Stock Pick of the Day
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- tomsalwasser
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 928
- Joined: Mon Feb 08, 2010 2:09 pm
Stock Pick of the Day
Greetings woodworkers. Just wondering if any of you are good stock pickers. I'm new to this, although I have put retirement money away for years in IRA and 401k mutual funds. I started looking into dividend stocks lately so I thought I'd share a little bit here with you. Here is my pick of the day: http://laterthanuthink.blogspot.com/201 ... f-day.html
- Ed in Tampa
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- Joined: Fri Jul 21, 2006 12:45 am
- Location: North Tampa Bay area Florida
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
Tom
I have a problem with stock pick guys. I figure if they were any good at it they would be on the beach enjoying life instead of trying to get me to invest in something they say is good.
Today's stock market is a house of cards and it is crap shoot as to when that house is coming down. You can bet most of the stock pick guys will emerge from the rumble unscathed because they never invested they made their money telling others how to.
I have a problem with stock pick guys. I figure if they were any good at it they would be on the beach enjoying life instead of trying to get me to invest in something they say is good.
Today's stock market is a house of cards and it is crap shoot as to when that house is coming down. You can bet most of the stock pick guys will emerge from the rumble unscathed because they never invested they made their money telling others how to.
- tomsalwasser
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 928
- Joined: Mon Feb 08, 2010 2:09 pm
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
I hear you Ed but in the long run the stock market is a pretty good place to be. In the short term it's certainly over valued right now but the correction is yet to come after years of doomsayers predictions. But scoring a home run in the stock market is not what I'm looking for here. I'm playing small ball, looking for walks and singles. A lot of people approaching retirement today do not get a pension. They just have a lump sum and they have to figure out a way to generate monthly income. There are many strategies to do this and a person should use more than one of them. I'm experimenting with dividend stocks. Just testing the waters, I've got a few bucks in 20 stocks now. These are companies I know and have been around a while. Most are household names. They generate a quarterly dividend. On various days every month 8 of my stocks deposit a dividend payment in my checking account. So I'm using these stocks like a savings account. The difference is they pay a lot more than the pittance a bank pays. And over time the stock may also increase in value. Of course they are not insured. The may lose value. But even if the stock value fluctuates, the dividends keep coming. They may however cut their dividend. It happens. But I think there's a place for dividend stocks in my retirement plan.
My most recent pick of the day is Deere & Co. Deere pays $2.40 per share per year dividends. The stock costs $90 per share. That's 2.6%. Not too shabby!
My most recent pick of the day is Deere & Co. Deere pays $2.40 per share per year dividends. The stock costs $90 per share. That's 2.6%. Not too shabby!
- rjent
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 2121
- Joined: Fri Mar 14, 2014 3:00 pm
- Location: Hot Springs, New Mexico
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
I have always seen our economy as two parts. The real economy that is all of the small businesses, employees at Walmart, the doctors, nurses, mechanics, ect and then Wall Street. Two totally different arenas. I have always stayed away from the Money Changers, and relied on my own blood sweat and tears. So far it has worked out pretty well ....
My dad always said "if you are going to make money, you have to earn it". I think he was right ...
JMHO
My dad always said "if you are going to make money, you have to earn it". I think he was right ...
JMHO
Dick
1965 Mark VII S/N 407684
1951 10 ER S/N ER 44570 -- Reborn 9/16/14
1950 10 ER S/N ER 33479 Reborn July 2016
1950 10 ER S/N ER 39671
1951 jigsaw X 2
1951 !0 ER #3 in rebuild
500, Jointer, Bsaw, Bsander, Planer
2014 Mark 7 W/Lift assist - 14 4" Jointer - DC3300
And a plethora of small stuff .....
"The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Benjamin Franklin
1965 Mark VII S/N 407684
1951 10 ER S/N ER 44570 -- Reborn 9/16/14
1950 10 ER S/N ER 33479 Reborn July 2016
1950 10 ER S/N ER 39671
1951 jigsaw X 2
1951 !0 ER #3 in rebuild
500, Jointer, Bsaw, Bsander, Planer
2014 Mark 7 W/Lift assist - 14 4" Jointer - DC3300
And a plethora of small stuff .....
"The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Benjamin Franklin
- tomsalwasser
- Platinum Member
- Posts: 928
- Joined: Mon Feb 08, 2010 2:09 pm
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
So true Dick, money does not grow on trees. After you earn it do you stick it under the mattress?
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
I guess I did it wrong all these years, I tried to always work smarter, not harder.Keeping your nose to the grind stone just made for a bloody nose and a ugly face. 
B B Baby
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
That's a 33 year return on investment. Providing the stock stays the same, the board doesn't decide to lower the dividend, corn prices don't tank, wait, I think they just did,etc...,etc...tomsalwasser wrote:I hear you Ed but in the long run the stock market is a pretty good place to be. In the short term it's certainly over valued right now but the correction is yet to come after years of doomsayers predictions. But scoring a home run in the stock market is not what I'm looking for here. I'm playing small ball, looking for walks and singles. A lot of people approaching retirement today do not get a pension. They just have a lump sum and they have to figure out a way to generate monthly income. There are many strategies to do this and a person should use more than one of them. I'm experimenting with dividend stocks. Just testing the waters, I've got a few bucks in 20 stocks now. These are companies I know and have been around a while. Most are household names. They generate a quarterly dividend. On various days every month 8 of my stocks deposit a dividend payment in my checking account. So I'm using these stocks like a savings account. The difference is they pay a lot more than the pittance a bank pays. And over time the stock may also increase in value. Of course they are not insured. The may lose value. But even if the stock value fluctuates, the dividends keep coming. They may however cut their dividend. It happens. But I think there's a place for dividend stocks in my retirement plan.
My most recent pick of the day is Deere & Co. Deere pays $2.40 per share per year dividends. The stock costs $90 per share. That's 2.6%. Not too shabby!
I'm not against the stocks mind you, but looking at individual stocks will get you chewing on your nails real quick. Now, this being a woodworkers forum, I'd bet you'll get a lot smarter folks than me tell you you'll get a whole lot better return on investment,and not just the monetary kind, from turning tops, building boxes and enjoying the smiles your product brings to your client.
Paul B
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
Here is a better return on investment at a lower cost per share.
http://www.wisconsinenergy.com/invest/d ... istory.htm
Living off of WEC dividends, worked there for 20 years, TRASOP program on stock.
This one I started with a hundred shares in 1980, did dividend reinvestment, now just collecting dividends and fat and happy.
http://www.rpminc.com/investor-information/
It is all about reinvesting dividends when young and not selling when a correction happens, you buy then.
http://www.wisconsinenergy.com/invest/d ... istory.htm
Living off of WEC dividends, worked there for 20 years, TRASOP program on stock.
This one I started with a hundred shares in 1980, did dividend reinvestment, now just collecting dividends and fat and happy.
http://www.rpminc.com/investor-information/
It is all about reinvesting dividends when young and not selling when a correction happens, you buy then.
B B Baby
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
If ya want a stock picker to listen to. Try this one.tomsalwasser wrote:Greetings woodworkers. Just wondering if any of you are good stock pickers. I'm new to this, although I have put retirement money away for years in IRA and 401k mutual funds. I started looking into dividend stocks lately so I thought I'd share a little bit here with you. Here is my pick of the day: http://laterthanuthink.blogspot.com/201 ... f-day.html
http://www.fool.com/
SS 500(09/1980), DC3300, jointer, bandsaw, belt sander, Strip Sander, drum sanders,molder, dado, biscuit joiner, universal lathe tool rest, Oneway talon chuck, router bits & chucks and a De Walt 735 planer,a #5,#6, block planes. ALL in a 100 square foot shop.
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Bob
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Bob
Re: Stock Pick of the Day
I read a very good article about stock brokers in, no less, in Play Boy many decades ago. It was titled "To your brokers boss, he is nothing but a salesman". Jest of the article was how if they aint selling or buying there is no commission coming in, and they have to move the junk as well as the good stuff.
B B Baby
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs
2 ERs, Greenie, Goldy, various PTAs