How the hell are we supposed to retire?

Use caution buying the dip. There's a massive window until March OPEX where the sell can get much larger. Basically all of the loans that were taken out in the beginning of covid are coming due after 5 years. Basically the market has to go up enough to add $20 trillion to compensate for the 5 yrs or liquidity will get ripped put(happening now) until loans are made good on. There will be a time to buy. It may not be this week or next.
My friends daughter works for a big firm that does commercial real-estate loans, and I asked her during Christmas if the commercial loans in trouble.
She said, not as bad as 08' but not good either. I just read between the lines. Not Good.
 
How the hell are we supposed to retire? By investing for the long term, not day trading. Long term investing is not about buying stocks at specific prices, but about buying good companies. If I own good companies, I am not worried about daily price fluctuations.

Here is the S&P 500 over 30 years. Look at the crash in 2007. Or the crash in 2020 with COVID-19. Or this last two weeks of decline. These are mere noise in the overall 670% increase over time.

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Find good companies. Avoid fees. Ignore the noise. Retire happy.
 
I work the business end of things - it has been trending downward since spring of 2023.

Commercial real estate in what regard? Like big ass buildings in cities? Or companies buying up all the new houses in developments? Or both?

I see the Florida housing market is about to go to shit. More houses on the market than pretty much ever before right now. Oddly, Texas as well. Where are people moving? Kansas?
 
Commercial real estate in what regard? Like big ass buildings in cities? Or companies buying up all the new houses in developments? Or both?

I see the Florida housing market is about to go to shit. More houses on the market than pretty much ever before right now. Oddly, Texas as well. Where are people moving? Kansas?
Commercial Real Estate or (CRE) as we call it was actually on Pause for lending at a good amount of banks for 2022-2024 as the risk was too high - these portfolios saw a ton of issues. Mainly from the investment side (tenants). Owner occupied fared well.

What we have been seeing is a slump in sales across the board - or sales figures have stayed elevated and inflation along with growing costs eroded the bottom line. Up until a few months ago the labor pool was dried up and everyone needed help, sales have been slowing enough that this is not the case as much.

Of course there are exceptions, but if I had to write a one page memo on what I see in the economy, this has been it.

Accountants have been severely understaffing since COVID started - 20% of my portfolio used to file on extension, now it is almost 80%.
 
Commercial real estate in what regard? Like big ass buildings in cities? Or companies buying up all the new houses in developments? Or both?

I see the Florida housing market is about to go to shit. More houses on the market than pretty much ever before right now. Oddly, Texas as well. Where are people moving? Kansas?
I was referring to commercial like small apartment buildings, brick and mortar retail and office buildings. Brick and Mortar have been slow for years and office space a lot of people still working from home.
 
How the hell are we supposed to retire? By investing for the long term, not day trading. Long term investing is not about buying stocks at specific prices, but about buying good companies. If I own good companies, I am not worried about daily price fluctuations.

Here is the S&P 500 over 30 years. Look at the crash in 2007. Or the crash in 2020 with COVID-19. Or this last two weeks of decline. These are mere noise in the overall 670% increase over time.

View attachment 256709
Find good companies. Avoid fees. Ignore the noise. Retire happy.
I look at day trading more as a paycheck then an investment for retirement. My wife is the bread winner, and I only work one or two days a week when they need me. If I'm not working, I trade futures. I made almost as much day trading as I did working for the year (together, about 75% what I'd make if I worked full time), with consistency getting better as time goes on. So it's like income. I do with that the same thing I do with paycheck money, pay bills and throw some into long term portfolio. It's a way to make money, not an investment. Though I guess you can argue that it's an investment in yourself. If you can learn to do it successfully, getting laid off from your real job isn't as scary when you have another means of making money. Especially nowadays with all the different paper trading programs, you can learn without any risk and decide yourself when or if you're willing to put your own money on the line. And when you are ready, you can start with micros or prop firms and the risk is minimal.
 
What happened at the end of the day? Shorts being closed out to drive prices up?
Then buyers going dark?

Just noticed this thread is 10 years old!
Hopefully progress has been made.
 
lol Canada…..trump imposes a 25% tax on goods from Canada , Canada comes back with a 25% tax on American goods, now trump wants to match that, so that’s a 50% tax on goods from Canada. Wall Street is going to loose its mind tomorrow…… plus what ever the big guys says tonight…. RIP 401k
 
I see the Florida housing market is about to go to shit. More houses on the market than pretty much ever before right now. Oddly, Texas as well. Where are people moving? Kansas?
to the great beyond? My wife's parents are both passed and left the house to the kids. While they were pondering whether to keep it as a place to vacation (on the gulf side), AirBNB it or sell it, hurricane Milton came in, laid down a foot of water and wiped out the yard and linai and left the pool looking like something a gator would be chilling in. No flood ins means its all out of pocket and renewing homeowners ins is somewhere between insane or impossible with companies pulling out and premiums skyrocketing. No recourse left but to do a basic remediation and sell and the list of work orders from contractors is so deep, they weren't even done with the prior hurricane repairs before this one hit.
 
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to the great beyond? My wife's parents are both passed and left the house to the kids. While they were pondering whether to keep it as a place to vacation (on the gulf side), AirBNB it or sell it, hurricane Milton came in, laid down a foot of water and wiped out the yard and linai and left the pool looking like something a gator would be chilling in. No flood ins means its all out of pocket and renewing homeowners ins is somewhere between insane or impossible with companies pulling out and premiums skyrocketing. No recourse left but to do a basic remediation and sell and the list of work orders from contractors is so deep, they weren't even done with Milton repairs before this one hit.


If they are in a flood zone they may be subject to the FEMA "Substantial Damage/ Improvement" rules, needing to lift it to comply with the flood zone elevation.
 
If they are in a flood zone they may be subject to the FEMA "Substantial Damage/ Improvement" rules, needing to lift it to comply with the flood zone elevation.
I don't know how any of that works but with this being a block house on grade with slab floors, is that even do-able? I remember when The hurricane hit here in NJ in like 2012 and we got a little water on the street but nothing in the house (I lived in the bayshore area at the time). I just cleaned up the yard and moved on but my next door neighbor had her house raised by fema. Now these were stick framed and so it seemed like jacking it up was a no big deal to get under the crawl space and brace it up but it sure took a helluva long time to complete.
 

it may have some appeal to be off in the woods but IMHO after ago 60 one needs to increasingly dial DOWN isolation for a large number of reasons.
Even if that means moving DelBocaVista Phase 5.

Otherwise risk the Unibomber lifestyle and spend too much time covering for the basic necessities and having poor healthcare access.
 
it may have some appeal to be off in the woods but IMHO after ago 60 one needs to increasingly dial DOWN isolation for a large number of reasons.
Even if that means moving DelBocaVista Phase 5.

Otherwise risk the Unibomber lifestyle and spend too much time covering for the basic necessities and having poor healthcare access.

That house I posted is on a ridge overlooking Anchorage. Although the only way to access it is by Helicopter, so this dude helis the 1/4 mile to Walmart instead of driving his 8-seater SUV.
 
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