Too late now, he's living in LA.
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We used to have a few didn't we? Usually after a stock market crash there'd be chat about what to invest in. What was the name of the board stock market "expert"?
Too late now, he's living in LA.
I started about 3 weeks ago thinking we were at the bottom of the market but if anything there's been a slight decrease since. Been doing a lot of research and just spread my money into things that look good value and could improve after everything starts getting a bit more normal. Might be a bit of a wait though.
Only one I think was a mistake was IAG (BA etc) but I'm tempted to buy a few more now they're so cheap. Airlines are a massive risk at the moment though so probably best avoided.
Who was that betting expert.
Whose expertise revolved around Manu Celtic and Rangers.
Funny as he was.
Unilever should be a safe bet.
Haven't dabbled since the internet bubble around 1998 ? Remember making £800 in one day in a 'penny share', but that was it. Mind you, I think with the FTSE around 5900 it could go a fair way back up if this 'v' shaped recession and boom happens [!].
Just follow the Dai Jones Index mun.
Concentrate on protecting your pile of filthy lucre instead of ways to add to it because the US, EU, Blighty, China and Japan are all QE'ing (AKA monetising their debt, or more correctly legally counterfeiting their currencies) which will result in their purchasing power falling to nil.
Britain QE'd another 210 billion quid in March. That money, just like the previously magicked £435B of QE, was created from absolutely nothing. People might wonder why they are compelled by laws to pay taxes on their labour, their homes and a huge list of other things when the state could instead simply QE the amount it currently rakes in through taxation.
https://www.bankofengland.co.uk/mone...itative-easing
Buy shares in :
Masks, Hand Sanitizer, Gloves . Couriers , Freight transport , it ain't going away.
The next bad boy will see the world go nuts for this gear and services .
I'd slightly disagree as you buy when shares as lower now.
If you pick an airline that survives ie Lufthansa, BA you might find in 5 years with other smaller airline companies falling away , the bigger ones who survive will have a healthy stock value , would be a long term gamble ??
Great to see capitalism working
I think it is a short term gamble (if Croesy needs to cash in his chips in 12-24 months time he may have made very little) . In 5 years time, those shares will be double or triple their current value. I have the same hopes on mining companies. Those shares can still go south too, although the talk of quarantining arrivals for 14 days is a small step forward. The next step will be tests on arrival.
I don and I work in the industry. The market collapsed quite a lot 6 weeks or so ago, but has recovered quite a bit. Anyone who is solely exposed to shares would have suffered the most. Diverse portfolios of shares, bonds, gilts, cash and overseas equities fare better and are less risky. Most of the people I deal with are more concerned with a steady growth and hanging on to what they've already got rather than gambling on hughe growth. The recent events have show that to be a sensible approach.
Easy Jet losing £5m a day. Virgin in financial difficulty, Virgin Australian bust and Flybe gone out of business. The Independent's Simon Calder reckons a number of other airlines are likely to go under and, while IAG are possibly less risky than others, I think there are plenty of other sectors that will do better. Don't forget one of the golden rules of investing is "Don't catch a falling knife". In other words don't buy shares that have fallen more heavily than others just because they look cheap.
When Boris makes his announcement tomorrow the media are saying he will impose lockdown arrangements for 2 weeks on all passengers arriving in the UK. There are a couple of airlines still operating some routes and some about to start. (IAG propose starting some routes from 1 July.) There is a suggestion that this announcement will prove to be the death knell for several airlines meaning even the stronger one's shares are likely to fall even further.
I agree they’re not a good buy for the short term but for a little gamble on long term returning to normal it was worth a go.
BA have good cash reserves though so unless they go bust in the next couple of years it’ll be fine eventually.
Don’t worry it’s only a small gamble, it wouldn’t bankrupt me if they did go bust.