You should not invest in stocks.
Ever.
You should not use Macro Economics to buy or sell stocks.
Ever.
While I do not recommend you buy Saul stocks, or make Saul your guru. I do recommend you read his end of month write ups every month.
You will notice a few things.
One. He listens to every quarterly conference call and knows the leadership and the company.
Two. He talks about companies, not stocks.
Three. He talks about that company, not stocks, not “the market” not “the economy”
If you will take the time, even one time and review the companies you are holding stock shared in, compared to the metrics that Saul uses to evaluate the companies that he is invested in, your eyes will be wide open.
I invested by platitude for years, this is why I am still working. When I compared my holdings, mostly AT&T to the metrics that Saul thought were important, I sold every share I could. Moreover, every time I invested by platitude, I have lost money since.
When Upstart was taking over the world, I was up, a lot. When I heard then change their business model, that was a red flag and I sold. I was slow so gave back a lot of profit. On the other hand, Upstart is down almost 95 percent from its high and has no viable way to grow at all. (At least not in this environment) I really believed, and still believe that the model that Upstart is using will change the world. But that belief does not make me money.
The same goes for a whole
list of companies.
Nvidia
Cisco
Worldcom
Enron
Village Farms
and so on
What makes money is investing money in companies led by people who can grow a company profitably preferably in a growing environment.
If one of your classmates came and asked you to invest in his start up, how much work would you do before you handed over your cash? This is the bar for investing in a public company via stocks. Anything less, you might as well spend the money booze and women because you are wasting the rest.
Cheers
Qazulight