Market timing needs luck, compounding needs patience.
- Manlobbi
Stocks A to Z / Stocks B / Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A)
No. of Recommendations: 1
No. of Recommendations: 20
I'm not sure if it's more shocking that it's a Tucker Carlson piece, or that the link is actually from Bing
I hadn't realized either of them was still around : )
Jim
No. of Recommendations: 4
“ I hadn't realized either of them was still around : )
Jim“ Good morning, if Don Lemon interviews Dalio I’ll let you know. ::))
No. of Recommendations: 2
Jim“ Good morning, if Don Lemon interviews Dalio I’ll let you know. ::))
That is funny! 😄🤣🤣🤣.
No. of Recommendations: 6
I read Dalio's book. I'm pretty sure he's a crackpot.
No. of Recommendations: 17
I read Dalio's book. I'm pretty sure he's a crackpot.
Isn't he too rich to be a crackpot?
I thought the preferred term was "eccentric". Perhaps even "visionary", depending on how his portfolio is doing.
Jim
No. of Recommendations: 1
"How to Survive"
what are his ideas to survive?
No. of Recommendations: 7
"what are his ideas to survive?"
Offer easy solutions to hard problems, behind a paywall, with no refunds. Say outrageous things with no regard to truth or honesty for attention, and cynically monetize the eyeballs. Weaken the US via internal division for just-barely-enough laundered moneys from its global adversaries.
Alternately, if ones ego is higher on up their hierarchy of needs, say increasingly outrageous things to chase fading fame and relevance, like a dying junkie chasing their first high jamming the junk between their shriveled toes, without a care for the harm to those around them.
Perhaps you meant I should take the premise for the videos seriously, and in that case I apologize.
No. of Recommendations: 3
Wow, and I thought I tended to be snarky.
No. of Recommendations: 1
I do sincerely apologize, the snark was excessive (and not aimed towards you, bigshan).
I strive to respect the sincerely held beliefs of those I disagree with, but Carlson can push my buttons. I shouldn't have dignified his content with the reaction.
Separately, I'm glad we sold DVA.
No. of Recommendations: 1
<<I do sincerely apologize, the snark was excessive (and not aimed towards you, bigshan).>>
No problem, I think it's toward Dalio.
But I do like to know his or anyone's ideas for survival. The risks do exist, but other than balanced portfolio, even some gold, what else?
No. of Recommendations: 3
I read Dalio's book. I'm pretty sure he's a crackpot.
Starting from nothing, his net worth is now between 15 - 20 billion dollars. He founded Bridgewater Associates which is now the world's largest hedge fund managing almost 100 billion dollars. A person with this level of success cannot be a crackpot (as in outright unhinged).
No. of Recommendations: 32
A person with this level of success cannot be a crackpot (as in outright unhinged).
I don't have an opinion about Dalio but there is a great deal of evidence that having net worth of many billions of dollars in no way prevents people from becoming unhinged, and strong reason to believe it drives them in that direction.
No. of Recommendations: 0
Bill Ackman disclosed he’s 10 percent meta and David Einhorn said it’s the most expensive market ever. I guess Buffett might agree with Einhorn.
No. of Recommendations: 3
a great deal of evidence that having net worth of many billions of dollars in no way prevents people from becoming unhinged, and strong reason to believe it drives them in that direction
When the richest guy in the world thinks differently than almost everybody who has less than him, that the richest guy in the world is unhinged is not the conclusion I reach. Especially when he keeps getting richer.
However, conclusions like that do support in me the idea that there's a lot of people who value going along with their crowd more highly than figuring out where exceptional performance comes from.
I could be wrong.
R: