But my system for over 30 years has been this: When stocks are attractive, you buy them. Sure, they can go lower. I've bought stocks at $12 that went to $2, but then they later went to $30.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
When stocks are attractive, you buy them. Sure, they can go lower. I've bought stocks at $12 that went to $2, but then they later went to $30. You just don't know when you can find the bottom.
Buy a stock at two, have it go to 30. You feel like you're on top of the world.
Fundamentally cheap stocks are often held in low regard by market participants. Something may be tainting their perception in investors' minds.
Fortune is like the market, where, many times, if you can stay a little, the price will fall.
As a bull market continues, almost anything you buy goes up. It makes you feel that investing in stocks is a very easy and safe and that you're a financial genius.
I think you have to learn that there's a company behind every stock, and that there's only one real reason why stocks go up. Companies go from doing poorly to doing well or small companies grow to large companies.
Most of the time common stocks are subject to irrational and excessive price fluctuations in both directions as the consequence of the ingrained tendency of most people to speculate or gamble... to give way to hope, fear and greed.
The stock market is overpriced. Everything is overpriced. Junk is king.
One of the reasons so many people get burned in the market is because they start buying as they see prices going up.
Tech stocks are trading at a 30-year-low when compared to the multiples of industrials (companies). It's the weirdest bubble when everyone hates everything.
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