I worked for a dot com in 2000. We went public in March 2000, just as the bubble was bursting. The price we employees were able to buy the the stocks were $24 per share but we could not sell when we wanted.Couple weeks after it went public, the stock peaked at $116; one year later it was at $5.
I knew 2 people that were brilliant and were so smart. they both created programs to automatically buy and sell stocks for them. 1 was a day trader, and the other even held classes in his home. They both retired, they BOTH went back to work when their gimmicks failed
Amazon, at about $20/share in late 2000, hit ~$5 a few years later. Fast forward SLOWLY, and it hit about $100 in the later 90s, and dropped to maybe $50. It hit $100 again maybe 2009. In Market Adjusted for Splits $, that $20 is about $2, and today it is $127. Sometime the market rewards patience
I was left with $60,000 +/- invested after the first Dot Com bubble burst. Decided to double down on the tech sector and put it all on a NASDAQ Index fund and let it ride. It reached $600,000 +/- about 3 years ago when I decided to diversify. I got no complaints (except Long Term Capital Gains Taxes).
BE THIS GUY about 1 year ago
I worked for a dot com in 2000. We went public in March 2000, just as the bubble was bursting. The price we employees were able to buy the the stocks were $24 per share but we could not sell when we wanted.Couple weeks after it went public, the stock peaked at $116; one year later it was at $5.
The dude from FL Premium Member about 1 year ago
I knew 2 people that were brilliant and were so smart. they both created programs to automatically buy and sell stocks for them. 1 was a day trader, and the other even held classes in his home. They both retired, they BOTH went back to work when their gimmicks failed
robertthomasson Premium Member about 1 year ago
I am haze on the internecine language of market trading, is popping good or bad? Rising or falling?
Mugens Premium Member about 1 year ago
Gotta love that last panel.
Geophyzz about 1 year ago
My son at Morgan Stanley said “Buy Facebook, opening at $40!” He was right.
OshkoshJohn about 1 year ago
“Boom Dot Bust” was a great Firesign Theatre album.
jrankin1959 about 1 year ago
When my wife first got into the stock market, I clipped this panel from the newspaper; she kept it on her desk for years.
Timothy Madigan Premium Member about 1 year ago
Most IPO trend up at the start and then drop when employees can start selling. Smart long-term investors usually wait 3 months before buying.
ctb11365 about 1 year ago
Amazon, at about $20/share in late 2000, hit ~$5 a few years later. Fast forward SLOWLY, and it hit about $100 in the later 90s, and dropped to maybe $50. It hit $100 again maybe 2009. In Market Adjusted for Splits $, that $20 is about $2, and today it is $127. Sometime the market rewards patience
mistercatworks about 1 year ago
We are all much calmer “on the way to the poor house”. Gambling is gambling. The odds are not in your favor.
michaelesum about 1 year ago
I was left with $60,000 +/- invested after the first Dot Com bubble burst. Decided to double down on the tech sector and put it all on a NASDAQ Index fund and let it ride. It reached $600,000 +/- about 3 years ago when I decided to diversify. I got no complaints (except Long Term Capital Gains Taxes).
Richard S Russell Premium Member about 1 year ago
One guy who made a fortune in the stock market was asked what his secret was and replied “You’ve got to get out the day BEFORE the market crashes.”