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Put all your money into Canadian banks.
Is high Revenue/Share a good method for finding good stocks?
The bigger worry is what happens in a down market, when the underlying stocks go under water. After a long period of financial expansion/bubble, the primary concern in investing shifts from return-on-capital to return-of-capital.
What's the difference between these two?
Rookie!
Just take out loans against your stock to pay the bills. They’re tax free and you don’t have to sell anything to do it. That’s how the big boys roll.
Shaman saysRookie!
Just take out loans against your stock to pay the bills. They’re tax free and you don’t have to sell anything to do it. That’s how the big boys roll.
Margin rates aren't cheap.
https://www.tdameritrade.com/pricing/margin-and-interest-rates.html?source=patrick.net
I have a bunch of shares of AAPL which are worth a bundle but I don’t want to sell any shares, I can’t part with them.
I have a bunch of shares of AAPL which are worth a bundle but I don’t want to sell any shares, I can’t part with them.
Put all your money into Canadian banks. But write the words "Trump Supporter for the Freedom Truckers" in the memo field of the check you use to deposit it.
You can get a margin loan but not in cash; you have to buy a security which the broker can sell quickly.
I have also bought a few stocks but not many of them. One (AAPL) has been great for me.
My investments have been for capital appreciation. I recently inherited a few funds which provide income.
Lately I’m thinking about income since I don’t work, and I just learned about “covered call ETFs”.
Wow they paid high rates recently.
XLYD, QYLD, RYLD are a few of them.
I’m going to check them out and maybe sell some of my shitty WFC to buy one.