So you now (above can forecast the ISM forward) 15 months, therefore you can forecast the markets forward.
...or just pay using BTC. It's been a few months now that I swap the BTC I need for USDT and paid with USDT directly, just as I would pay with a credit card, Google Pay, or Apple Pay.void said:
and liquidate only what you need to spend for consumption/pleasure/needs
Click to expand...
I'm far from feeling eligible for giving advises to others as my background and risk tolerance is very different from an average personMercury said:
Any strategy to mitigate sequence of returns risk, and avoid selling during bear market?
Click to expand...
short futures 1:1Mercury said:
Any strategy to mitigate sequence of returns risk, and avoid selling during bear market?
Click to expand...
where or how would you do that ?void said:
2) in the rest of the cases I believe borrowing against BTC is the right way - yes, I'm aware that options are very limited/expensive nowadays but it will evolve no doubt
Click to expand...
please elaborate - where, how, costs...?
It's called hedging. 1:1 means being flat the market, which is the same as selling the whole portfolio, but without the transaction and spread costs.
Same as selling the whole portfolio, except that you still own the crypto or stocks that you hedge. Also if you hold quality stocks and short e.g. S&P500, you probably gain during the hedge.JohnnyDoe said:
It's called hedging. 1:1 means being flat the market, which is the same as selling the whole portfolio, but without the transaction and spread costs.
Click to expand...
sure but where are you doing this with BTC and what is the cost?10101 said:
Same as selling the whole portfolio, except that you still own the crypto or stocks that you hedge. Also if you hold quality stocks and short e.g. S&P500, you probably gain during the hedge.
Click to expand...
What's the problem with buying again the whole portfolio instead of closing the derivatives position?10101 said:
Same as selling the whole portfolio, except that you still own the crypto or stocks that you hedge.
Click to expand...
Then it would not be a 1:1 hedge10101 said:
Also if you hold quality stocks and short e.g. S&P500, you probably gain during the hedge.
Click to expand...
HODLburden said:
What should we be able to learn from this long discussion? Could someone perhaps briefly summarize this?
Click to expand...
What services do you use for these nice graphs?
All internally generated (dynamic) updates as data feeds in/derived/deduced.Don said:
What services do you use for these nice graphs?
Invaluable contributions by the way 🙂 thanks!
Click to expand...
Thanks!wellington said:
All internally generated (dynamic) updates as data feeds in/derived/deduced.
But at the basis, Plotly can work with php/python (some generated using php +js others python +js)
Click to expand...
Yeah that's why i created them, basically you have to f**k around with Bloomberg Terminal/OpenBB /Tradingview etc to generate the charts and you can only have so many open at once and it resets and you actually just need this in the bg routinely updating twice a day or once a day / week etcDon said:
Thanks!
Got to have these things running on a separate screen in the office.
Then next thing is automate alerts and trades.
Click to expand...
So 17.3% minus 8% debasement, 2% Gov reported inflation (4%) = 5.3% - tax.... ?Radko said:
Over the long term, research shows that REITs have outperformed stocks.
Since 1994, three REIT subgroups stood out for their ability to beat the S&P 500
Self-storage REITs have delivered a 17.3% average annual total return since 1994. That has obliterated the S&P 500's 10.1% average annual total return during that period.
Self-storage REITs have routinely delivered strong returns compared to other REITs.
Industrial REITs have delivered the second-best performance in the sector since 1994, with an average annual total return of 14.4%.
Residential REITs have delivered the third-highest performance among REIT subgroups since 1994 at 12.7% annually.
Click to expand...