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[SPEAKER_19]: This is a special invest talk, best of caller questions, compilation program.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Please call with questions.
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[SPEAKER_19]: 888, 99 chart, 888, 99, C-H-A-R-T.
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[SPEAKER_19]: They will be played and answered on an upcoming Invest Talk podcast.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Let's go to a live call, Richard in Santa Clarita.
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[SPEAKER_18]: I want to talk about strategy in case of a recession.
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[SPEAKER_05]: Yeah, hi, Justin.
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[SPEAKER_05]: Thanks for taking my call.
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[SPEAKER_05]: I'm a long-time listener, and I might make a few quotes I heard, you know, Steve Cakes, and it makes you sit as well.
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[SPEAKER_05]: But in terms of preparation or portfolio preparations, I should say, for a possible recession upcoming recession, or at least a very strong pullback.
00:49.283 --> 00:51.005
[SPEAKER_05]: First of all, I know that Steve
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[SPEAKER_05]: Always said, you might sell some trimming, take profit off the table, you never get out of the market because you never know what's going to really happen.
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[SPEAKER_05]: No forecaster knows for sure.
01:03.542 --> 01:11.366
[SPEAKER_05]: But one of the things to do, I would think, would be to set up some dry powder, you know, cash.
01:11.706 --> 01:18.209
[SPEAKER_05]: I remember during the COVID recession, the short one, you know, as cash is king with the thing that was being said so much.
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[SPEAKER_05]: So my question would be, what do you think of the chances at this stage of a very strong pullback recession in a so what percent of a portfolio should you have in cash that's ready to go because when the market, you know, the market usually goes up that takes the stairs when it comes down to some senses, it can take the elevator.
01:42.166 --> 01:45.288
[SPEAKER_05]: What that percentage I'm thinking maybe 10 percent
01:47.682 --> 01:53.388
[SPEAKER_05]: would be some, and, you know, you can put that in a money market, also, or at least collect some interest.
01:53.729 --> 02:01.357
[SPEAKER_05]: Given what's going on right now, what do you think in terms of this current environment, which should hold in cash?
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[SPEAKER_18]: Yeah, well, I think if we are going into recession, which I do think there's an increasing likelihood that we would be in a recession sometime next year, I'm gonna go up in this year, but I do think next year is an increasing possibility.
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[SPEAKER_18]: How much cash you should have?
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[SPEAKER_18]: This definitely dependent on the person the risk tolerance level, the goals for the money, how long term is it, how short term is that account?
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[SPEAKER_18]: If you're needing that money,
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[SPEAKER_18]: in an year term, then obviously you want to have much higher levels than cash than 10 or 15%.
02:31.087 --> 02:43.620
[SPEAKER_18]: It was long term money, you know, 10, 15, 20% is not an issue, but I think it has more to do with your asset allocation, because you really want to be in sectors that
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[SPEAKER_18]: can continue to do well.
02:45.061 --> 02:50.988
[SPEAKER_18]: There are certainly companies and broader sectors that can buck the trend.
02:51.028 --> 02:58.116
[SPEAKER_18]: And do you want to be in the stocks that are remaining in relatively good good trends, right?
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[SPEAKER_18]: Uptrends, at least neutral and kind of trading water during times when there's more pressure.
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[SPEAKER_18]: on the market.
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[SPEAKER_18]: And so you can do things like that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: You could buy puts.
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[SPEAKER_18]: You could self-covered calls.
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[SPEAKER_18]: That's a way to lower the risk of a portfolio.
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[SPEAKER_18]: That's something to certainly consider.
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[SPEAKER_18]: And remember, a lot of people think that a recession is a way.
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[SPEAKER_18]: A recession is not a ways
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[SPEAKER_18]: greatly affected.
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[SPEAKER_18]: That go down considerably.
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[SPEAKER_18]: I think of the session before that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: And I think of COVID recession.
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[SPEAKER_18]: That's kind of a one-off kind of a unique scenario.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Because it technically was a a recession with shutting down the economy.
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[SPEAKER_18]: But I kind of throw that one out.
03:41.383 --> 03:48.526
[SPEAKER_18]: You know, but if you look at like the oh 2000, jails and three recession, you had technology stocks going down dramatically.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So you could have something like that where multiples contract considerably and growth slows in certain pockets of the market.
03:57.049 --> 04:03.031
[SPEAKER_18]: But if you look at that period, the NASDAQ went down 70% where, but the S&P only went down about 20% and 25% I think it was and peaked the trough.
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[SPEAKER_18]: which means that there's pockets in there that we're fine that didn't really go down much at all and many continue to go up.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So I think it's more about a shift in your sector allocation and being overweight the non-sequitable sectors.
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[SPEAKER_18]: utilities, consumer staples, it's maybe reads, things like that, and having a shift towards that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: And obviously, once again, there's still pockets of demand for maybe AI data centers, even though you might be in a recession, and there can be companies that continue to do well.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So I don't think it's just, you don't think just cash.
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[SPEAKER_18]: it's not just about that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: That can be part of it, but it's about staying in the right companies and sectors that are still outperforming, that have good relative strength, etc.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So I love your question, but also adjust your understanding of what a recession means for the market.
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[SPEAKER_05]: All right.
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[SPEAKER_05]: Well, thank you very much.
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05:37.478 --> 05:41.099
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[SPEAKER_17]: 888-99 chart.
05:44.692 --> 05:45.753
[SPEAKER_13]: I'm just in a local console.
05:45.833 --> 05:51.977
[SPEAKER_13]: So for her, I do hold two companies, EXK, Endeavor, and SFM, sort of reminding.
05:52.798 --> 05:56.861
[SPEAKER_13]: And I've been holding it for quite some time for these silver-to-gold ketchup trade.
05:56.961 --> 06:00.203
[SPEAKER_13]: And I've noticed that it is doing well now, and it is pretty volatile, and curious.
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[SPEAKER_13]: What you guys do for your silver positions, what it is valued like this, do you bolden and take some off the top, do you wait for the ketchup?
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[SPEAKER_13]: I guess ratio is complete, or are there some macro signals that you look for?
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[SPEAKER_13]: And then you start getting out of it completely.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Just curious how you guys pull this, um, just want to get a head start.
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[SPEAKER_13]: As silver is rallying the last couple of things.
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[SPEAKER_13]: Thank you.
06:22.064 --> 06:22.224
[SPEAKER_13]: Bye.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So silver has rallied a little bit.
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[SPEAKER_03]: But it's still lagging behind the historical ratio of gold, right?
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[SPEAKER_03]: You typically have seen this little push-pull dynamic between gold and silver, but that hasn't really happened recently.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It's a little bit decoupled.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It's been lagging gold for just about a year and a half now, right?
06:40.991 --> 06:43.992
[SPEAKER_03]: Since the beginning of 2024, but that's on the back of gold's historic run-up.
06:44.452 --> 06:50.734
[SPEAKER_03]: And so you have to understand the different dynamics between what drives gold prices and what drives silver prices.
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[SPEAKER_03]: gold prices are driven by primarily uncertainty.
06:54.376 --> 07:01.820
[SPEAKER_03]: It's a haven't asked at a hard asset that is historically for a very long time been used as a store of value.
07:02.760 --> 07:07.943
[SPEAKER_03]: Silver used to be in line with that, but it's more of the industrial metal now.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so the reason why you're seeing this divergence is because you have a lot of uncertainty and downward demand
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so that's what's kind of lagged.
07:20.634 --> 07:22.995
[SPEAKER_03]: Now your question is with the rally, what would we do?
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[SPEAKER_03]: Well, we would treat silver the same way we would treat any other company we're invested.
07:27.597 --> 07:35.480
[SPEAKER_03]: When you're up, when things rally, it is a tried and true investment strategy to sell at the highs by the lows.
07:36.060 --> 07:36.781
[SPEAKER_03]: that is the goal.
07:37.301 --> 07:49.593
[SPEAKER_03]: And so with any other company, you should continue to trim, continue to take profits, take off the table, further diversify into sectors that may do well in the short medium term, because you're right.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It is incredibly volatile.
07:50.734 --> 07:52.235
[SPEAKER_03]: Commodities are incredibly volatile.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So when the going is good, take some profit.
07:55.808 --> 07:56.609
[SPEAKER_17]: Thanks for the call.
07:57.090 --> 08:02.637
[SPEAKER_17]: You are listening to an invest talk best of caller questions compilation program.
08:03.117 --> 08:06.261
[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome.
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[SPEAKER_17]: Call anytime 88899 chart.
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[SPEAKER_17]: That's 88899 CHART.
08:18.740 --> 08:23.687
[SPEAKER_17]: Serious investors are certain to have, finance and investment questions.
08:23.987 --> 08:25.489
[SPEAKER_17]: What do you think is a good price?
08:25.609 --> 08:29.935
[SPEAKER_17]: And the best person to ask your question in the right way is you.
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[SPEAKER_06]: I was wondering, from your standpoint, if they're at downside, in buying fractional shares or is this whole shares?
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[SPEAKER_17]: and 24-7 rain or shine, Justin Klein and Luke Guerrero stand ready to provide their unbiased dancers.
08:44.891 --> 08:50.436
[SPEAKER_18]: But technically, right now, I like it, I like the momentum, but what's going to don't like those fundamentals?
08:50.676 --> 08:56.901
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, while gold is hitting these record highs, it's driven by the safe haven to manned by central bank buying across the board.
08:57.221 --> 09:00.044
[SPEAKER_17]: Your participation makes an invest talk better.
09:00.664 --> 09:02.847
[SPEAKER_16]: Colin asked about corn in Maine.
09:03.007 --> 09:05.029
[SPEAKER_16]: This is Josh in North Carolina.
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[SPEAKER_18]: This is Marlow from George City area.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Let's take a live call, Sam from San Jose.
09:10.836 --> 09:13.579
[SPEAKER_17]: So don't forget to call Invest talk.
09:13.879 --> 09:14.400
[SPEAKER_17]: Vade and pipe.
09:14.460 --> 09:14.800
[SPEAKER_17]: Thank you.
09:14.820 --> 09:15.140
[SPEAKER_17]: 888-99 chart.
09:21.441 --> 09:26.104
[SPEAKER_19]: This is a special in Vestock, best of caller questions, compilation program.
09:26.484 --> 09:29.867
[SPEAKER_19]: Remember, the Invest Talk phone lines never close.
09:30.267 --> 09:33.609
[SPEAKER_19]: Please call with questions, 888-99 chart.
09:33.629 --> 09:37.091
[SPEAKER_03]: It's like we got another live call, Larry from San Francisco.
09:37.152 --> 09:39.113
[SPEAKER_03]: It was a question about rolling over an IRA.
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[SPEAKER_15]: Hello, thanks for having me to call.
09:40.774 --> 09:42.355
[SPEAKER_15]: I love what you guys are doing for us out here.
09:42.735 --> 09:44.276
[SPEAKER_15]: Yeah, I set right up from an employer.
09:44.516 --> 09:49.280
[SPEAKER_15]: And it was a defined benefits plan, a pension, a rolled over, the, it was about 100 grand.
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[SPEAKER_15]: to IRA fidelity.
09:51.891 --> 09:54.192
[SPEAKER_15]: I hold about 15 positions already.
09:54.772 --> 09:56.292
[SPEAKER_15]: And I'm just wondering how to divvy that up.
09:56.352 --> 09:58.113
[SPEAKER_15]: Of course, I hold, I'm heavy in tech.
09:58.193 --> 10:03.594
[SPEAKER_15]: About half my positions are across that the mega seven or whatever it is.
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[SPEAKER_15]: And I'm asking, how do I do I do I do I do I do I dollar cost average month, over month, or do I just put it all in that one?
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[SPEAKER_15]: Some 45, just looking, I'm aggressive growth.
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[SPEAKER_15]: It's my style, right down my investment style.
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[SPEAKER_15]: how to go about, you know, kind of dolla cost average in or just kind of throw it in lump some.
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[SPEAKER_03]: The research is interesting on this, but again, it's kind of difficult, right?
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[SPEAKER_03]: Because timing is so hard, right?
10:31.309 --> 10:33.111
[SPEAKER_03]: So time in the market beats timing the market.
10:33.171 --> 10:39.838
[SPEAKER_03]: And when you look at dollar cost averaging versus lump sum investing, the research that I so actually shows that lump sum investing have higher expected returns.
10:40.459 --> 10:45.264
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, that keeps in mind that typically love some investing is done on down days, right?
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so, for me, risk perspective, just given where we are in the market right now, we're pretty elevated.
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[SPEAKER_03]: You have rising tensions in the Middle East.
10:53.333 --> 10:55.976
[SPEAKER_03]: You have pretty much a Goldilocks scenario on earnings.
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[SPEAKER_03]: If it were me, I would continue to dollar cost average in.
10:59.379 --> 11:02.122
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, you mentioned that you have, uh,
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[SPEAKER_03]: A lot of exposure to tech, so be cognizant of the risks you're taking on, obviously you're a growth investor, but you do have to be aware of some of those risks and how those companies would react, should things move south pretty quickly.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so I would advise you to continue to be as diversified as you possibly can when you're reinvesting your money, keep in mind, right?
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[SPEAKER_03]: It's a good time to be patient, right?
11:26.822 --> 11:31.586
[SPEAKER_03]: You can get pretty solid yields by keeping your excess cash in something like SGOV and getting interest.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so you have the ability now to dollar cost average understand the risks of where we are and what is on their horizon.
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[SPEAKER_19]: I wish you the best of luck.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Thanks for the call.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Invest talk is ready 24-7 for your finance and investment questions.
11:46.644 --> 11:51.425
[SPEAKER_00]: I'm hoping you'll give me your take-on or matte technology, ORA.
11:51.785 --> 11:58.427
[SPEAKER_10]: Is it a good idea to sell your losses in a Roth IRA and just use whatever you have left to reinvest into better stocks?
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[SPEAKER_19]: Don't forget to call, In Best Talk, 888-99-Chart.
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[SPEAKER_07]: This is a piece from St.
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[SPEAKER_07]: On New York.
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[SPEAKER_07]: Over the last few months, I've seen my portfolio kind of go up at like 75%
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[SPEAKER_07]: I'm sitting on a lot of profits right now and over the last few weeks I've been taking a lot of chips off the table and I just started looking and I realized that I'm sitting on like 30% cash in my portfolio.
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[SPEAKER_07]: I was wondering what you guys doing a situation like this where the markets a little bit fraught the equities is soaring on your taking profits.
12:30.638 --> 12:38.262
[SPEAKER_07]: But are you guys directly investing them like right away or are you playing like the long game and just kind of waiting and being patient.
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[SPEAKER_07]: My gut is telling you to wait and be patient, but I also don't like sitting on that 30% cash because obviously could be growing as well.
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[SPEAKER_07]: So, there's more of like a portfolio question, how do you guys rebound in its time like this?
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[SPEAKER_07]: I appreciate it, and I'll look forward to hearing your answer to the podcast.
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[SPEAKER_18]: This is a great question, and very interesting one, because cash in and of itself in the account isn't siloed.
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[SPEAKER_18]: It's also you have to take the rest of the account
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[SPEAKER_18]: to consideration as well.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So you said that you're up 75% of the year.
13:14.124 --> 13:22.289
[SPEAKER_18]: Obviously, you only get that type of performance if you're investing in aggressive positions, speculative positions.
13:23.170 --> 13:23.890
[SPEAKER_18]: So you might have 30% cash.
13:25.326 --> 13:39.790
[SPEAKER_18]: But that 70% might be in very aggressive, speculative stocks, small-mush the reactors, and chip names, and AI names, and names that, as we saw in 2022, can go down a lot.
13:40.431 --> 13:43.772
[SPEAKER_18]: So you're overall portfolio, still might be risky even with 30% cash.
13:44.852 --> 13:48.516
[SPEAKER_18]: So a lot does depend on what the rest of the portfolio is doing.
13:49.256 --> 13:52.660
[SPEAKER_18]: Now, you're right, there's some frothiness in the market.
13:53.260 --> 13:56.083
[SPEAKER_18]: But that doesn't mean you can't continue to go up.
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[SPEAKER_18]: It might be a little harder because we're over-but.
14:00.247 --> 14:03.671
[SPEAKER_18]: Right, there's not a lot of cash sitting on the sidelines.
14:04.392 --> 14:08.335
[SPEAKER_18]: There's a lot of leverage with margin loans, et cetera.
14:08.975 --> 14:14.059
[SPEAKER_18]: So, and there's a lot of speculation within the options market, a lot of call option activity.
14:14.559 --> 14:17.441
[SPEAKER_18]: That's the market that we are in right now.
14:18.442 --> 14:23.426
[SPEAKER_18]: And is it good risk versus reward over the medium term, probably not?
14:23.726 --> 14:29.550
[SPEAKER_18]: But yes, you could be missing out, but if you put that money to work in companies that over bought,
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[SPEAKER_18]: and then suddenly liquidity and flex, are you going to be getting out in time?
14:38.055 --> 14:49.601
[SPEAKER_18]: So I would be looking to take that cash and find other opportunities in the market, broaden out your portfolio beyond just highly speculative names.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Because there are other opportunities out there like that.
14:52.542 --> 15:04.405
[SPEAKER_18]: Whether that's precious metals, you know, if you look at the rest of the portfolio and say, okay, you can use this cash elsewhere, maybe it's utility companies, maybe it's industrial names, where are you underweight?
15:05.365 --> 15:08.326
[SPEAKER_18]: And that's where I'd be going to look for opportunities.
15:09.126 --> 15:13.449
[SPEAKER_18]: So, it's hard to be blank and say, use the cash, don't use the cash.
15:13.889 --> 15:20.774
[SPEAKER_18]: A lot of depends on what type of risk you're taking, what opportunities, maybe you're not exposed to in your portfolio.
15:21.395 --> 15:24.817
[SPEAKER_18]: And there still could still be places to deploy that capital.
15:25.157 --> 15:31.802
[SPEAKER_18]: Because there are always good opportunities in the marketplace, sometimes they're very abundant, and other times not so much.
15:32.242 --> 15:34.344
[SPEAKER_18]: Hopefully that gave you some context to what you think about
15:39.674 --> 15:45.196
[SPEAKER_17]: You are listening to an invest talk, best of call or questions compilation program.
15:45.676 --> 15:48.837
[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome.
15:49.197 --> 15:50.118
[SPEAKER_17]: Call anytime.
15:50.138 --> 15:50.798
[SPEAKER_17]: 88899 chart.
15:50.978 --> 15:51.298
[SPEAKER_17]: That's 88899 CHART.
16:01.223 --> 16:06.725
[SPEAKER_17]: You are listening to an invest talk, best of caller questions, compilation, program.
16:07.226 --> 16:10.387
[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome.
16:10.727 --> 16:14.088
[SPEAKER_17]: Call anytime, 88899 chart.
16:14.549 --> 16:15.529
[SPEAKER_17]: That's 88899 CHART.
16:15.709 --> 16:21.351
[SPEAKER_17]: Hey, Jeff and I looked at Tyler from Kansas City.
16:21.712 --> 16:23.812
[SPEAKER_08]: My question today I'll do with earnings forecast.
16:24.393 --> 16:28.334
[SPEAKER_08]: I have a list of maybe 30 to 40 stocks that have alerts
16:30.788 --> 16:39.714
[SPEAKER_08]: When the alert goes off, I reconfirm that I'm still interested in these names and then self-puts or go ahead and buy into the names if I don't think they'll go in any lower.
16:40.395 --> 16:48.160
[SPEAKER_08]: Over the years, I noticed that a decent percentage of these alerts happen when an earnings or revenue forecast gets a revision to the downside.
16:48.900 --> 16:52.863
[SPEAKER_08]: All my information sources seem to be late by one to three days.
16:53.343 --> 16:58.347
[SPEAKER_08]: This gets frustrating when I take a position just to realize that forecast have been lower to a
16:59.273 --> 17:01.374
[SPEAKER_08]: that I would have lowered my target buy-in price.
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[SPEAKER_08]: Who have you found to be the best original sources that indicate these revisions?
17:07.318 --> 17:12.742
[SPEAKER_08]: And do you register to anyone specific for these type of forecasted earnings and or revenue alerts?
17:12.922 --> 17:14.703
[SPEAKER_08]: Thank you guys, I'll be listening on the podcast.
17:15.023 --> 17:15.884
[SPEAKER_18]: This is a great question.
17:16.884 --> 17:26.971
[SPEAKER_18]: And this is an area where it's difficult for the average investor to get good up-to-date data.
17:27.860 --> 17:43.909
[SPEAKER_18]: We use faxet, now we have a we're in our it, we're a financial advisor, we can pay for its tens of thousands of dollars a year for this data and that they're doing is they're aggregating all of the earnings estimates from the major banks.
17:44.410 --> 17:51.474
[SPEAKER_18]: We can see it, we can go in, we can see every single one, what the trend is, is it rising, is it falling, is it staying flat, what does
17:55.876 --> 17:59.738
[SPEAKER_18]: We can see that pretty much a real time, and so that's how we do it now.
17:59.758 --> 18:11.144
[SPEAKER_18]: There are other tools that access some effects it's data, but you're not going to get the granular details there and I don't know how fast they get an update from fax it, right?
18:11.164 --> 18:12.685
[SPEAKER_18]: They're right beside the lay there.
18:12.705 --> 18:13.085
[SPEAKER_18]: I'm not sure.
18:13.725 --> 18:16.447
[SPEAKER_18]: So that's kind of a difficult separation.
18:16.947 --> 18:23.751
[SPEAKER_18]: As maybe something where AI could help scraping internet for the most up to date earnings data, but as we know AI kind of
18:24.435 --> 18:29.038
[SPEAKER_18]: Make sure you check where it's game coming from and check its sources.
18:29.398 --> 18:32.700
[SPEAKER_18]: It should link its sources out and then you can kind of dig into there.
18:32.720 --> 18:38.923
[SPEAKER_18]: That's probably what I would do if I didn't have something like that set, which I can go to anytime and just grab.
18:39.544 --> 18:41.185
[SPEAKER_18]: So that's what we're at.
18:41.205 --> 18:42.265
[SPEAKER_18]: Hopefully that helps.
18:42.665 --> 18:46.407
[SPEAKER_18]: It's probably not a complete answer, but at least a direction you can go in.
18:46.668 --> 18:47.548
[SPEAKER_18]: Thanks for the call.
18:54.889 --> 19:01.445
[SPEAKER_16]: 350 one exchange to address concentrated positions with capital gain increases.
19:02.150 --> 19:04.992
[SPEAKER_16]: and the benefits of that process.
19:05.393 --> 19:06.213
[SPEAKER_16]: Thank you very much.
19:06.393 --> 19:06.553
[SPEAKER_16]: Bye.
19:06.914 --> 19:13.939
[SPEAKER_03]: So a 350 one exchange is you're essentially taking property appreciated stock, concentrated position.
19:14.379 --> 19:18.042
[SPEAKER_03]: You are shifting it, you're transferring it to a corporation that you create.
19:18.623 --> 19:26.428
[SPEAKER_03]: If for an exchange for shares in that corporation, the corporation takes your carryover basis in the property, you take the stock with that same basis.
19:27.249 --> 19:28.770
[SPEAKER_03]: Now, there are some benefits to it, right?
19:28.790 --> 19:30.832
[SPEAKER_03]: You're deferring immediate capital gains taxes.
19:30.852 --> 19:33.694
[SPEAKER_03]: You're allowing diversification within the business.
19:33.714 --> 19:43.281
[SPEAKER_03]: So let's say you take your concentrated shares and whatever your company is, and you sell those shares in order to diversify, you're getting that deferred taxes.
19:43.901 --> 19:46.363
[SPEAKER_03]: And it gives you control and liability protection, right?
19:46.383 --> 19:49.425
[SPEAKER_03]: You can integrate it with your estate and wealth transfer planning.
19:50.085 --> 19:50.846
[SPEAKER_03]: But they're costs, right?
19:50.866 --> 19:53.488
[SPEAKER_03]: You're getting double taxation, because it's a corporate structure.
19:53.508 --> 19:54.829
[SPEAKER_03]: So you're getting a corporate tax rate.
19:54.849 --> 19:56.130
[SPEAKER_03]: You're getting a dividend tax rate.
19:57.217 --> 20:00.920
[SPEAKER_03]: The most important one, I think, for me, is you lose your step up and cost basis at death.
20:01.480 --> 20:05.423
[SPEAKER_03]: So you're in herders, we'll not get that step up and cost basis on those assets.
20:07.024 --> 20:10.826
[SPEAKER_03]: And, you know, you have ongoing corporate compliance and administrative costs.
20:10.866 --> 20:13.929
[SPEAKER_03]: You have to meet IRS control rules.
20:13.969 --> 20:15.550
[SPEAKER_03]: And so who's it for, right?
20:15.590 --> 20:21.334
[SPEAKER_03]: It's for people that are families, you know, families are closely held groups that are setting up a family investment company.
20:21.734 --> 20:22.635
[SPEAKER_03]: It works well for those.
20:23.355 --> 20:27.898
[SPEAKER_03]: situations where you wouldn't get a step up in cost basis at all is a good situation for there.
20:28.458 --> 20:38.784
[SPEAKER_03]: But you know, for us, we help out clients all the time who are in a situation where they wanted to for taxes, that's the point of the deferred sales trusts that we use the DSTs.
20:39.265 --> 20:49.591
[SPEAKER_03]: And so I think they're just other tools as well, where you can greatly benefit from that deferral without, again, some of those costs, the loss in step up in cost basis.
20:49.611 --> 20:49.931
[SPEAKER_03]: And also,
20:53.033 --> 20:53.593
[SPEAKER_03]: administration?
20:54.233 --> 20:54.934
[SPEAKER_18]: Thanks for the call.
20:55.314 --> 20:58.035
[SPEAKER_18]: Every day we see questions from the comment section over on the best talk.
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[SPEAKER_18]: YouTube channel.
20:59.415 --> 21:02.856
[SPEAKER_18]: Here's when they came in earlier Lindsey says, what are your thoughts on the short term rental market?
21:03.437 --> 21:09.399
[SPEAKER_18]: Are there good opportunities for investments in short term rental properties out there or is the market to saturated at this point?
21:10.059 --> 21:14.862
[SPEAKER_18]: Now the first thing you have to understand about every real estate market is that it's it's localized.
21:15.283 --> 21:20.066
[SPEAKER_18]: Now there are general trends and generally the real estate market is slowing.
21:20.406 --> 21:25.549
[SPEAKER_18]: Other pockets of like in Denver for example, Austin Texas, these are markets that are very weak.
21:26.070 --> 21:27.931
[SPEAKER_18]: Other markets, not quite as bad.
21:28.711 --> 21:32.474
[SPEAKER_18]: Now it comes to short-term rental market, I'm very weary of that market.
21:33.327 --> 21:37.850
[SPEAKER_18]: Mainly because it hasn't really seen a true recession.
21:38.291 --> 21:43.395
[SPEAKER_18]: The Airbnb, the RVL market, it was really in its infancy in 2008, right?
21:43.415 --> 21:46.277
[SPEAKER_18]: I don't even know if it really existed at that point.
21:46.977 --> 21:48.518
[SPEAKER_18]: Then really start taking off until the 2010s, mid-2010s.
21:52.005 --> 22:05.032
[SPEAKER_18]: And if you buy at the rate price and you buy the right low cow, there's not a lot of competition, you can make very good returns, but it's also kind of headache, clients have talked to it.
22:05.092 --> 22:09.515
[SPEAKER_18]: Friends family that have these type of properties, and it's a lot of work.
22:09.595 --> 22:10.795
[SPEAKER_18]: It's own little business.
22:10.915 --> 22:14.477
[SPEAKER_18]: It's basically a bed and breakfast, so that's what Airbnb stands for, right?
22:14.798 --> 22:16.999
[SPEAKER_18]: It's air, bed, and breakfast.
22:17.579 --> 22:24.301
[SPEAKER_18]: It's a lot of work and you can get good returns but you need to have the time and the discipline and the know-how to manage these properties.
22:25.041 --> 22:32.964
[SPEAKER_18]: And then there are regulatory issues, localies, and then they change the laws, the rules, and that can hurt the value you're seeing that if you can in Palm Springs area right now.
22:33.384 --> 22:34.804
[SPEAKER_18]: So are there opportunities sure?
22:35.204 --> 22:40.166
[SPEAKER_18]: But you have to do your deep research and make sure you buy right both on price and the right low cap.
22:40.546 --> 22:45.410
[SPEAKER_17]: This is an invest talk best of caller questions compilation program.
22:45.750 --> 22:48.892
[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome.
22:49.252 --> 22:50.874
[SPEAKER_17]: Call anytime 88899 chart.
22:50.894 --> 22:51.374
[SPEAKER_17]: That's 88899 CHART.
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[SPEAKER_19]: This is a special invest talk, best of collar questions, compilation program.
23:08.809 --> 23:12.190
[SPEAKER_19]: Remember, the Invest Talk phone lines never close.
23:12.590 --> 23:15.911
[SPEAKER_19]: Please call with questions, 888-99 chart.
23:16.692 --> 23:22.214
[SPEAKER_14]: I'm a part of the corporation that offers a cash balance program that we can contribute to.
23:22.254 --> 23:23.974
[SPEAKER_14]: I believe it's pre-tax dollars.
23:29.797 --> 23:53.395
[SPEAKER_14]: I am not really familiar with cash balance programs, so I guess my question would be, do you know anything about them or can you help guide me and make an decision on whether or not I should be investing this money in the cash balance opportunity that they present or maybe put it somewhere else, like the money market or somewhere where it's over the more liquid where I can use the money more at hand if I needed it.
23:53.967 --> 23:56.728
[SPEAKER_14]: I appreciate all you do, who's going to feel like answering the podcast.
23:56.768 --> 23:57.109
[SPEAKER_14]: Thank you.
23:57.349 --> 23:59.730
[SPEAKER_18]: I love this question because it's not talked about very much.
23:59.790 --> 24:04.973
[SPEAKER_18]: We do invest some cash balance accounts for clients.
24:05.093 --> 24:12.977
[SPEAKER_18]: Now setting up those plans involves third party administrators, actuaries, it can be expensive to kind of set up maintain.
24:12.997 --> 24:13.117
[SPEAKER_18]: But
24:13.857 --> 24:24.823
[SPEAKER_18]: It's also a place where you can set aside, you set 75,000 dollars for yourself, but some business owners, this is typically for business owners, and you might be part of, maybe one of many owners.
24:25.863 --> 24:41.531
[SPEAKER_18]: And some can put 150, 200, 300,000 dollars a year, there's some calculations there, that it is pre-tax, and you basically get to write that contribution off on your taxi gear, and those that are in the high tax bracket, that can be a smart play.
24:42.728 --> 24:52.452
[SPEAKER_18]: So I would do it if you're on a high tax bracket, but when it comes to liquidity, that's a bigger broader question to your financial plan, right?
24:53.492 --> 24:54.493
[SPEAKER_18]: What do you use money for?
24:54.513 --> 24:59.254
[SPEAKER_18]: It was just long-term money for retirement then cash balance plan is perfect.
24:59.334 --> 25:04.536
[SPEAKER_18]: If you think everything that's money is for buying a house in the next couple of years, probably not.
25:05.017 --> 25:08.658
[SPEAKER_18]: So it just depends on what this money is bucketed for.
25:09.298 --> 25:10.599
[SPEAKER_18]: Now, you can invest it.
25:11.879 --> 25:31.555
[SPEAKER_18]: anything you want when you do put the money in cash balance down like I said it's kind of like a personal trust and a business trust excuse me and you know we sit them up at Schwab you can set them up and you need a big brokerage firm but like I said it's usually connected to a a 401k of some type think of it kind of like it's a personal pension.
25:32.215 --> 25:33.436
[SPEAKER_18]: playing it in a way.
25:33.996 --> 25:38.840
[SPEAKER_18]: These can be complex, but there's something you want to talk professional about, but like I said, you have the setup.
25:38.860 --> 25:45.845
[SPEAKER_18]: It sounds like it's been set up for you, but the better question is, what do you need this money for in the near term?
25:46.265 --> 25:46.645
[SPEAKER_18]: You need it.
25:47.266 --> 25:47.786
[SPEAKER_18]: I wouldn't put it in.
25:47.866 --> 25:51.329
[SPEAKER_18]: If you are earmarking this for a long term, then I would utilize it.
25:51.729 --> 25:55.512
[SPEAKER_03]: All right, here comes another question this time from a listener in Tennessee.
25:55.852 --> 25:56.393
[SPEAKER_04]: This is how we
25:58.852 --> 26:07.920
[SPEAKER_04]: I really wanted to ask my employer recently started offering a raw 401k and they've always offered a traditional 401k which I've been contributing to.
26:08.440 --> 26:15.906
[SPEAKER_04]: My question is, should I start to transfer my funds into my raw 401k or should I leave it in my traditional?
26:16.487 --> 26:20.810
[SPEAKER_04]: I still do have a raw IRA that I've been contributing to in massing out every year.
26:21.491 --> 26:26.115
[SPEAKER_04]: So any advice to you guys would have in this, I would be grateful for, thank you so much, love your program.
26:27.731 --> 26:36.756
[SPEAKER_03]: You can't really just directly transfer your money from your traditional 401k directly into your Roth 401k.
26:36.796 --> 26:42.559
[SPEAKER_03]: You need to do something called a in-service in-plan Roth conversion.
26:43.140 --> 26:46.922
[SPEAKER_03]: But like a traditional or typical Roth conversion, there's some tax implications.
26:47.562 --> 26:53.444
[SPEAKER_03]: So because traditional IRAs, traditional 401K plans are tax deferred, right?
26:53.484 --> 26:55.224
[SPEAKER_03]: There are pre-tax contributions.
26:55.905 --> 27:02.907
[SPEAKER_03]: If you are doing this rollover, you have to pay taxes on the earned income in the account in the year that you are doing this rollover.
27:03.807 --> 27:09.532
[SPEAKER_03]: And, you know, this can be beneficial sometimes, but sometimes you can push you into a higher tax bracket.
27:09.552 --> 27:14.156
[SPEAKER_03]: You can actually end up paying more in taxes and have a higher tax burden because you decide to do this.
27:14.697 --> 27:21.283
[SPEAKER_03]: I think this is one of the main confusion points for a lot of people is not understanding the math of this.
27:21.863 --> 27:23.945
[SPEAKER_03]: If tax rates are the same, right?
27:24.405 --> 27:25.426
[SPEAKER_03]: If your tax rates tend to 10%.
27:26.531 --> 27:30.294
[SPEAKER_03]: And you have $100, and you're going to see a 100% return.
27:30.774 --> 27:32.075
[SPEAKER_03]: Let's say you pay the taxes up front.
27:32.115 --> 27:36.338
[SPEAKER_03]: Well, your $10 or your $100 turned into $90, 100% return makes it $180, okay?
27:37.499 --> 27:38.920
[SPEAKER_03]: Let's say you pay taxes in the back end.
27:39.280 --> 27:43.823
[SPEAKER_03]: We'll year $100, 100% return is $200, then you pay 10% tax on that.
27:44.023 --> 27:44.724
[SPEAKER_03]: That's 20, you get 180.
27:44.904 --> 27:50.168
[SPEAKER_03]: If tax rates are the same, and the return is the same, a Roth under traditional account would have the exact same return.
27:50.708 --> 27:51.709
[SPEAKER_03]: And I don't think people understand that.
27:52.209 --> 27:55.392
[SPEAKER_03]: The only way it is beneficial is if the tax rate,
27:56.092 --> 28:03.215
[SPEAKER_03]: is lower, if the tax rate is lower, if the tax rate has differences, that is where the benefits come from.
28:03.655 --> 28:15.500
[SPEAKER_03]: And so you only want to do that conversion into that tax-free growth, if you have the ability to take advantage of lower tax rates at the time and what you're doing, the conversion.
28:16.020 --> 28:21.202
[SPEAKER_03]: If this is your situation, if you have a low tax year on the horizon, if you think that your
28:23.763 --> 28:26.565
[SPEAKER_03]: Then yes, it would make sense to try and do this in service roll over.
28:26.866 --> 28:35.693
[SPEAKER_03]: The next step would be to talk to your planned administrator, but understand the real cost here is the tax difference dial that in before you make a decision.
28:35.973 --> 28:36.434
[SPEAKER_17]: Thanks for the call.
28:37.600 --> 28:42.061
[SPEAKER_17]: On radio, on YouTube, streaming live on at vestalk.com.
28:42.261 --> 28:45.642
[SPEAKER_10]: My question today is about the HME Equipment Services Inc.
28:46.062 --> 28:57.564
[SPEAKER_17]: And for our podcast subscribers, if you're willing to take the risk in vestalk, if you're okay with that risk, with host and financial advisor, Justin Klein, and that volatility.
28:57.904 --> 28:58.264
[SPEAKER_17]: Go for it.
28:58.524 --> 29:01.845
[SPEAKER_17]: And go host and portfolio manager, Luke Guerrero.
29:02.285 --> 29:04.986
[SPEAKER_17]: This company is falling like a rock, it's down 52% in Vestalk.
29:05.086 --> 29:07.788
[SPEAKER_17]: Have a simple T-H-E.
29:08.108 --> 29:10.849
[SPEAKER_17]: Everybody wants a secure financial future.
29:11.129 --> 29:12.810
[SPEAKER_03]: Richard, do you have a question about T-O-L?
29:13.030 --> 29:17.652
[SPEAKER_17]: But getting there takes strategy, discipline, and the right information.
29:17.872 --> 29:19.614
[SPEAKER_18]: What do you think of the price of it?
29:19.794 --> 29:23.056
[SPEAKER_18]: Go to Chris in Maine looking at I.E.X.
29:23.617 --> 29:25.639
[SPEAKER_16]: Hey Justin, I own it.
29:25.999 --> 29:27.260
[SPEAKER_16]: Just see what you thought of it.
29:27.460 --> 29:30.863
[SPEAKER_17]: Invest talk is made better by listener contributions.
29:31.303 --> 29:35.207
[SPEAKER_17]: So don't forget to call 88899 chart.
29:35.847 --> 29:40.551
[SPEAKER_18]: Let's go take a voicemail call from 88899 chart.
29:40.752 --> 29:43.354
[SPEAKER_02]: Hi guys, this is Eric from New York.
29:43.754 --> 29:51.504
[SPEAKER_02]: Thanks for all the information that you guys give, every day in your podcast, I'm going to have it on my hour and a half commute.
29:52.004 --> 29:58.292
[SPEAKER_02]: You guys talk about investing in stocks and bonds and other types of foreign investment products.
29:58.675 --> 30:00.536
[SPEAKER_02]: I'm a typical retail investor.
30:00.776 --> 30:04.597
[SPEAKER_02]: I have the typical retail investor apps that I use.
30:04.697 --> 30:06.818
[SPEAKER_02]: I don't really have a financial advisor.
30:07.438 --> 30:15.121
[SPEAKER_02]: How can someone like me actually go about investing in a corporate bonds or municipal bonds?
30:15.281 --> 30:20.103
[SPEAKER_02]: How can someone like me get involved in the actual bond market?
30:20.163 --> 30:25.745
[SPEAKER_02]: I hear you guys talk about it a lot in terms of diversification, rate of return, everything like that.
30:26.417 --> 30:35.808
[SPEAKER_02]: I actually don't really, I guess, maybe I should look a little bit more, but I don't have a lot of exposure into the bonds, I'm just buying stocks, buying ETFs.
30:36.509 --> 30:41.695
[SPEAKER_02]: Yeah, it could look into that for me, that would be great, and I'll listen to it on the podcast.
30:41.735 --> 30:42.016
[SPEAKER_02]: Thank you.
30:42.718 --> 30:43.298
[SPEAKER_18]: Sounds good.
30:43.338 --> 30:49.160
[SPEAKER_18]: Well, there are many ways to invest in the bond market for the average investor like yourself.
30:49.880 --> 30:52.661
[SPEAKER_18]: You know, ETF is probably this simple way.
30:52.761 --> 30:56.822
[SPEAKER_18]: Now, bonds are completely different beast than equities.
30:56.882 --> 31:00.923
[SPEAKER_18]: So you really have to educate yourself on the risks that are there.
31:01.423 --> 31:04.204
[SPEAKER_18]: The main two are credit risk, meaning defaults.
31:05.004 --> 31:08.305
[SPEAKER_18]: When you buy an ETF for mutual fund or mutual funds
31:11.481 --> 31:26.873
[SPEAKER_18]: You get diversification, so you don't get a lot of default risk of individual names, because you're so spread out, but you can get yield spreads widened out, and you can lose money over short periods of time when you take a lot of credit risk.
31:26.933 --> 31:28.475
[SPEAKER_18]: So understand that.
31:29.436 --> 31:30.797
[SPEAKER_18]: And then there's duration risk.
31:31.823 --> 31:36.909
[SPEAKER_18]: which is how long with the maturity length of these bonds that you're holding in that particular fund.
31:37.330 --> 31:42.816
[SPEAKER_18]: So you want to really understand that and figure out how much risk you want to take.
31:43.076 --> 31:45.700
[SPEAKER_18]: Then you can also buy individual bonds.
31:46.160 --> 31:48.163
[SPEAKER_18]: Your broker probably has a bond desk.
31:48.623 --> 31:57.847
[SPEAKER_18]: If you're at one of the major brokers, you can call them up and discuss potentially buying a new individual bond as well, and they'll probably help you understand the risk there as well.
31:57.907 --> 32:03.229
[SPEAKER_18]: So a lot of ways to do it, but make sure you do your research before you fire on it.
32:03.529 --> 32:06.530
[SPEAKER_03]: All righty, this is Invest Talk, and our show is about question.
32:06.570 --> 32:08.571
[SPEAKER_03]: So let us roll in another listener question now.
32:09.352 --> 32:12.953
[SPEAKER_12]: Hi, I've heard past callers ask about questions
32:17.928 --> 32:20.508
[SPEAKER_12]: You want to understand what a lot of those term mean.
32:20.568 --> 32:25.629
[SPEAKER_12]: You're talking about different types of traits, but I don't have a full understanding of it and I do want to learn.
32:26.329 --> 32:45.393
[SPEAKER_12]: I've tried looking up some information about that online, but a lot of it is very technical or information that seems to be geared towards people who already know what that means for YouTubers or maybe selling different types of courses, which if you have a pay option that you would recommend, I would do that.
32:47.463 --> 32:49.344
[SPEAKER_12]: courses is informational and helpful.
32:49.444 --> 32:51.624
[SPEAKER_12]: It's hard to find when it's legit, though.
32:52.364 --> 33:12.930
[SPEAKER_12]: I was wondering if you might have any resources that you would share to people who are trying to learn and understand this that are trying to get a full understanding of determinology, the different types of trades, how to apply them, what to look for that would tell them when to apply different things.
33:14.163 --> 33:16.644
[SPEAKER_12]: I would appreciate that very much, and thank you.
33:17.165 --> 33:26.850
[SPEAKER_03]: That is a very big and very important question that I don't think we have the time to dive into fully on this format.
33:27.350 --> 33:33.033
[SPEAKER_03]: Now it is true there are a lot of paid classes on these types of things.
33:33.433 --> 33:39.196
[SPEAKER_03]: And you had the top mentioned options, puts leaps, all of these things that are a bit more complex.
33:39.616 --> 33:46.561
[SPEAKER_03]: in terms of their strategy, then when you talk about just building a typical equity bond portfolio.
33:47.342 --> 33:52.706
[SPEAKER_03]: And I can direct you towards any one of these paid services that can give you a lesson, right?
33:52.726 --> 34:04.675
[SPEAKER_03]: They can help you learn about the basics before you move on towards another layer of complexity, because a lot of the times the conversation is complex, because the assumption is that if you're looking at these types of strategies, you have a foundational knowledge.
34:05.235 --> 34:08.699
[SPEAKER_03]: But here's what I will say, and this is plugging in Vestock a little bit.
34:09.240 --> 34:19.533
[SPEAKER_03]: We have started on our YouTube to pick back up our series, the Investock Classroom series, and what it achieves to do, what it aims to do, is help to teach you about
34:21.375 --> 34:23.516
[SPEAKER_03]: concepts that may be complex in a very simple way.
34:24.176 --> 34:36.602
[SPEAKER_03]: And given that question, we will make sure that one of the next episodes we do is an explanation to try and simplify and help you understand all of these very complex top and topics within the option space.
34:37.402 --> 34:39.183
[SPEAKER_03]: And like all of our other episodes,
34:39.823 --> 34:41.964
[SPEAKER_03]: It'll be available for free.
34:42.384 --> 34:49.325
[SPEAKER_03]: So just head over to our Invest Talk YouTube channel that is in Invest Talk with two T's look for the Invest Talk classroom series.
34:49.966 --> 34:52.246
[SPEAKER_03]: And we'll have that episode out to you, as soon as we can.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Thanks for the call.
34:54.427 --> 34:57.047
[SPEAKER_17]: You've got two for the price of one.
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[SPEAKER_17]: Justin Klein and Luke Guerrero are here, and they're taking your finance and investment questions now.
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[SPEAKER_17]: 888-99 chart.
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[SPEAKER_03]: All right, let's keep things rolling and answer another color question now.
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[SPEAKER_09]: Hello, invest stock.
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[SPEAKER_09]: My name is Enrique de Collin from Pacific Beach.
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[SPEAKER_09]: My question is, is it better to reinvest the dividends back into the stock or to get them deposited into your core account, even though if you're gonna keep investing 500 to $1,000 a month?
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[SPEAKER_09]: Just want to hear your take on it, looking forward to the answer on the podcast.
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[SPEAKER_09]: Thank you very much.
35:35.377 --> 35:43.081
[SPEAKER_03]: The question is around sounds like drips, dividend, dividend rather, reinvestment plans.
35:43.941 --> 35:56.348
[SPEAKER_03]: And so the idea is, when a dividend is paid out by a company, you may be offered cash or you may be offered to elect to reinvest those dividends directly.
35:57.208 --> 36:02.213
[SPEAKER_03]: Now there are some costs and benefits here, there are some things that you have to understand.
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[SPEAKER_03]: One of them is, well, it is best if you want long-term compounding and you intend to buy the same company to just have the dividends reinvest it, right?
36:10.220 --> 36:15.745
[SPEAKER_03]: There is a settlement time between when cash is delivered and then you can buy the shares, prices move.
36:16.405 --> 36:17.446
[SPEAKER_03]: If you're intention,
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[SPEAKER_03]: is that you want to buy the same thing.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Well, then it makes the most sense to just reinvest those dividends directly.
36:25.714 --> 36:37.785
[SPEAKER_03]: But if you need income, right, if you need cash, if you want the flexibility to invest in a different name, if you expect the stock is maybe a little bit too high in your portfolio in terms of waiting, well, then you'd want to take cash.
36:38.472 --> 36:43.854
[SPEAKER_03]: The reality is, no, no matter what you do, tax is the same in terms of tax treatment, right?
36:43.914 --> 36:51.716
[SPEAKER_03]: Dividens are taxed the year you receive them, reinvesting doesn't defer those taxes, unless, of course, it's in a tax-advanced account.
36:52.536 --> 36:56.097
[SPEAKER_03]: So I guess the answer is it depends what you wanna do with it.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Just at a quick one, quick high level again.
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[SPEAKER_03]: If you wanna invest somewhere else to me at the cash, take the cash.
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[SPEAKER_03]: If you're gonna reinvest it in the name, just reinvest it using the dividend reinvestment program
37:08.766 --> 37:09.286
[SPEAKER_03]: Thanks to the call.
37:09.546 --> 37:12.348
[SPEAKER_17]: Have you heard about the new Invest Talk Store?
37:13.028 --> 37:16.711
[SPEAKER_17]: That's right, you'll find great merch for the savvy investor.
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[SPEAKER_17]: It's all there for you now at InvestTalkStore.com.
37:20.953 --> 37:25.976
[SPEAKER_18]: Let's go to the back of the Invest Talk Voice Bank for this question that came in earlier in eight and eight nine-une inch art.
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[SPEAKER_11]: I just found a little helpful.
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[SPEAKER_11]: My name's Jim from New York.
37:29.298 --> 37:31.899
[SPEAKER_11]: I have a general question about retirement account.
37:32.380 --> 37:35.522
[SPEAKER_11]: I am currently a cold-time employee and I have a full 3D.
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[SPEAKER_11]: I also have a small business and self-employed as well.
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[SPEAKER_11]: So I'm going to, if I can, max out my full 3B for my full time components and also start another retirement account for my small business, can I contribute to two different retirement accounts, like a FRA or another kind of a retirement account for my small business?
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[SPEAKER_11]: Is that possible?
37:59.820 --> 38:00.380
[SPEAKER_11]: Is it legal?
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[SPEAKER_11]: Thank you.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Well answer is yes you can.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Now there are limitations to it.
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[SPEAKER_18]: There's limitations basically an income and total contributions.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So this is something that you want to talk to you a tax advisor or that's a CPA or some other licensed tax advisor to help you with that because I don't know your income.
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[SPEAKER_18]: But you can't.
38:22.719 --> 38:34.132
[SPEAKER_18]: You can contribute to a 4-3B or a 401K or a TSP and contribute to an IRA or Roth IRA or a SEP IRA depending on what you qualify for.
38:34.192 --> 38:38.256
[SPEAKER_18]: But it depends on your total income and that total contribution.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So make sure you talk to a licensed professional before you before you do that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Okay, or an advisor, or a financial advisor, like me that would go over exactly what this looks like and help explain kind of where you're at, uh, within the rules of the tax code not tax professional, but you know the basics, but once again, if you know kind of instantly what that income really looks like.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Thanks for the call a great question.
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[SPEAKER_18]: A lot of people don't know that a lot of you don't understand that.
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[SPEAKER_18]: It's not just your 401k, it's not just your 4th or B, it's not just even an IRA, right?
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[SPEAKER_18]: You have limitations to that, the captive contributions, but it's always good to consult with the tax professional before you make that contract.
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[SPEAKER_17]: You are listening to an Invest Talk Best of Caller Questions compilation program.
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[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome.
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[SPEAKER_17]: Call anytime 88899 chart.
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[SPEAKER_17]: That's 88899 CHART.
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[SPEAKER_17]: This is an invest talk best of caller questions compilation program.
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[SPEAKER_17]: Your comments and questions are always welcome call anytime 88899 chart that's 88899 CHART Justin Luke Justin Clayton so appreciative for everything you've done for us here's my question listen in a year advice of the last 10 years I've been 30 days successful
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[SPEAKER_06]: I have an investing account, this is a straight investment account, and a traditional IRA.
40:28.719 --> 40:44.242
[SPEAKER_06]: My understanding is, as we go to the later part of the year, and I move some of this into bonds and treasuries and spending a little bit of a pullback, as I switch my investment account, whether I pull it out or turn around and put it right into bonds, I will have to pay taxes on my game, is that correct?
40:44.563 --> 40:51.164
[SPEAKER_06]: And as I switch my traditional IRA and pull the money out, regardless of my game,
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[SPEAKER_06]: if I leave it in the traditional hyera and just move it into what my investment company gives me for stocks and bonds and treasuries.
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[SPEAKER_06]: I do not have to play games on that.
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[SPEAKER_06]: I only play games on that when I actually pull it out of the hyera area.
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[SPEAKER_06]: There's all made mistakes looking forward to hearing your answer on the podcast.
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[SPEAKER_06]: Thanks again for all of your advice and everything you've done for
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[SPEAKER_18]: Well, appreciate your kind words and simple answer to your questions are yes, you know, if an IRA, whether you have a gain or a loss, the only tax implication is when you take the money out of it, okay, or if you do a Roth conversion and
41:31.702 --> 41:44.128
[SPEAKER_18]: that is something you should talk about with your advisor, if you want to call us, we can help you discuss that and what that planning should look like, so that is a strategy almost everyone should be looking at.
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[SPEAKER_18]: It's some sort of rough conversion strategy at some point, typically between retirements and taking social security or taking your R&Ds, etc.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So that's a more as a deeper conversation, but you're right.
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[SPEAKER_18]: is moving money in and out of whatever within an IRA is not a tech does not create tax consequences.
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[SPEAKER_18]: But on a taxable account, yeah, if you have a gain, you sell it.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Hopefully you want to sell it at long-term capital gains, so you have a lower tax rate there, but you have to consider that as part of the decision making process, right?
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[SPEAKER_18]: Just because we have a market pullback or maybe markets get a little rougher, doesn't necessarily mean that you should
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[SPEAKER_18]: be crystallizing those gains.
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[SPEAKER_18]: Not bad, not a terrible idea, but it's in context to your full financial picture.
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[SPEAKER_18]: So understand that as well, and hopefully your current advisor is helping you with that, if not, that you'll call with us.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Got a question for Justin or Luke, you're the best person to ask it.
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[SPEAKER_10]: Is it a good idea to sell your losses in a Roth IRA and just use whatever you have left to reinvestment to better stock?
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[SPEAKER_19]: Invest talk is ready 24-7.
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[SPEAKER_11]: I would really appreciate if you could give me an NP-point for a company called Metronic MDP.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Call Invest Talk 8-8-99 chart or post your questions on the Invest Talk YouTube channel.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Artil, let's drop in another listener question now.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Hi, I want to thank first of all to Justin and Luke for the amazing show and all the information.
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[SPEAKER_01]: You guys are providing, thank you so much again.
43:16.118 --> 43:36.309
[SPEAKER_01]: What I want to know is, in terms of long-term investment, what kind of financial ratios do you guys or do one should typically look into to understand the company and to decide if this company is a go-no-go kind of a thing?
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[SPEAKER_01]: Again, thank you for so much of the information and I keep hearing the show every day.
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[SPEAKER_01]: Thank you guys again.
43:43.110 --> 43:43.251
[SPEAKER_03]: Bye.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Alrighty, what are some important financial ratios to look at?
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[SPEAKER_03]: There's a lot.
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[SPEAKER_03]: Right.
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[SPEAKER_03]: When you're analyzing a business, there is no one size fits all thing that just tells you, well, this is a good company.
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[SPEAKER_03]: This is not a good company.
43:57.181 --> 43:58.262
[SPEAKER_03]: There are so many things to look at.
43:58.922 --> 44:03.225
[SPEAKER_03]: when you're talking about looking at liquidity, current ratio, quick ratio, cash ratio.
44:03.665 --> 44:10.671
[SPEAKER_03]: This is all telling you how much liquid cash or investments a company has relative to what its liabilities are.
44:11.251 --> 44:17.496
[SPEAKER_03]: There's leverage ratios, your debt to equity, all sorts of leverage shows that can tell you how do they capitalize this business.
44:17.916 --> 44:20.518
[SPEAKER_03]: Does this company have more debt than other companies in its industry?
44:20.998 --> 44:29.542
[SPEAKER_03]: There's profitability ratios, that's what margins are, your net margin, your EBITDA margin, your operating profit margin relative to your book value of your assets.
44:30.042 --> 44:33.544
[SPEAKER_03]: Then you have your valuation multiples, your forward-looking price earnings, price to book.
44:33.944 --> 44:37.346
[SPEAKER_03]: You have your efficiency ratios, your asset turnover, your inventory turnover.
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[SPEAKER_03]: It becomes incredibly complex and incredibly difficult.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And some of these ratios mean more for some companies than they do for others.
44:45.430 --> 44:50.132
[SPEAKER_03]: Inventory turnover is going to mean a lot more for retail company than it is going to mean for a utility company.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so that's to say it is difficult when analyzing these companies to just say that there is one size fits all you have to have a holistic approach.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And it's not just about how the company is doing, because most of the return of a stock is going to be how the market returns.
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[SPEAKER_03]: After that, a lot of it's going to be how the sector returns.
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[SPEAKER_03]: So little is dependent upon what the individual company does.
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[SPEAKER_03]: And so when you're looking for these companies to invest in, you have to get the top stuff done first.
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[SPEAKER_03]: What is your macro worldview?
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[SPEAKER_03]: How does your theme, the theme over which you're investing, how is it informed by that macro worldview?
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[SPEAKER_03]: Only then can start to dive into some of those critical ratios, profitability, cash, leverage, to help you select appropriate company for your strategy and your risk profile.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Invest talk is a trademark of KPP financial, because of the nature of the interactive dialogue inherent in the format of this program.
45:47.379 --> 45:51.560
[SPEAKER_19]: It's important for the listener to understand that not all comments made will apply to them.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Specifically, nothing said she'll be taken to be investment advice.
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[SPEAKER_19]: or shell statements on this program be considered an offer to buy or sell security.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Because such advice is rendered solely on an individual basis, and at times will require that the investor review a prospectus before investing.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Invest talk is a copyrighted program of Klein, Pavless, and Peasley Financial, a registered investment advisor firm, which retains all rights.
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[SPEAKER_19]: For more information regarding KPP's investment advisors, call 1-800-557-5461.
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[SPEAKER_19]: Thank you for listening, and your comments and questions are welcome on our 24-hour listener line.
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[SPEAKER_19]: At 888-99 chart.
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