Play, of course, but if you can't play with it then do something else with it, the markets should be treated like a day in Vegas or AC, go for it but know you can lose. I would never play the markets or do sports betting or horse racing to pay off debt, this sounds like a terrible idea and shouldn't be encouraged unless you are independently wealthy.
I just think your posts are missing nuance and painting with broad strokes. Yoloing every penny into GME is very different from putting money you don't expect to need for 5+ years into VTI. Day traders have a failure rate in the 90%+ range (similar to Vegas) which is very different from the success rate people see in total market index funds.My intent is not to talk high risk tolerance gamblers out of gambling, it is a thing many enjoy as evidenced by the entire city of Vegas, which was not built by winners BTW but I digress.
My intent is to caution the uninitiated who maybe shouldn't participate in the markets and who can't absorb losses to think before they jump. It's my personal experience that with gambling, and with substances and really any one of a number of risky endeavors, that the people who relish them most have an uncanny ability to completely block out all the losses and maintain an almost trancelike focus on the wins. When I talk to a gambler they will ALWAYS talk about the time they won 10K in Atlantic City or $x by doing ABC , but will block out all the times they lost thousands.
If anyone hasn't seen it I'd say watch, "The Big Short" because the traders make money whether the investment is good or a fail and I don't think people realize this, buyer beware it's on you.
You are not drawing a distinction between long term investing in stocks of stable companies vs speculation and short-term trading. Someone a few posts back asked if that meant you do not invest in ANY stocks. The days are long past when you can make income in T-bills which is what my dad did. We've been investing for over 40 years, and yes there are ups and downs, but over the long term the trend is definitely up. If people are putting all their savings in savings accounts making 0.5% interest, they are losing money.My intent is not to talk high risk tolerance gamblers out of gambling, it is a thing many enjoy as evidenced by the entire city of Vegas, which was not built by winners BTW but I digress.
My intent is to caution the uninitiated who maybe shouldn't participate in the markets and who can't absorb losses to think before they jump. It's my personal experience that with gambling, and with substances and really any one of a number of risky endeavors, that the people who relish them most have an uncanny ability to completely block out all the losses and maintain an almost trancelike focus on the wins. When I talk to a gambler they will ALWAYS talk about the time they won 10K in Atlantic City or $x by doing ABC , but will block out all the times they lost thousands.
If anyone hasn't seen it I'd say watch, "The Big Short" because the traders make money whether the investment is good or a fail and I don't think people realize this, buyer beware it's on you.
Not looking to debate the merit of a win, of course a win is fab. Point is do you understand that long term or short term, nothing is immune from full loss? If you do understand this it's all good, if you do not understand this it is not all good.You are not drawing a distinction between long term investing in stocks of stable companies vs speculation and short-term trading. Someone a few posts back asked if that meant you do not invest in ANY stocks. The days are long past when you can make income in T-bills which is what my dad did. We've been investing for over 40 years, and yes there are ups and downs, but over the long term the trend is definitely up. If people are putting all their savings in savings accounts making 0.5% interest, they are losing money.
Individual stocks can go to zero but if the entire market goes to 0? You'll have much bigger problems than stock investments. That is "what local rodents can I eat" territory.Not looking to debate the merit of a win, of course a win is fab. Point is do you understand that long term or short term, nothing is immune from full loss? If you do understand this it's all good, if you do not understand this it is not all good.
There is a link between risk and payoff, the greater the risk the better the promise of payoff or else why would anyone participate? The reason savings accounts are so low on earnings is that they are FDIC insured, so it is about as safe as possible. Safety has a cost, but so too does risk, where we all sit in the spectrum is an organic sort of thing called risk tolerance. It is neither wrong nor right, it simply is.
Assuming an annual inflation of 3% or whatever it is now, a savings account with a measily 0.5%, maybe even less, means you're paying that difference for the FDIC protection.
Do I understand that? Sure. Our investments are in broad spectrum index funds, so the risk is spread out over hundreds of companies. If all the companies in the US suddenly go under, nothing will be safe anywhere. Do you understand losing money in 'safe' savings accounts because the earnings are less than inflation?Not looking to debate the merit of a win, of course a win is fab. Point is do you understand that long term or short term, nothing is immune from full loss? If you do understand this it's all good, if you do not understand this it is not all good.
There is a link between risk and payoff, the greater the risk the better the promise of payoff or else why would anyone participate? The reason savings accounts are so low on earnings is that they are FDIC insured, so it is about as safe as possible. Safety has a cost, but so too does risk, where we all sit in the spectrum is an organic sort of thing called risk tolerance. It is neither wrong nor right, it simply is.
Individual stocks can go to zero but if the entire market goes to 0? You'll have much bigger problems than stock investments. That is "what local rodents can I eat" territory.
My intent is not to talk high risk tolerance gamblers out of gambling, it is a thing many enjoy as evidenced by the entire city of Vegas, which was not built by winners BTW but I digress.
My intent is to caution the uninitiated who maybe shouldn't participate in the markets and who can't absorb losses to think before they jump. It's my personal experience that with gambling, and with substances and really any one of a number of risky endeavors, that the people who relish them most have an uncanny ability to completely block out all the losses and maintain an almost trancelike focus on the wins. When I talk to a gambler they will ALWAYS talk about the time they won 10K in Atlantic City or $x by doing ABC , but will block out all the times they lost thousands.
If anyone hasn't seen it I'd say watch, "The Big Short" because the traders make money whether the investment is good or a fail and I don't think people realize this, buyer beware it's on you.
I have been buying stocks and making big money on NIO. MY DEBTS ARE GONE.
ANYBODY ELSE PLAY THE STOCK MARKET?
Nelson! You're back! Hello.....I have been buying stocks and making big money on NIO. MY DEBTS ARE GONE.
ANYBODY ELSE PLAY THE STOCK MARKET?
Some already have. I sure wouldn't have minded a 6-digit Mother's Day gift.I think there are a lot of young people "playing" in the stock market and crypto right now. Some truly believe they will be retiring in a few years. They've yet to experience the lows that come with it. No doubt some are smarter / luckier than I and will "win" , but I can't imagine this lasting forever.