@Triplethought, pretty fair and balanced I think, thanks for your honesty!Triplethought wrote: ↑Fri Oct 14, 2022 11:50 pmI can tell you I made good money in 2020 and I give SOL and team credit to give me the courage to jump in shortly after the COVID bottom when it was not at all obvious to me the trend would be back. I have given it all back in 21 and 22 following the TI program. I was $150K up and now have lost $150K since early 2021. So yes, IMO SOL lost a bit Mojo for sure. But I'd say it's mostly market conditions and prolonged downturn. Say 90% of our losses due to a very down market and 10 or 15% bad stock picks and options plays by TI. I believe TI was overly aggressive into tech (nasdaq) and marginal companies (Marijuana etc) based on chart patterns and market psychology and not based on fundamentals. But the bigger sin is not following the "fight the Fed" advise.TK2fast wrote: ↑Thu Oct 13, 2022 6:54 pm I've been a 101 stock investor for many years and was doing ok until I followed the TI plan. I am 70 years old and began here at Tactical Investing one year ago. I have followed the "rules" as close as possible, but in that time I am 13K in the red. Is it just the market is that bad? What have others experienced? I am very curious as I thought the signal from TI was that the last quarter of the year we were to see a major pullback. Obviously it has happened a whole lot sooner.
I am not a savvy investor like many here so don't rip me a new one.Not pointing fingers but trying to understand.
This question is similar to my question about market trend green arrow at top of newsletter still being up the entire time. Several people posted long term charts showing over years the market is going up despite the jog down this year. SOL replied similarly saying over long periods of time the market is up. I find this answer a bit of a cop out as such a statement is a big "no shit sherlock" and one of the big things we all look for TI to do is data that let us sell when downturns are coming. That was a fail. However, I also realize that no one has a crystal ball. Because SOL has always been so positive and bullish, when he started backing off on buys and saying the last quarter would have a downturn I decided in mid august to ignore his optimistic exit levels and sell anything and everything that was either green or only slightly red. This left me with a portfolio full of turkeys but I'm 60% out right now. I've decided "don't fight the FED" is the advice I will follow to guide my re-entrance into the market. It means I will probably buy back in AFTER the market has begun it's upswing but I'm OK missing the bottom by a little.
I would hold those loses thru this downturn (that's what I'm doing with the turkeys) and let them ride out the other side.
Having said this I plan to follow SOL's buy levels when the time comes to work back in. However this time I will also be allocating a bigger chunk of the portfolio to index funds where I don't have to actively manage. At this point I believe in the Vogel advice... that it's hard for an individual investor to beat the market so buy and hold index. But I plan to still dabble to see if Im wrong and I suspect strongly SOL will get his Mojo back.
I would add that that stop losses weren't used effectively, we went in with 3 lots of eHealth and still down 93%, perhaps some of the high risk stocks shouldn't have even been part of the choices to purchase, I'm a bit surprised at some of the stock picks with negative p/e's, think that's fine when we're in a strong bullish run but with a prediction of a correction towards the end of last year should we have had these available, I haven't looked at company data previously because I've been relying on TI but will in future.
However, to be fair to TI, some things haven't been predictable without a crystal ball, a prolonged war, prolonged hawkish FED, manipulated sentiment figures that previously would have predicted a big bounce. Basically we're in a new era of manipulation that I think has taken Sol/TI by surprise at how quickly and the level it's come into play even though it was predicted by them.