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Strategies & Market Trends : Gorilla and King Portfolio Candidates -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Uncle Frank who wrote (23240)4/21/2000 6:19:00 PM
From: Mike Buckley  Respond to of 54805
 
I'd suggest you turn until your good side is pointed at the camera

ROTFLMAO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Frank! That was really funny! You're learning!

--Mike Buckley



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (23240)4/21/2000 7:30:00 PM
From: gdichaz  Respond to of 54805
 
Uncle Frank: Congratulations for your insight.

Your essence of quintessence: "Gorilla gaming is about investing in companies, not stocks." really does make the key distinction for long termers.

Kudos. Best. Cha2



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (23240)4/21/2000 8:36:00 PM
From: freeus  Respond to of 54805
 
re all of the commentary related to entry points etc

So if a person bought Qcom at 200, they just wait for their shares to "grow into" the price.
Kind of like buying clothes a little big for a baby: they'll definitely grow into them! (Not for an older child though: the clothes would be tattered before he/she grew into them if his or her activity level is anything like in our family.)
Oh, guess what I'm going to be a "grandma" again later this year: if my plans work out I will be living near enough to watch that precious baby grow out of babyhood like I did David (they lived in So Cal then).
Freeus



To: Uncle Frank who wrote (23240)4/23/2000 3:43:00 AM
From: Dinesh  Respond to of 54805
 
uncle frank:

If you believe that to be true, all of the commentary
related to entry points, exit points, oversold, overbought,
interest rates, elections, etc. can be ignored as noise.


Entry point I believe still matters - or you may be buying
a business at an excessive valuation or at unrealistic
projections.

Exit point - matters sometimes, unless the business also
becomes a part of your life. As an individual investor in a
public company, that's a difficult thing to achieve.

overbought, oversold, etc - I agree with you, is primarily
noise.

Regards
Dinesh