Financial implications of a Trump victory (Full Version)

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Hillwilliam -> Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/8/2016 11:49:25 PM)

From 93 to '01, my 401k made a ton. I lost my ass from '01 to'09.
I have slowly made that back plus a good chunk since then.
Gonna hafta talk to my advisor tomorrow. What are your plans?




servantforuse -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:06:08 AM)

Sit tight and relax. The UK markets were in turmoil after the Brexit vote. Back to normal a couple of weeks later.




Real0ne -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:08:13 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

From 93 to '01, my 401k made a ton. I lost my ass from '01 to'09.
I have slowly made that back plus a good chunk since then.
Gonna hafta talk to my advisor tomorrow. What are your plans?




401 'investing' has been a bad call since 2001




Real0ne -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:09:53 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: servantforuse

Sit tight and relax. The UK markets were in turmoil after the Brexit vote. Back to normal a couple of weeks later.



fear and greed can only be suppressed for a couple seconds




mrevibo -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:16:40 AM)

You need to look at factors other than just the pure number assigned to the "value" of the DJIA. There has been the stimulus, and this has been every year since it was first passed, since no "budget" has been approved since then. There has been "quantitative easing" in a few phases. These things have all been very inflationary, so the number associated to the value of your account has grown greatly, while the actual value hasn't. Both inflation and employment numbers have been manipulated shamelessly. Have you yourself done any grocery shopping? Have you thought of what your tank of gas costs, or just paid for it? What is the declared inflation rate, vs how much more you're really paying for things? I don't doubt you've done a lot better than a lot of the lumpen proletariat out there, I'm in the same position. You owe it to yourself, though, to analyze these things without illusions.




heavyblinker -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:25:01 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: servantforuse
Sit tight and relax. The UK markets were in turmoil after the Brexit vote. Back to normal a couple of weeks later.


So you think that will be the sum total of Brexit's effects on the market?




mrevibo -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 1:55:30 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: heavyblinker

quote:

ORIGINAL: servantforuse
Sit tight and relax. The UK markets were in turmoil after the Brexit vote. Back to normal a couple of weeks later.


So you think that will be the sum total of Brexit's effects on the market?



What are you expecting?




heavyblinker -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 2:21:07 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo
What are you expecting?


A lot of uncertainty and stagnation.




mrevibo -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 2:40:09 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: heavyblinker

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo
What are you expecting?


A lot of uncertainty and stagnation.


All the way back to 1980 then? You haven't learned anything since then either?




Real0ne -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 4:06:58 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: heavyblinker

quote:

ORIGINAL: mrevibo
What are you expecting?


A lot of uncertainty and stagnation.



a stable market?

you know or should know that all of this growth is shit is mosty just accounting for inflationary/deflationary spikes and nothing more than a ruse




WickedsDesire -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 4:37:44 AM)

Growth is just an illusion - it is just another way of plundering poorer peoples savings. But when it happens to the richer people there is a crash. Cyclic, pyramid scheme, feasting from the trough and the void must be filled, usually by quantitative easing whose core principle is that it filters money down the very pyramid top to bottom - of course the bottom never sees a dime and is still paying for the last one, as they will for decades to come. It is just a control mechanism to keep the sheople in order.

As i said elsewhere martial law will probably get declared ( I looked up the impeachment thingy - I dont think its possible as the voters knew his history and yet still opted for creature and I dont think his own party will/can do it when is is wrecking the office)




tj444 -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 6:27:59 AM)


quote:

ORIGINAL: Hillwilliam

From 93 to '01, my 401k made a ton. I lost my ass from '01 to'09.
I have slowly made that back plus a good chunk since then.
Gonna hafta talk to my advisor tomorrow. What are your plans?


Since you asked…
I would be watching every single thing Trump does like a hawk, every law he is behind and see if & tailor my investments/stocks/options/futures/real estate to take advantage of anything I can.
I would also very quietly get a portion of your cash offshore where the govt cant get it, as a financial disaster back-up plan. There are laws now that allow the US govt to do what the govt did in Cypress, overnight stealing money in your bank account. I know what yer thinking, it cant happen here.. they thought that in Cypress too, until the day after their bank accounts were cleared out by the govt.. if there is a way to hedge my investments, I will do that..
You can also kiss your property rights goodbye (such as they are), cuz he is gonna make it easier for thieves like him to steal property much easier so he can build bigger developments (for the “public good”, of course).. So consider that when you make investments…
I am not an American (and never will be) & my govt doesn’t tax me if I am a non-resident (unlike the US) but I do plan to get a second citizenship in another country, just in case.. This one is not cuz of Trump tho, its always been in my future plan..




bounty44 -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/9/2016 7:40:41 AM)

the selling off was so bad last night that a handful of people on fox business were suggesting its a great time to buy.




servantforuse -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (11/10/2016 12:39:48 PM)

The DJIA is up around 600 points in the last two days. It would have been a good time to buy.




Musicmystery -> RE: Financial implications of a Trump victory (12/21/2016 9:06:59 AM)

Trump kept saying in his campaign that the stock market was a "big, ugly bubble."

So which is it?




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