We all know the supposed tale of how Joseph Kennedy made... [Outsider Club Header]
Feb 19, 2024 By for the Outsider Club Is Bitcoin Playing with Your Emotions? Dear Reader, With the S&P and Nasdaq reaching all-time highs, Bitcoin breaking $50,000, and chip companies going to the moon, itâs got a lot of people talking about the stock market. Thereâs a lot of good advice but also a lot of bad advice out there. For example, for the last six months, Jim Cramer has been saying that the market is overvalued and that it canât possibly go up any further. Wrong. He said the market was going up, just before the CPI numbers came out this week which caused selling pressure. Wrong again. The point is youâve got to be careful out there. Nearly every day I hear someone on the street talking about crypto or the stock market. This, too, is a good sign but also a bad one. Secret tech stock set to soar on Appleâs Vision Pro Rollout Apple has unleashed its Vision Pro headset, a device set to transform the tech world. This is Apple's most ambitious project since the iPhone. At the heart of this innovation is a small tech firm, collaborating closely with Apple. Its partnership with Apple puts this tech firm in a prime position for growth. [All the details can be found right here.]( We all know the supposed tale of how Joseph Kennedy made his family fortune. Time magazine wrote the following about it⦠There is a famous story, we donât know if itâs true, about how in the late summer of 1929, a shoe-shine boy gave Joe Kennedy stock tips, and Kennedy, being a wise old investor, thought, âIf shoe shine boys are giving stock tips, then itâs time to get out of the market.â While the rest of his fellow bigshot investors were pumping money into the stock market, Kennedy saw signs that stocks were wildly overvalued. He sold off most of his stock holdings before the 1929 crash, and even better, he started shorting stocks, betting that their prices would go down. When everyone else lost their shirts on Black Tuesday, Kennedy walked away richer than ever. FOMO, or the fear of missing out, really does affect day-to-day market behavior. When times are good, times are really good. When times are bad, times are really bad. When the marketâs good, investors who made the right moves feel like geniuses, only to be crushed when the market goes the other way. And it always does, by the way. Now, Iâm not saying this is going to happen right now, but the point is thereâs an easy way to invest and a hard way. Letâs go over the hard way first... Trading There are two main types of investing: active and passive. To me, active investing is also called trading and can be taken to the extreme with day trading, which is a very difficult job. Most people who dabble in stocks have attempted to day trade at one point in their investing career only to give it up soon after because the odds are against them. Trading typically means buying single stocks with the goal of outperforming the market or a specific benchmark. Portfolio managers or individual investors actively make decisions to buy or sell securities based on their analysis of market conditions, economic trends, and individual company performance. Typically, active investors believe they can identify mispriced securities and capitalize on market inefficiencies. Most active investors are in fact day traders who frequently buy and sell securities. They do their own research and market analysis. A drawback here is that frequent trading involves higher transaction fees. Not to mention, youâre less diversified and if any of your positions go against you, you can lose money in a hurry. By all means, if you want the sleepless nights and excess risk, be my guest. But you canât do that forever. Not to mention, itâs believed that only 5% of day traders actually make money in any given year. So be careful out there. Also, most of the market news you hear is made to drum up emotion and make you do something stupid with your money. Thereâs a better way to invest, however... [Exploit Congressâ New Law for Easy Moneyâ¦]( Congressed just passed a brand-new law. Itâs an obscure provision in the Internal Revenue Code⦠Which allows in-the-know Americans to claim $7,882 every quarter â courtesy of the U.S. government. If your retirement nest egg is running on empty, then⦠[Click here to exploit this new law â 100% legal and ethically.]( Care-Free Investing On the other hand, thereâs [passive investing](, or what I call carefree investing. Thatâs because, with passive investing, you can go about your life and not worry about any of the noise coming from the news or your genius friends. You just put your money into your account whenever it works for you, and thatâs it. You may do this through your retirement account like a [401(k)Â](or an individual retirement account (IRA). Passive investors build portfolios that closely mimic the composition of a chosen index, and they typically hold onto these investments for the long term. It involves less frequent buying and selling, as the goal is to maintain a portfolio that mirrors the benchmark like the S&P 500. Passive investing generally relies on a "buy and hold" strategy, minimizing the need for continuous monitoring, and lowering transaction fees in the process. Passive investors believe that over the long term, markets are efficient, and itâs challenging to consistently beat the market through active management. Pros and Cons Now, before you go setting up shop with your new day trading firm, letâs look at the pros and cons of each style. Active Investing: - Pros: Potential for outperformance, flexibility in portfolio management, ability to adapt to changing market conditions.
- Cons: Higher fees, increased transaction costs, and the challenge of consistently outperforming the market. Passive Investing: - Pros: Lower fees, reduced transaction costs, simplicity, and the likelihood of achieving market returns.
- Cons: No attempt to outperform the market actively, exposure to market downturns without attempts to mitigate risks. Investors often choose between active and passive strategies based on their investment goals, risk tolerance, time horizon, and beliefs about market efficiency. Some investors also adopt a hybrid approach, incorporating elements of both active and passive strategies into their portfolios. [URGENT: This Parcel of Land Could Gift You Half a Million Dollars]( [JMT Buried Under the Land Image](In a remote corner of North America, a team of geologists and explorers just found something truly amazing. Mining experts call it the last GREAT gold discovery on Earth. And if you invest in the tiny firm that owns this land â before Big Tech and Wall Street investors catch wind of it... You could turn $10,000 into over $500,000! [Get the lowdown on this urgent gold opportunity right now.]( Sometimes even both strategies can fall short and you have to do something no one else is doing, as in our example above with Joseph Kennedy. If you spot something big on the horizon and no one else sees it, thatâs when fortunes are made. And whatever you do, donât use leverage. Thatâs what hurt so many people, as the Time article reveals: âFor so many months so many people had saved money and borrowed money and borrowed on their borrowings to possess themselves of the little pieces of paper by virtue of which they became partners in U. S. Industry,â TIME wrote of the mood on that first frightening day. âNow they were trying to get rid of them even more frantically than they had tried to get them.â The fact that the market had fallen 10% before the bankers intervened made other people wary of the market and probably theyâre the ones who started selling the following Monday and Tuesday. [And] easy money is good for the stock market, which is fairly true. The Federal Reserve in the summer of 1929 was worried about the excess of speculation so they actually did a tightening at the beginning of September. Thereâs so much more to cover here, but weâll leave it at that for now. Next time on this investor series, weâll cover index funds vs ETFs and even look at some tax implications. [And if you want access to our care-free dividend portfolio, make sure to click this link right here.]( Stay frosty, Alexander Boulden
Editor, Outsider Club After Alexanderâs passion for economics and investing drew him to one of the largest financial publishers in the world, where he rubbed elbows with former Chicago Board Options Exchange floor traders, Wall Street hedge fund managers, and International Monetary Fund analysts, he decided to take up the pen and guide others through this new age of investing. [Check out his editor's page here](. Want to hear more from Alexander? [Sign up to receive emails directly from him]( ranging from market commentaries to opportunities that he has his eye on. Follow the Outsiders [YouTube]( This email was sent to {EMAIL}. You can manage your subscription and get our privacy policy[here](. Outsider Club, Copyright © Outsider Club LLC, 3 E Read Street Baltimore, MD 21202. Please note: It is not our intention to send email to anyone who doesn't want it. If you're not sure why you're getting this e-letter, or no longer wish to receive it, get more info [here]( including our privacy policy and information on how to manage your subscription. If you are interested in our other publications, please call our customer service team at [1-855-496-0830](tel:/18554960830).