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  1. #11
    Senior Member TeslaGod's Avatar
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    CC

    It seems your black swan / market crash /end of the world dooms day event came early for you with your -40 to -100% crypto pick losses this year.

    Or you just don't have a clue what your doing.

  2. #12
    Guru justakiwi's Avatar
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    This comment just shows your lack of understanding of investing in shares. There will be crashes. Some worse than others, but the markets always eventually recover. Not all companies will survive a major crash, but most will. Wise investors will pick companies that will recover and survive. Wise investors also don't panic sell, and ensure they are prepared to ride out a crash, even if it takes several years. Snoopy's approach is not a "cabbage patch move" - it is a very wise strategy.

    Why are you worried? According to you crypto is the only investment worth considering. The one that will make you a billionaire and give you security for life. Having second thoughts are we?

    Quote Originally Posted by Crypto Crude View Post
    To be investing in companies (listed companies I presume) through a very likely financial market meltdown is a cabbage patch kid move... in bear markets no companies are spared no matter what they do or how important they are.... small companies, big companies they all get smoked....
    You need a huge reality check....

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crypto Crude View Post
    Snoopy,
    To be investing in companies (listed companies I presume) through a very likely financial market meltdown is a cabbage patch kid move... in bear markets no companies are spared no matter what they do or how important they are.... small companies, big companies they all get smoked....
    You need a huge reality check....
    CC in one sense you are right, but it all depends on time frames. If we have the mother of all market crashes what do you think people will do? Cancel their internet connection? Cut off their power account? Stop buying food and live off rats and sparrows with grass salad caught and harvested on their own property? If you don't think any of that will happen, then

    1/ Cash will still flow through to those companies operating in those 'utility type' industries.
    2/ That means that cash will be available to pay dividends.
    3/ A dividend means the underlying share will be providing an investment yield.
    4/ An investment yield means the underlying share price will have a 'floor value'.
    5/ If interest rates are lowered (which is what happens in times of a sharemarket crisis), then this means the 'floor price' for these 'utility type' shares will be high.

    This sounds like a good 'capital preservation' strategy to me. Of course none of this prevents a 'shock price reaction', which is I think the kind of thing you fear. For example, in the initial Covid-19 shock, the CEN share price of $7 plunged to under $5. SPK plunged from $4.80 to under $3.80 and RBD plunged from $12 to under $7. But how long did these plunges last?

    OTOH if you were a shareholder in Tesla, trading on a PE ratio in the hundreds, what need is there for the public to suddenly rush out and buy a new car? With no dividend in sight, you might see a more permanent 'down rating' in the Tesla share price. A far different situation to the three companies that I described above.

    Quote Originally Posted by Crypto Crude View Post
    Buying companies and hedging with a short sell now that's smarter...
    Next year from mid year on will not be a time to scalp profits... it will be a time to maintain as much wealth as possible and really pump it back on after the crash.....
    The problem with hedging is that it forces you to time the crash. That works until it doesn't, and when it doesn't work (as eventually it won't no matter how smart you think you are) at that point your dollars are done.

    I managed to have a few nibbles after the early 2020 Covid-19 meltdown that have done very well, but nothing 'life changing'. The problem is at the time of a crash like that, the survival of some companies comes into question. Buying of certain companies is more akin to 'night at the casino' gambling. I remember having real fears that SCT (for example), dependent on big projects controlled by possum in the headlights managers of their customers, would go bust. I couldn't sell out - not enough market liquidity - so what to do? In the end SCT's sound balance sheet was enough to pull them through until the investment project tap turned on again. This investment has since proven ultra successful for me. But no way could I have piled cash (which I did have at the time) into the bottom plunging share price trough ( a mere 80c!) of this one at 'crash time'.

    Quote Originally Posted by Crypto Crude View Post
    I'm considering where to store money... I'm thinking perhaps just a cheap house which won't lose much money in a bear market and spread some money around and wait for the bear market... its coming...
    100%... and this will be a real nasty one... of a generation
    cc
    I wouldn't say you are wrong with that 'cheap house' strategy. But houses aren't listed on the sharemarket. Try selling that cheap house at the bottom of a real market crash and there will be no buyers, or at least no buyers at a price you would consider selling at. Your cheap house could lose half its value if sold on a panicked market. But such a loss will quickly bounce back when sanity prevails over panic. And of course you would not need to sell your cheap house at the bottom of the market , so you will be O.K.. Exactly the same logic applies to the 'essential goods' shares that I am talking about. In the case of the shares you have a squiggly line chart to follow down in the 'shock crash'. In the case of the house, the price isn't quoted on the market each day so you don't. That doesn't mean a house price crash isn't happening though. You will ignore it. I will ignore the price squiggles on my utility type shares. We will both come out O.K..

    SNOOPY
    Last edited by Snoopy; 09-12-2021 at 09:11 AM.
    Watch out for the most persistent and dangerous version of Covid-19: B.S.24/7

  4. #14
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    No offense but you guys are stupid, and to illustrate how silly this topic is, i'll post a bunch of references from great investors of all time: (because it seems that my previous post did not ring a bell at all one bit - re graph of the Dow Jones from 1986 to 2016).

    Peter Lynch:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m4IVGyDzjA8

    Jack Bogle (RIP):

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hMjC_TX1Dc0

    and finally...

    https://i.imgur.com/6qFASSx.jpg

    Will putting money in houses do better than future stock market returns? In the short term no one knows with certainty, but in the long term equity markets have always done better. But what the topic of this thread is discussing is rather simple: trying to time the market and trying to pick the asset class (or a particular stock) to hedge against or avoid an future uncertainty like a total market crash.

    Crypto Crude thinks there will be the mother of all stock market crashes to come next year. I say based on what analysis? If it's as good as how you trade cryptocurrencies, I would only take it as a gamble or speculation. To me, QE has push prices up throughout global markets. THAT money gets trickled through companies and ends up as profits for which it benefits the shareholders. Once Covid becomes under control, the markets will continue on higher. Too hard to believe? Again look at my previous post with the historic chart - WWI, WWII, etc.

  5. #15
    Guru Crypto Crude's Avatar
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    Many of you probably forgot what happened in the 2008 GFC... everything got absolutely slaughtered...blue chips... the works!... smoked like a rabbit in headlights...In late 2007 I was completely out of the stockmarket....I found a 'special' company so good I thought it was hedged against a bearmarket lol.... so I went back all in... it got smoked lol... I made it all back but lost a year and a whole bunch of profits had I bought after the crash...
    ..... sure all assets did recover and have since put in major new all time highs... but, bear markets are when the greatest transfer of wealth happens....
    I'd say the writing is on the wall for next year... ... we have had our first warning signs fired with evergrande... and next year it will gain momentum... we never fixed the problems of 2008... central banks just threw money at the problem but never sorted the underlying issue...and now we have a much bigger problem... debts are so much higher...people are still geared up in investments... only time will tell but you will see... im confident this is going to be 2-3 times worse than the GFC....this market reset should have happened years ago... but central banks injected money and printed more and more currency than ever before...
    Next year is the year it all stops... the US is at maximum debt ceiling I'm even of the opinion that US debt is so high its impossible to pay back...
    Most if not all countries are currently at all time high debts... even China has significant debt...
    There is a massive cooler coming so no SBQ, Your the big idiot...
    I'm just interested on where people think is a good place to put money for impending crash....
    I'm not talking about the retrace.. I'm buying at heavy discount...
    cc

  6. #16
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    You're the crypto rude man so just put everything that's crypt and would be nice if there's krypton on it for upward movement too

  7. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by Crypto Crude View Post
    Many of you probably forgot what happened in the 2008 GFC... everything got absolutely slaughtered...blue chips... the works!... smoked like a rabbit in headlights...In late 2007 I was completely out of the stockmarket....I found a 'special' company so good I thought it was hedged against a bearmarket lol.... so I went back all in... it got smoked lol... I made it all back but lost a year and a whole bunch of profits had I bought after the crash...
    ..... sure all assets did recover and have since put in major new all time highs... but, bear markets are when the greatest transfer of wealth happens....
    I'd say the writing is on the wall for next year... ... we have had our first warning signs fired with evergrande... and next year it will gain momentum... we never fixed the problems of 2008... central banks just threw money at the problem but never sorted the underlying issue...and now we have a much bigger problem... debts are so much higher...people are still geared up in investments... only time will tell but you will see... im confident this is going to be 2-3 times worse than the GFC....this market reset should have happened years ago... but central banks injected money and printed more and more currency than ever before...
    Next year is the year it all stops... the US is at maximum debt ceiling I'm even of the opinion that US debt is so high its impossible to pay back...
    Most if not all countries are currently at all time high debts... even China has significant debt...
    There is a massive cooler coming so no SBQ, Your the big idiot...
    I'm just interested on where people think is a good place to put money for impending crash....
    I'm not talking about the retrace.. I'm buying at heavy discount...
    cc

    CC, when you read the responses to the question you pose, it seems to me there is a common theme, which perhaps you should consider a little more deeply? Folk are suggesting a nuanced approach is best, rather than just predetermining (prior to any potential crash), a mono-strategy approach.
    One thing we can learn from history, is that no “crash” is the same. As per a well-used cliché,
    “market trends don’t repeat, but they do rhyme”.

    Each crash has its own unique set of characteristics (let’s say personality traits). Hence, how one best adapts & strategically contends with a crash situation will partly depend on what one perceives the market personality at the time. One example of doing this is by assessing the likely duration of a crash/new bearish trend.

    • Is it a Flash Crash (which are more common now that Algo’s use is ubiquitous across markets)?
    • Or is it a “Black Swan” type event like 9-11 or Covid (March 2020)?
    • Or is it a broad-based economic breakdown which can go on for years, and sometimes even decades? The 1990 Nikkei crash (>40% loss within first 12 mths), which only very recently surpassed (in nominal terms) the 1990 ATH is a classic example. Another example, which also illustrates stark differences in market responses to the same event is the ’87 crash. In the US, the DOW printed its low on the day of the crash (Black Monday). It has never printed a lower low on the tape since! Meanwhile in NZ, the October event was just the “beginning”. Going on to make new lows for many years after.


    However, in saying all that, it seems that you are asking the question from the viewpoint of a significant deflationary/de-leveraging event occurring. I suspect a few may sympathise with your view. If it does come to pass, I would suggest that the duration of such an event would be significant. A crash (or crashes!) may occur at different stages of the journey, and not necessarily at the beginning by the way.
    Regardless of why & when a crash next comes, it's good to keep two further little sayings in the back of your mind...

    “The bigger, longer & harder the party……the bigger, longer & harder the hangover”.

    "Just because something is inevitable, it doesn't mean that is imminent".


    So, one answer to your question, "where to put your money in that sort of financial crisis?" is very clear in my mind.
    Wherever there isn’t debt!

    During true deflationary periods most asset classes are re-priced to lower nominal levels. Leaving Debt nominally where it was prior. Having access to sustainable cashflow & liquidity become the number 1 priority for investment survival & prosperity.

    And yes as you say, perhaps the GFC gave us just a little heads-up to how things could look.
    Last edited by FTG; 11-12-2021 at 11:39 AM.
    Success is a journey AND a destination!

  8. #18
    Guru Crypto Crude's Avatar
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    Evergrande has defaulted now... and bad inflation figures coming out of the US...
    Watch this space...
    cc

  9. #19
    Guru Crypto Crude's Avatar
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    Inflation 6.8% in America...
    The highest since 1982 !...

    cc

  10. #20
    Senior Member TeslaGod's Avatar
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    Crypto Crude can't pick a winning alt coin

    Can't read a company financial statement

    So has decided to become this forum's Michael Burry and be NZ biggest bear.

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