Edited by animedad ()
Agnus_Dei posted:If you are curious about investing then by all means experiment with it, but use cautious sums. Invest in companies you like. You will learn a lot in the process.
Personally I think keeping a Traditional IRA in your preferred broker's long-term growth index is a good idea. It's nice to contribute the max every year and receive a refund.
Keep the rest of your money in a high-yield savings account.
One should be aware that the dollar, stocks, gold, etc. may all drop in value catastrophically at any moment. This anxiety is an unavoidable reality of wealth.
If you are concerned about maximizing your earnings past that you should probably consider this image.
thanks for the advice joel
jools posted:doug henwood already does this Lol
lol.
Crow posted:
some brass knucks?! brass knucks dude???
tpaine posted:shit up yer arse
i did now what?
Edited by jeffery ()
The people advocating shorting stocks as a strategy clearly dont understand uncontroversial aspects of finance and are probably also contradicting whatever brand of hackneyed leftism is their gimmick of choice
anyways, what book does he talk about the mechanisms of finance?
AmericanNazbro posted:it fairly redundant knowing the specific inner workings of a system you know to be built on a flawed premise. what good would that information do to the average leftist? they don't have the capital to be able to participate in financial markets, it's a privilege relegated for the wealthy.
anyways, what book does he talk about the mechanisms of finance?
i'm not sure how understanding the mechanisms of the current hegemony isnt important to leftists. this isn't really its only problem, but the fact that ows couldn't articulate anything beyond vague critiques of bailouts and complaining about atm fees went a long way in discrediting it among people who tried to think it through; and that was a movement supposedly created to directly counter finance capitalism
anyway http://www.wallstreetthebook.com/WallStreet.pdf is the best he's done on it, reading this would probably leave you more knowledgable than the finance majors out of big ten schools you and impper do shooters with at schoolyard tavern
Groulxsmith posted:AmericanNazbro posted:it fairly redundant knowing the specific inner workings of a system you know to be built on a flawed premise. what good would that information do to the average leftist? they don't have the capital to be able to participate in financial markets, it's a privilege relegated for the wealthy.
anyways, what book does he talk about the mechanisms of finance?i'm not sure how understanding the mechanisms of the current hegemony isnt important to leftists. this isn't really its only problem, but the fact that ows couldn't articulate anything beyond vague critiques of bailouts and complaining about atm fees went a long way in discrediting it among people who tried to think it through; and that was a movement supposedly created to directly counter finance capitalism
anyway http://www.wallstreetthebook.com/WallStreet.pdf is the best he's done on it, reading this would probably leave you more knowledgable than the finance majors out of big ten schools you and impper do shooters with at schoolyard tavern
knowing how to trade in derivative and place puts =/= a good understanding of capitalism. i would say it would be more akin to being mislead into believing a subject has a firm grasp on the mechanisms of capitalism, though built on a faulty premise ultimately.
i wasn't referring to OWS protesters as leftist, OWS is/was kind of a joke. i was speaking in regards to people who have a background in marxism. unless someone were to actively attempt to trade in the finance markets, i can't see a necessity in learning the finer mechanics within financial markets.
also again, what kind of /real/ leftist has the capital to trade in equities? some extremely radical leftist like dorkasaurus_rex? i think our definition of what constitutes a leftist differs quite a bit.
google will buy your shit for $500m
hth
AmericanNazbro posted:
not so much how to do it (no book is really about that) but about how business and financial markets interplay, something lost on most people, marxist or not, besides some idea about companies wanting stock prices high and inflation low
i don't even mean that someone can take down the system be being a leftist rogue trader or something dumb like that. but if you're going to fight cpaitalism (and i'm not even sure how that is done) it seems best to understand how it even works in 2012 because it is functionally unrecognizable from the form marx or lenin understood it to be. leave my dear friend dork rex out of it... my god, if there a hundred like him around today, it could change the world
AmericanNazbro posted:are you actually doing any investing and speculating now goldsmith? you used to be a courier before right? did you make it to the big times now are you at the trading desk? i heard that's a real miserable job hahah
i worked on a trading desk years ago. even ethics aside i wasn't cut out for that ilfe. now i actually work at a busy and boring office job. i don't remember what even attracted me to finance in the first place anymore
Canadian Fucking Attitude!!!
AmericanNazbro posted:Groulxsmith posted:
AmericanNazbro posted:
it fairly redundant knowing the specific inner workings of a system you know to be built on a flawed premise. what good would that information do to the average leftist? they don't have the capital to be able to participate in financial markets, it's a privilege relegated for the wealthy.
anyways, what book does he talk about the mechanisms of finance?
i'm not sure how understanding the mechanisms of the current hegemony isnt important to leftists. this isn't really its only problem, but the fact that ows couldn't articulate anything beyond vague critiques of bailouts and complaining about atm fees went a long way in discrediting it among people who tried to think it through; and that was a movement supposedly created to directly counter finance capitalism
anyway http://www.wallstreetthebook.com/WallStreet.pdf is the best he's done on it, reading this would probably leave you more knowledgable than the finance majors out of big ten schools you and impper do shooters with at schoolyard tavern
knowing how to trade in derivative and place puts =/= a good understanding of capitalism. i would say it would be more akin to being mislead into believing a subject has a firm grasp on the mechanisms of capitalism, though built on a faulty premise ultimately.
i wasn't referring to OWS protesters as leftist, OWS is/was kind of a joke. i was speaking in regards to people who have a background in marxism. unless someone were to actively attempt to trade in the finance markets, i can't see a necessity in learning the finer mechanics within financial markets.
also again, what kind of /real/ leftist has the capital to trade in equities? some extremely radical leftist like dorkasaurus_rex? i think our definition of what constitutes a leftist differs quite a bit.
Stalin and his gang robbed banks and did deals with oil magnates to fund their revolution while you say "what kind of real leftist needs to know how to get money".....weird
Groulxsmith posted:AmericanNazbro posted:not so much how to do it (no book is really about that) but about how business and financial markets interplay, something lost on most people, marxist or not, besides some idea about companies wanting stock prices high and inflation low
i don't even mean that someone can take down the system be being a leftist rogue trader or something dumb like that. but if you're going to fight cpaitalism (and i'm not even sure how that is done) it seems best to understand how it even works in 2012 because it is functionally unrecognizable from the form marx or lenin understood it to be. leave my dear friend dork rex out of it... my god, if there a hundred like him around today, it could change the world
if you think this maybe you should actually read Marx instead of wasting time reading theology books on the various strategies for growing fictitious capital and justifying it as productive.
babyhueypnewton posted:Groulxsmith posted:
AmericanNazbro posted:
not so much how to do it (no book is really about that) but about how business and financial markets interplay, something lost on most people, marxist or not, besides some idea about companies wanting stock prices high and inflation low
i don't even mean that someone can take down the system be being a leftist rogue trader or something dumb like that. but if you're going to fight cpaitalism (and i'm not even sure how that is done) it seems best to understand how it even works in 2012 because it is functionally unrecognizable from the form marx or lenin understood it to be. leave my dear friend dork rex out of it... my god, if there a hundred like him around today, it could change the world
if you think this maybe you should actually read Marx instead of wasting time reading theology books on the various strategies for growing fictitious capital and justifying it as productive.
The world is a very different place to the 1870s today
Groulxsmith posted:leave my dear friend dork rex out of it... my god, if there a hundred like him around today, it could change the world
if he gave 10mil to 100 people there could be, but he doesn't. Hmm makes u think, makes u think...
animedad posted:it's really not that complicated, anyway
Eight Million people without electricity because the wires are on poles. Should they be? Why are they? Good idea?
Groulxsmith posted:like by cracking open the protocols of the bankster you might be prone to start studying for your CFA
but isnt that like, exactly what always happens? no one responsibly wields that power. the lure of exploitative laborless capital is endlessly corruptive and abyssal. leave your soul at the door
"oh no guys, its not what you think. im getting inside their heads. im studying to defeat them"
animedad posted: