.11 6.85 12.1%HSIEX 8.03 7.82 -2.6%HSAFX 9.74 9.52 -2.3%
If you didn't panic during the "COVID crash" of March 2020, and did nothing more than buy a fund tracking the S&P as a whole, you would have gained almost 60% in three years. If you bought equal amounts of Hussman's three funds, you would have gained less than 3% in three years (which, obviously, is well below the rate of inflation). There's really no comparison.
I'm not posting this to show how smart I am. Just the opposite - I'm not smart enough to time the stock market, which is why I mostly invest in general funds that track the market as a whole. Be careful of perma-bears like John Hussman. He's been calling for a stock market crash almost every year since 2000. And sometimes he's right (2001, 2008-09, 2020) - but he loses so much ground in the years he's wrong, that it's a bad investment strategy.
(In case anyone accuses me of cherry-picking the data, look at this link, which is from Hussman's own website. Since the fund's inception, it's annualized return has lagged the S&P by more than 5.5% - which works out to roughly a 330% difference in total).
I don't invest in anything other than passive funds, personally. I don't have the risk tolerance for active management.Three years ago today (on March 29th, 2020), I said in a post that "Now is probably a good time to buy [stocks] since everything is much cheaper than it was a month ago". One person argued with me, primarily drawing on research from hedge fund manager John Hussman, to suggest that the stock market was overvalued. I'm not going to name the poster, because I'm not trying to embarrass him. Instead, I'm trying to show people why listening to "perma-bears" (like Hussman) is generally a bad idea.
To quote myself: "I've been investing in the market long enough to know that every time there's a correction, the "this time is different" crowd shows up. There were people who said in 2008 that "this time is different" - that the stock market was shown be a sham, the economy's foundation was faulty, and it would taken decades to recover. It took about six years (before taking into account dividends). People said the same thing in 2001. And in 1987." And that's exactly what happened - people argued that this correction was somehow different than all the others.
The person I was debating didn't specify which of Hussman's three equity funds was the best. So let's look at all three, and compare it to the S&P 500 as a whole (which can easily be tracked through a number of index funds and ETF's):
29-Mar-20Today Change S&P 2,541.47 4,027.81 58.5%HSGFX 6.11 6.85 12.1%HSIEX 8.03 7.82 -2.6%HSAFX 9.74 9.52 -2.3%
If you didn't panic during the "COVID crash" of March 2020, and did nothing more than buy a fund tracking the S&P as a whole, you would have gained almost 60% in three years. If you bought equal amounts of Hussman's three funds, you would have gained less than 3% in three years (which, obviously, is well below the rate of inflation). There's really no comparison.
I'm not posting this to show how smart I am. Just the opposite - I'm not smart enough to time the stock market, which is why I mostly invest in general funds that track the market as a whole. Be careful of perma-bears like John Hussman. He's been calling for a stock market crash almost every year since 2000. And sometimes he's right (2001, 2008-09, 2020) - but he loses so much ground in the years he's wrong, that it's a bad investment strategy.
(In case anyone accuses me of cherry-picking the data, look at this link, which is from Hussman's own website. Since the fund's inception, it's annualized return has lagged the S&P by more than 5.5% - which works out to roughly a 330% difference in total).
With the way Tesla’s cutting prices, I’m not surprised stock went down. But I know elon mentioned this may happen a while ago, to get bigger market share.Looks like TSLA missed delivery numbers so there may be some short-term pain, but nothing rattles me as a long term hodler
1. This jumps off one of the lower points the Dow was at in the 1978-1982 range, when it was already about 65% off the 1965 high and had dropped below the 1974 low. Of course it's going to look really good from there. Spoiler: we're not at the same point in time in 2020. Jump off March, 2000 and see how those gains look compared to having sat in Treasuries or even a money market account.
2. Even with today's massive rally, everyone who's "systematically put money to work continuously" (read: dollar-cost averaging) in the market is still flat for the last 5 1/2 years. Not "flat after accounting for inflation," I mean "your total return over that period is 0.00%." As of yesterday's close, you were flat for nearly 7 years. If (when) we hit 2100, you'll be flat for 8 years. 2000? 8 1/2 years. 1250 (about where I expect we'll land)? 23 years of buy-and-hold gains will be wiped out. 25 points below that? It'll wipe out everything back to 1995. Inflation-adjusted? It's even worse.
Short-term timing? I agree, 99.99% of people shouldn't do that. Long-term "set it and forget it" a la Ron Pompeil, though? That's just as dumb, IMO. Gains are paper only until you sell, and way too many people won't do that because they fear losing more gains. Buy-and-hold is great as long as stocks go up forever. When they don't, buy-and-hold quickly turns into losses because your cost basis has increased over time. Never be afraid to take gains, don't just put blind faith in "everything will always go back up" because like irrational behavior on the way up, the market can stay irrational longer on the way down than you want to believe is possible.
I bought Boeing and Alibaba during covid ... look at the big brain on BradThree years ago today (on March 29th, 2020), I said in a post that "Now is probably a good time to buy [stocks] since everything is much cheaper than it was a month ago". One person argued with me, primarily drawing on research from hedge fund manager John Hussman, to suggest that the stock market was overvalued. I'm not going to name the poster, because I'm not trying to embarrass him. Instead, I'm trying to show people why listening to "perma-bears" (like Hussman) is generally a bad idea.
Is this the .09 cent stock?NuRAN Signs NaaS Agreement with MTN Group for 250 Sites
Quebec, QC, Canada, June 5th, 2024 – NuRAN Wireless Inc. (“NuRAN” or the "Company") (CSE: NUR) (OTC: NRRWF) (FSE: 1RN), a leading supplier of mobile and broadband wireless infrastructure solutions, is pleased to announce a five-year Network-As-A-Service ("NaaS") agreement with MTN (JSE: MTN) for the deployment of 250 sites in Africa under the NaaS business model further to its Group Framework Agreement ("GFA") in place with the MTN Group announced on July 21, 2022.
- Nuran is currently waiting for an amendment to their contract with Orange.
- DRC License to be paid for. 150k fee was just announced in the monthly form7. The application was submitted in November 2023.
- Drawdowns / Equity investment to come
Jesus. Weren't you the guy pumping knr like 3 or 4 years ago? Thanks for the lesson to not listen to folks on forums no matter how much "research" they've done, and to stay away from cheap stocks that don't have a good track record.Yes, sir! Still hovering around the 5m mc range. One of my cse picks this year. Companies running on Africa time. Should be a fun one when the funding starts to be drawn if you like trading
I also been having fun on invr and knr this Spring. Both have been going up and retracing steadily.
My next rotation if timing works out is into cybn, salt, and qmet as they play out through the year.