Here's a statement of the obvious: The opinions expressed here are those of the participants, not those of the Mutual Fund Observer. We cannot vouch for the accuracy or appropriateness of any of it, though we do encourage civility and good humor.
If Biden’s cabinet represents “experience” and “qualifications”, let’s try something else.
Trump won a decisive, crushing victory. The American people rejected the progressive con job. Inflation is so bad that even a billion dollars couldn’t buy an…
And Rubio as Sec of State?! ORK. Mierda. Get me the hell out of here.
Well, you have to be happy with Mike Huckabee as US ambassador to Israel. Sanity being restored to government at last.
It appears Warren Buffett of all people may have fallen into the politics trap. He said at the BH annual meeting earlier this year "with present fiscal policies I think that something has to give, and I think that higher taxes are quite likely." He …
You’re the first to admit that the Dems made mistakes. I’m glad you’re able to see and do that. As for me, well, Trump got 73,461,776 votes and counting. You can call them all stupid, but again, that suggests that there’s nothing wrong with how the …
Go for it, guys. Let the TDS flow. If the Democrats can find no fault within their party or candidate, and blame the American people for their loss, they will never win another national election.
And Trump is the candidate of antisemitism? Not the …
Very serious case of TDS, if you cannot address a single mistake made by your candidate.
Feel free to insult all you like, if that helps you cope. Obviously the American people rejected your candidate in a landslide, as well as in the senate, house…
The democrats lost because:
- Biden tried to run as a geriatric vegetable
- The DNC shut down any serious primary contenders including RFK
- Once Biden was pushed aside, they crowned the incumbent VP who couldn’t separate herself from all the failu…
I suspect Trump’s crimes, mistakes and misdeeds *were* acknowledged, considered, and judged by many who voted for him; but, they concluded that when everything was taken into consideration, the alternative was worse. This election was the Democrats’…
Who said ”Crime doesn’t pay”?
Hmm. Whoever raised money for the people who rioted, looted and burned businesses in Minneapolis? Whoever decided that thefts under $900 would not be prosecuted?
Gummint depending on Elon is like shooting yourself in both feet. He is obviously morally vapid, like the Great Orange Fast Food Slug. And he is demonstrating that he will do anything he can get away with. Is this country just 2 weeks away from dire…
FD 1000, bring your drivel back to chang's forum.
+1
And we promise never to visit that wasteland.
And yet it seems you all hang out on BB and repost threads here. Glad to be of service!
@chang We know you are just trolling. Don't pull the "sore loser" card.
They must be missing you back at your other website. You should stay there.
I see. So you are only interested in the views of people who think exactly the same way you d…
@Mark "Articulate"? If pressed, I’m sure I could find ten complimentary things to say about KH, but "articulate"? You don't seriously mean that. The non-answers and word salads are legendary. "I grew up in a middle class family, ng-kay?"
But I will…
And 72,389,776 people… The popular vote was a landslide.
A 3% differential is usually not referred to as a landslide. But hey, whatever narrative works for you.
Kamala 67,878,826 votes
Trump 72,560,841 votes
I get 6.9%. Yes, it works for me.
…
'not ready for a women in power'.
I think the country - and men - are more than ready for a woman president. Just not an empty-headed one with a horrendous record of failure, who would be a puppet for a secret committee comprised of the likes of Ob…
Might be a useful link after November 5 for some on this board (note this comment is non-partisan):
https://www.crisisconnections.org/24-hour-crisis-line/
Thank you all for the many years that go back to the Fundalarm days of investment advice and wisdom. I benefited from it and I appreciate all the thoughtful insights and the great work David and Charles and many others here have done.
Unfortunately…
Down 10% today and now $12.15 in today's AH trading..... it's still $12 over-valued, imho.
For context, today's volume was ~19.2m shares, the average is ~9m.
Up 110% since this post. Could this thread predict future price movement?
I checked some of the Nordic HY bond UCIT funds that were mentioned, e.g., Pareto, DNB, etc. They hold mostly floating rate bonds. Success of these bonds are usually associated with periods of rising rates. Is it possible that we're late to the part…
If DT wins, the first thing I’ll do is check this thread to see the reaction.
https://npr.brightspotcdn.com/legacy/sites/wyprmain/files/201611/sad-clinton-10.jpg
Matthews started falling apart a long time ago. They introduced institutional classes to raise fees on investor classes, rolled out (and then shuttered) new funds, lost their best managers to Artisan, and then just started bleeding talent and assets…
Interesting, Baillie Gifford managed. They haven’t done that well with VWIGX either (although the managers are different). Lots of managers with none of their own money invested (per M*).
Recently made this comment on BB, it seems to be related to this topic:
“I have no aversion per se to concentrated funds (fewer than approximately 30 stocks). I’ve seen it work fine, but I’ve also seen it not work. For some reason, OAKMX has histor…
Robinhood offers 1% without a cap, so $50,000 for a $5m transfer with a 2y holding period. Stocks and ETFs, no mutual funds. Tempting, but I passed on it.
Fidelity since 1986. Always been the best, still the best. I had a Schwab acct for a couple of years (a few years ago); the customer service was awful.
“Curious what % of your equity fund holdings are in international stocks and what your favorite funds are.”
Not sure because I don’t use X-ray but I’d guess 25-35% international.
Favorites:
Taxable: passive, dividend paying ETFs (so you can decla…
“Theft”? If the sanctions directly caused financial loss to the Russian parties to the project (the principal Gazprom, lenders, designers and engineers, contractors, vendors and suppliers, etc.) then it could be quite sensible.