Seduction Spa

Current strategy?

What are you doing with your portfolio

  • Nothing.. ride the wave (can’t time market)

    Votes: 12 70.6%
  • Reduce exposure - liquidate positions / increase cash holding

    Votes: 3 17.6%
  • Defensive reallocation in REIT, ETF etc

    Votes: 2 11.8%

  • Total voters
    17

vipp

Active member
Jan 27, 2009
172
83
28
Given the Aug 1 deadline, heightened uncertainty, and market pull back.. what’s ur investment strategy
 

angrymime666

Well-known member
May 8, 2008
1,146
720
113
My strategy hasn't changed. I continue to invest every month and will continue to do so till my cash reserve for investing is empty. I live below my means and reinvest anything leftover. I don't have a lot of things since I find they are an anchor to freedom.
 

Mandala

Active member
Jan 2, 2025
183
117
43
Strategey has not changed as I invest ultraconservative to risky

My decision is based on how much money do I need to ride out a market downturn and that money goes into safety and the rest rides the market. Tariffs are short term noise as is Trump and MAGA. Trump will disappear into trash bin of the worse President in history as he sits in prison but the market will still be there and so will my investments
 

Mandala

Active member
Jan 2, 2025
183
117
43
My strategy hasn't changed. I continue to invest every month and will continue to do so till my cash reserve for investing is empty. I live below my means and reinvest anything leftover. I don't have a lot of things since I find they are an anchor to freedom.
So you refuse to market time?

Sounds like you are dripping but that is market timing and is a term created by mutual funds and banks to get your to buy their funds
 

Liam011

Well-known member
Feb 2, 2024
213
338
63
So you refuse to market time?

Sounds like you are dripping but that is market timing and is a term created by mutual funds and banks to get your to buy their funds
It isn't that at all. DRIPping is simply another tactic that helps investors with the psychology of investing. And that is the number one stumbling block to success. Ourselves. Yes, lump sum is mathematically better. However, if DRIPping makes someone feel safer and gets them in (to stay) in the market then it is worth far more than any mathematical "optimization"

For myself, I am and will remain fully invested. If you "time" the market for every single fucking political event or earthquake that comes along you're not an investor. You're a speculator. Or, more likely, an idiot. And the financial industry loves idiots.
 

tastingyou

Well-known member
Dec 5, 2014
770
1,244
93
I thought at the end of 2023 that the market was fully priced. I stayed invested and made 23 % in 2024. When the market dropped about 10% early in 2025 , - I was fully invested - I thought that if I ended 2025 still down 10-15% that would be reverting to the norm . I am now up about 7% for 2025 . If I end 2025 down 10% for the year I would not be surprised.

When I say fully invested that means about 10% cash and almost no bonds.

I am not smart enough to time the market but I am smart enough to be fully invested all of the time and to be very diversified in quality stocks .
 

angrymime666

Well-known member
May 8, 2008
1,146
720
113
So you refuse to market time?

Sounds like you are dripping but that is market timing and is a term created by mutual funds and banks to get your to buy their funds
I purchase a company's shares every month. When a significant drop happens I'll pick up extra that month if warranted. I don't like to do large purchases as I'd rather have the highs and lows. Not getting the mathematical optimization as stated by @Liam011 but it's much easier on the nerves. I don't buy mutual funds only Canadian stocks. Better tax advantage in my cash account plus I use the cash for living expenses.

I'm quite pleased by the results. I find it comes down to ROI and piece of mind
 

DiscreetRocker

Respected Member
Mar 9, 2016
1,409
1,658
113
My Three Portfolios have three different strategies:
  1. Retirement Portfolio: Continue dollar cost averaging in. Good times, bad times, always stay steady acquiring.
  2. Secondary Portfolio: Reallocate when new opportunities emerge or I lose confidence in a sector. Usually small movements but sometimes completely dump a stock.
  3. Gambling Portfolio: Mostly crypto. My main bag has 6-figure gains. Major reallocations when I see better opportunities and de-risk often. I'm mostly in XRP, HBAR, ETH, BTC, and for the laughs some DOGE.
 
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jeff2

Well-known member
Sep 11, 2004
1,935
1,069
113
Keep holding stocks,ETFs, mutual funds. Might add more VDY on pullbacks.
Keep holding Oracle. From 6,000 to 400,000 over 30 years(dividends included but not reinvested).
Recent Topicus earnings look good. Wish I had more shares.
 
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stinkynuts

Super
Jan 4, 2005
8,524
2,856
113
I just invested 25% of my portfolio in unh. In a market where everything is overvalued, unh seems to be a great bargain. It has issues, but nothing it can’t overcome.
 

Zoot Allures

Well-known member
Jan 23, 2017
2,463
1,129
113
I just invested 25% of my portfolio in unh. In a market where everything is overvalued, unh seems to be a great bargain. It has issues, but nothing it can’t overcome.
Investing in individual stocks is a fools game
You believe you can outsmart the market where others cannot
It is extremely difficult to pick the few winners despite how logical it all seems and what the experts say

Buy the whole market with an index fund.
Yes, you are guaranteed to be buying losers but you are also guaranteed you buy the winners

Buy one stock and you are guaranteed only that you have a high probability of having bought a loser and a guarantee you will become attached to it and a guarantee you will have no idea when to dump and a guarantee of worry
 
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BigMz

Member
Aug 11, 2025
32
14
8
See, I'm a bit blind to the whole investment thing (even my current idea is using one of those TD investment accounts), but recently I've decided to put my money in physical assets. I bought 2 used corollas for $4k each and hope to resell them at the end of the year.
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
29,198
10,478
113
Room 112
My advisor has put me into a more defensive position in my RRSP portfolio. In my corporate investment account, which I manage, its status quo.
 

stinkynuts

Super
Jan 4, 2005
8,524
2,856
113
See, I'm a bit blind to the whole investment thing (even my current idea is using one of those TD investment accounts), but recently I've decided to put my money in physical assets. I bought 2 used corollas for $4k each and hope to resell them at the end of the year.
Those are depreciating assets.

Physical assets such as real estate and precious metals are fine.
 

jeff2

Well-known member
Sep 11, 2004
1,935
1,069
113
See, I'm a bit blind to the whole investment thing (even my current idea is using one of those TD investment accounts), but recently I've decided to put my money in physical assets. I bought 2 used corollas for $4k each and hope to resell them at the end of the year.
I noticed it can be hard to get transmission flushes on old cars if they think the coolant line might be corroded. So they only offer the drain and fill which only exchanges around 5 litres.
 

BigMz

Member
Aug 11, 2025
32
14
8
Those are depreciating assets.

Physical assets such as real estate and precious metals are fine.
So that's the thing, ontario has the highest percentage of new drivers compared to the rest of the country. 35% of all vehicles driven here are by people with a license acquired in the past 5 years. I'm not keeping the corollas for long, it's more $8k now then flipping them for a bit more in the next year or so.
 
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