POWL
EliteZags said:
If the crash doesn't happen, how impossibly hard is it going to be to buy back in higher and higher and stop the missed gains from compounding on more and more missed gains
EliteZags said:
If the crash doesn't happen, how impossibly hard is it going to be to buy back in higher and higher and stop the missed gains from compounding on more and more missed gains
EliteZags said:
If the crash doesn't happen, how impossibly hard is it going to be to buy back in higher and higher and stop the missed gains from compounding on more and more missed gains
FTAC2011 said:EliteZags said:
If the crash doesn't happen, how impossibly hard is it going to be to buy back in higher and higher and stop the missed gains from compounding on more and more missed gains
I have this exact thought. If it keeps going… when is the buy back in point?
ProgN said:
So he timed it wrong. I started moving to cash this week because it's what I believe is prudent. I guess we'll see what happens, but I'm content.
zgolfz85 said:
POWL
jamey said:ProgN said:
So he timed it wrong. I started moving to cash this week because it's what I believe is prudent. I guess we'll see what happens, but I'm content.
I started last week too, taking profits mostly out of the Russell which i cleaned out and a little out of the S&P and more again out of the S&P yesterday
I dont think I'll ever invest in the Russell again unless rates have already gone up and there's reason to think they come back down soon.
jamey said:
I saw something similar on the Russell and thats a big reason I got out.
It made more sense once upon a time when you might catch a Palantir but nowadays I think those companies go straight to large caps.
Side note, just saw a chart showing the Russell 2000 and Ethereum follow the same chart
*CHINA TO TIGHTEN EXPORTS OF RARE EARTH AND RELATED TECH
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) October 9, 2025
ProgN said:jamey said:
I saw something similar on the Russell and thats a big reason I got out.
It made more sense once upon a time when you might catch a Palantir but nowadays I think those companies go straight to large caps.
Side note, just saw a chart showing the Russell 2000 and Ethereum follow the same chart
Look, if people on this thread are in mutual funds, ETFs, etc. then they should not be trying to time the market. I invest in individual stocks at percentages of the account that is a no no. Mutual fund and ETF investors should just leave their money alone.
Heine, OA, 30K, FJ, me, etc. have all said to remove emotion. Well right now the market is trading on only emotion. Look at the last time everyone was this juiced, before Deepseek news, and what did these stocks do. Even NVDA went to $90 from $160, and this was before the "liberation day" selloff in April.
Emotion is what's driving this parabolic move but something will spook the market. Retail has become too complacent and believe that they can't lose and have to ignore warning signs. They always say that they'll dump when the market turns, but they don't. They hold because when it turns most say 'well when it goes back to X price, then I'll sell'. When their positions don't go right back to their sell price then they hold and ride a lot of it down, then they're locked up. That's also emotion and will lead to mistakes.
Ride it to Valhalla, sell or post 'shoulda, woulda, couldas', I don't care. I want everyone to remove emotion and evaluate their holdings rationally and make the best decision for themselves and their families.

Touchless said:
How much have you left in POWL? Are you trimming/pulling back on that one as well or still think it can go higher just based on the company itself and where it's at compared to competitors.
cgh1999 said:
How do you consider taxes in your approach?
Just looking at my four largest positions, my gains are significant and selling would be an immediate 20% hit for taxes (blend of short and long term). 68%-500%+ gains in my top 5.
I don't think I have any losses in my portfolio that would provide any reasonable offset.
The only thing I've been doing is donating portions of my largest gains / holdings to charity. That way I get a deduction, lower my concentration, and avoid paying taxes.
I've been buying protective puts and selling calls - when those have works I keep that in cash.
Any other hedge or strategy to protect a portfolio and minimize taxes?
[UPDATE]
— Quiver Quantitative (@QuiverQuant) October 8, 2025
We recently posted a report on Marjorie Taylor Greene's purchase of Impinj stock, $PI.
It caught our eye, because it was a small company that no one in Congress had traded for years.
The stock has now risen 177% since her April 4th purchase. pic.twitter.com/tGJEnK7fIj



MRB10 said:
My kid will never know how the number they get was invested. If I've done my job right, I'll show them the number and it'll be "gee thanks dad, I really appreciate you saving X for my benefit".
Kaiser von Wilhelm said:El Chupacabra said:
Unreal on AMD...glad I held on to some
I accidentally held on to all of it. Guess it pays to be lucky instead of good.
Now when to unload...


Proposition Joe said:MRB10 said:
My kid will never know how the number they get was invested. If I've done my job right, I'll show them the number and it'll be "gee thanks dad, I really appreciate you saving X for my benefit".
Eff that, I'm printing this entire thread out and reading it to him day-by-day as he traverses his youth.
Heineken-Ashi said:Proposition Joe said:MRB10 said:
My kid will never know how the number they get was invested. If I've done my job right, I'll show them the number and it'll be "gee thanks dad, I really appreciate you saving X for my benefit".
Eff that, I'm printing this entire thread out and reading it to him day-by-day as he traverses his youth.
Probably a better education than most colleges today.