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Author Topic: THE GNR Stock Exchange  (Read 30413 times)
*Timothy*
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Liberated the WANG!!!


« Reply #80 on: March 22, 2008, 09:47:44 PM »

I kick myself in the ass everytime I think about not buying those maple leafs and eagles when they were at 5 last year.

I feel the same way about Bud Fox's Magic Member Cream (ticker symbol COX), it's gone up nearly 50% since the IPO.

 no

How is his ass cream doing?
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« Reply #81 on: March 22, 2008, 10:26:21 PM »

I kick myself in the ass everytime I think about not buying those maple leafs and eagles when they were at 5 last year.

I feel the same way about Bud Fox's Magic Member Cream (ticker symbol COX), it's gone up nearly 50% since the IPO.

 no

How is his ass cream doing?

He told me your misuse voided the warranty again, is that true?
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*Timothy*
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« Reply #82 on: March 22, 2008, 10:51:20 PM »

I kick myself in the ass everytime I think about not buying those maple leafs and eagles when they were at 5 last year.

I feel the same way about Bud Fox's Magic Member Cream (ticker symbol COX), it's gone up nearly 50% since the IPO.

 no

How is his ass cream doing?

He told me your misuse voided the warranty again, is that true?


Did she now?

My oh My , she is a mean she devil. God i love thee fair wentch.
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sandman
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« Reply #83 on: April 09, 2008, 01:21:00 PM »

I'm playing it safe. I got 5.25 on 1 year CDs, and that is looking real good right now. It ain't earning much, but it is guaranteed.

you post got me searching for good rates. i found some banks that offer checking accounts that pay 6% or more. no fees. no minimum balance. FDIC.

they all require 10+ debit card transactions a month. that's probably how they make their money (visa fees). unless they are lending cash to columbian drug lords. 

this is a good site...

http://www.money-rates.com/rewardschecking.htm

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« Reply #84 on: April 09, 2008, 01:27:42 PM »

www.bankrate.com is another good site with TONS of information/rates.
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« Reply #85 on: April 09, 2008, 01:52:20 PM »

I'm watching my friends buy high and sell low.

Don't panic! Especially with retirement funds!!

It's not a loss or gain until you sell it.
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« Reply #86 on: April 10, 2008, 10:54:31 AM »

Get on the phone and short American Airlines now!

 hihi
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D
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« Reply #87 on: April 13, 2008, 06:18:13 PM »

Im bout to come into 27,000 dollars.

I thought of investing it

Any advice?

I am a complete novice with this stuff.
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« Reply #88 on: April 13, 2008, 06:30:30 PM »

Im bout to come into 27,000 dollars.

I thought of investing it

Any advice?

I am a complete novice with this stuff.

Jesus man. PM me would you.

You can loose that real quick listening to bad advice.

I'm serious, PM me.
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« Reply #89 on: April 14, 2008, 01:40:22 AM »

D - not sure what your situation I would do one or a combo of the following:

1. buy a place - 27k is a nice down payment, real estate (as a place to live for a long period of time, not to flip) is always a sound investment.

2. throw it into a mix of savings account, long term CDs and mutual funds and ETFs

3. PM SLC Wink
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« Reply #90 on: April 14, 2008, 02:29:34 AM »

Well I'm not trying to be a pig about this, or be too pushy.... People just have no idea of how fast you can blow 30k. I've seen people blow through it and have nothing to show for it, such a shame.

You can take my advise or leave it. But especially at your age, you have a leg up on older guys like me: time. Time for interest to compound and make you more money. Frankly most younger guys (in their 20s) don't take my advice, probably because it ain't too sexy. Tax deferred savings? Index funds? Work hard? Who wants to do that?!?!?
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« Reply #91 on: April 14, 2008, 03:49:57 AM »

Well I'm not trying to be a pig about this, or be too pushy.... People just have no idea of how fast you can blow 30k. I've seen people blow through it and have nothing to show for it, such a shame.

You can take my advise or leave it. But especially at your age, you have a leg up on older guys like me: time. Time for interest to compound and make you more money. Frankly most younger guys (in their 20s) don't take my advice, probably because it ain't too sexy. Tax deferred savings? Index funds? Work hard? Who wants to do that?!?!?

agree w/ you 100%.  that's all great advice.
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« Reply #92 on: April 14, 2008, 09:28:15 PM »

D, Let's be serious here.  We could use this money to bribe Axl to get the albums out!   hihi

I like what SLC and Hil-Dog had to say.  You'll do the right thing.   yes
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« Reply #93 on: April 15, 2008, 02:33:48 AM »

"Be afraid when everyone else is being greedy and be greedy when everyone else is afraid."

Warren Buffet
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« Reply #94 on: April 15, 2008, 10:46:11 AM »

Buffett's outlook....

Do you think the U.S. financial markets are losing their competitive edge? And what's the right balance between confidence-inspiring standards and ...

... between regulation and the Wild West? Well, I don't think we're losing our edge. I mean, there are costs to Sarbanes-Oxley, some of which are wasted. But they're not huge relative to the $20 trillion in total market value. I think we've got fabulous capital markets in this country, and they get screwed up often enough to make them even more fabulous. I mean, you don't want a capital market that functions perfectly if you're in my business. People continue to do foolish things no matter what the regulation is, and they always will. There are significant limits to what regulation can accomplish. As a dramatic illustration, take two of the biggest accounting disasters in the past ten years: Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. We're talking billions and billions of dollars of misstatements at both places.

Now, these are two incredibly important institutions. I mean, they accounted for over 40% of the mortgage flow a few years back. Right now I think they're up to 70%. They're quasi-governmental in nature. So the government set up an organization called OFHEO. I'm not sure what all the letters stand for. [Note to Warren: They stand for Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight.] But if you go to OFHEO's website, you'll find that its purpose was to just watch over these two companies. OFHEO had 200 employees. Their job was simply to look at two companies and say, "Are these guys behaving like they're supposed to?" And of course what happened were two of the greatest accounting misstatements in history while these 200 people had their jobs. It's incredible. I mean, two for two!

It's very, very, very hard to regulate people. If I were appointed a new regulator - if you gave me 100 of the smartest people you can imagine to work for me, and every day I got the positions from the biggest institutions, all their derivative positions, all their stock positions and currency positions, I wouldn't be able to tell you how they were doing. It's very, very hard to regulate when you get into very complex instruments where you've got hundreds of counterparties. The counterparty behavior and risk was a big part of why the Treasury and the Fed felt that they had to move in over a weekend at Bear Stearns. And I think they were right to do it, incidentally. Nobody knew what would be unleashed when you had thousands of counterparties with, I read someplace, contracts with a $14 trillion notional value. Those people would have tried to unwind all those contracts if there had been a bankruptcy. What that would have done to the markets, what that would have done to other counterparties in turn - it gets very, very complicated. So regulating is an important part of the system. The efficacy of it is really tough.

At Piccolo Pete's, where he has dined with everyone from Microsoft's Bill Gates to the New York Yankees' Alex Rodriguez, Buffett sat at a table with 12 Whartonites and bantered over many topics.

How do you feel about the election?

Way before they both filed, I told Hillary that I would support her if she ran, and I told Barack I would support him if he ran. So I am now a political bigamist. But I feel either would be great. And actually, I feel that if a Republican wins, John McCain would be the one I would prefer. I think we've got three unusually good candidates this time.

They're all moderate in their approach.

Well, the one we don't know for sure about is Barack. On the other hand, he has the chance to be the most transformational too.

I know you had a paper route. Was that your first job?

Well, I worked for my grandfather, which was really tough, in the [family] grocery store. But if you gave me the choice of being CEO of General Electric or IBM or General Motors, you name it, or delivering papers, I would deliver papers. I would. I enjoyed doing that. I can think about what I want to think. I don't have to do anything I don't want to do. It might be wonderful to be head of GE, and Jeff Immelt is a friend of mine. And he's a great guy. But think of all the things he has to do whether he wants to do them or not.

How do you get your ideas?

I just read. I read all day. I mean, we put $500 million in PetroChina. All I did was read the annual report. [Editor's note: Berkshire purchased the shares five years ago and sold them in 2007 for $4 billion.]

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« Reply #95 on: April 15, 2008, 10:46:35 AM »

What advice would you give to someone who is not a professional investor? Where should they put their money?

Well, if they're not going to be an active investor - and very few should try to do that - then they should just stay with index funds. Any low-cost index fund. And they should buy it over time. They're not going to be able to pick the right price and the right time. What they want to do is avoid the wrong price and wrong stock. You just make sure you own a piece of American business, and you don't buy all at one time.

When Buffett said he was ready to pose for photographs, all 150 students stampeded out of the room within seconds and formed a massive line. For the next half hour, each one took his or her turn with Buffett, often in hammy poses (wrestling for his wallet was a favorite). Then, as he started to leave, a 77-year-old's version of A Hard Day's Night ensued, with a pack of 30 students trailing him to his gold Cadillac. Once free, he drove this Fortune writer back to his office and continued fielding questions.

How does the current turmoil stack up against past crises?

Well, that's hard to say. Every one has so many variables in it. But there's no question that this time there's extreme leveraging and in some cases the extreme prices of residential housing or buyouts. You've got $20 trillion of residential real estate and you've got $11 trillion of mortgages, and a lot of that does not have a problem, but a lot of it does. In 2006 you had $330 billion of cash taken out in mortgage refinancings in the United States. That's a hell of a lot - I mean, we talk about having $150 billion of stimulus now, but that was $330 billion of stimulus. And that's just from prime mortgages. That's not from subprime mortgages. So leveraging up was one hell of a stimulus for the economy.

If that was one hell of a stimulus, do you think the $150 billion government stimulus plan will make an impact?

Well, it's $150 billion more than we'd have otherwise. But it's not like we haven't had stimulus. And then the simultaneous, more or less, LBO boom, which was called private equity this time. The abuses keep coming back - and the terms got terrible and all that. You've got a banking system that's hung up with lots of that. You've got a mortgage industry that's deleveraging, and it's going to be painful.

The scenario you're describing suggests we're a long way from turning a corner.

I think so. I mean, it seems everybody says it'll be short and shallow, but it looks like it's just the opposite. You know, deleveraging by its nature takes a lot of time, a lot of pain. And the consequences kind of roll through in different ways. Now, I don't invest a dime based on macro forecasts, so I don't think people should sell stocks because of that. I also don't think they should buy stocks because of that.

Your OFHEO example implies you're not too optimistic about regulation.

Finance has gotten so complex, with so much interdependency. I argued with Alan Greenspan some about this at [Washington Post chairman] Don Graham's dinner. He would say that you've spread risk throughout the world by all these instruments, and now you didn't have it all concentrated in your banks. But what you've done is you've interconnected the solvency of institutions to a degree that probably nobody anticipated. And it's very hard to evaluate. If Bear Stearns had not had a derivatives book, my guess is the Fed wouldn't have had to do what it did.

Do you find it striking that banks keep looking into their investments and not knowing what they have?

I read a few prospectuses for residential-mortgage-backed securities - mortgages, thousands of mortgages backing them, and then those all tranched into maybe 30 slices. You create a CDO by taking one of the lower tranches of that one and 50 others like it. Now if you're going to understand that CDO, you've got 50-times-300 pages to read, it's 15,000. If you take one of the lower tranches of the CDO and take 50 of those and create a CDO squared, you're now up to 750,000 pages to read to understand one security. I mean, it can't be done. When you start buying tranches of other instruments, nobody knows what the hell they're doing. It's ridiculous. And of course, you took a lower tranche of a mortgage-backed security and did 100 of those and thought you were diversifying risk. Hell, they're all subject to the same thing. I mean, it may be a little different whether they're in California or Nebraska, but the idea that this is uncorrelated risk and therefore you can take the CDO and call the top 50% of it super-senior - it isn't super-senior or anything. It's a bunch of juniors all put together. And the juniors all correlate.

If big financial institutions don't seem to know what's in their portfolios, how will investors ever know when it's safe?

They can't, they can't. They've got to, in effect, try to read the DNA of the people running the companies. But I say that in any large financial organization, the CEO has to be the chief risk officer. I'm the chief risk officer at Berkshire. I think I know my limits in terms of how much I can sort of process. And the worst thing you can have is models and spreadsheets. I mean, at Salomon, they had all these models, and you know, they fell apart.

What should we say to investors now?

The answer is you don't want investors to think that what they read today is important in terms of their investment strategy. Their investment strategy should factor in that (a) if you knew what was going to happen in the economy, you still wouldn't necessarily know what was going to happen in the stock market. And (b) they can't pick stocks that are better than average. Stocks are a good thing to own over time. There's only two things you can do wrong: You can buy the wrong ones, and you can buy or sell them at the wrong time. And the truth is you never need to sell them, basically. But they could buy a cross section of American industry, and if a cross section of American industry doesn't work, certainly trying to pick the little beauties here and there isn't going to work either. Then they just have to worry about getting greedy. You know, I always say you should get greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy. But that's too much to expect. Of course, you shouldn't get greedy when others get greedy and fearful when others get fearful. At a minimum, try to stay away from that.

By your rule, now seems like a good time to be greedy. People are pretty fearful.

You're right. They are going in that direction. That's why stocks are cheaper. Stocks are a better buy today than they were a year ago. Or three years ago.

But you're still bullish about the U.S. for the long term?

The American economy is going to do fine. But it won't do fine every year and every week and every month. I mean, if you don't believe that, forget about buying stocks anyway. But it stands to reason. I mean, we get more productive every year, you know. It's a positive-sum game, long term. And the only way an investor can get killed is by high fees or by trying to outsmart the market.
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« Reply #96 on: April 15, 2008, 01:07:10 PM »

And the only way an investor can get killed is by high fees or by trying to outsmart the market.


Quoted for D.
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« Reply #97 on: April 15, 2008, 11:23:39 PM »

SLC - can you PM me some good financial advice you've been told and learnt over the years?
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« Reply #98 on: April 15, 2008, 11:30:29 PM »

Don't buy any GE stock.

A share is worth less now than it was in  2001.

« Last Edit: April 15, 2008, 11:33:36 PM by Senator John "Bluto" Blutarsky » Logged

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« Reply #99 on: April 15, 2008, 11:49:01 PM »

2001 was about the peak price for GE wasn't it?

My dad owns a ton of GE, has been buying it since the early 70's.  Shocked
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