• Hey, guest user. Hope you're enjoying NeoGAF! Have you considered registering for an account? Come join us and add your take to the daily discourse.

Stock-Age: Stocks, Options and Dividends oh my!

If you want to buy and hold one forever then BPTRX is the better of the two by a mile, that is not up for dispute. However what you're getting there is far more diversified.

If you want something that will grant you more exposure to SpaceX for a period of time (at the cost of more volatility, feed and uncertainty) then DXYZ is the one to go for.

Compare how the two have performed since Trump won the election and you will see what I mean.
Now BPTRX has 15% holding in SpaceX.

 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Markets rebounded nicely, but still a down day for probably most people. Got lucky, dont have a ton of stocks now as I got a load of cash. My portfolio was never down a lot all day.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Rumours Gamestop and Bitcoin got something cooking as the ceos of gamestop and microstrategy were photohgraphed together.

GME up +7% today. I didnt pull the trigger. It opened right away up 3% and avoided. Jumped more.
 

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Made money off NVDA last year. Nice chunk $50k. Got back into it 1 week ago. Up 15%! But didnt put in as much as last time. Damn. If it goes up another 10%-15% I might dump it. It's high is around $150. If it creeps up near it I might bail.

Tip for you Canadian investors. Look for the Canadian CDR stock. It'll be much cheaper and in CDN so you wont get nailed with currency fluctuations or fees. For example, NVDA.NE (Canada's stock) is only $31. It goes up and down with the US stock so it really makes no difference what the price is. But you dont have to worry about currency exchange issues and trading fees. Then again, there are times when the US dollar gets stronger, buying a US stock on Dow/Nasdaq benefits you. Some US stocks I got have appreciated somewhere between 5-10% alone just on currency. Then again, it can go the other way and you get nailed.

There arent tons of CDRs, but if you buy a US stock, see if there's a CDR first.
 
Last edited:

StreetsofBeige

Gold Member
Whew. Sold my NVDA CDR stock a week ago. Made about $10k in less than 3 weeks. Will jump back in at some point. Earnings coming.

Mircron has been a dog. Down 10%.

Got into Novo Nordisk. Up 5% in a few days.
 
57154244.jpg
 

MaestroMike

Gold Member

Berkshire Hathaway liquidates holdings in S&P 500 ETFs​

Disclosures indicate its holdings in SPY and VOO were dissolved in fourth quarter of 2024


Berkshire Hathaway has liquidated its holdings in S&P 500 ETFs from Vanguard and State Street Global Advisors, leaving the bellwether investor without any ETF positions.

Berkshire’s shares in the SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO), each valued at roughly $22mn, were dissolved during the fourth quarter, according to disclosure filings.

The sales underscore a longer-term trend at Berkshire of retreating from securities, lifting its cash position to the highest on record — $334.2bn at the end of the year.

For nine straight quarters, Berkshire has been a net seller of securities.

Speaking in his recently released annual letter, chief executive Warren Buffett brushed off speculation that he viewed markets as overvalued.

“Despite what some commentators currently view as an extraordinary cash position at Berkshire, the great majority of your money remains in equities,” he said. “That preference won’t change.”

Buffett has spoken glowingly of index funds in the past, and of Vanguard’s in particular. Writing in his 2016 letter, he recommended “low-cost index funds” as a superior alternative to hedge funds.

“When trillions of dollars are managed by Wall Streeters charging high fees, it will usually be the managers who reap outsized profits, not the clients,” he said at the time.

In the same letter, Buffett hailed Vanguard founder Jack Bogle as the best champion of investors the country has known.

“If a statue is ever erected to honour the person who has done the most for American investors, the hands-down choice should be Jack Bogle,” Buffett said. “In his crusade, he amassed only a tiny percentage of the wealth that has typically flowed to managers who have promised their investors large rewards while delivering them nothing — or, as in our bet, less than nothing — of added value.”
 
Top Bottom