FINANCIaL

FIELd NOTES

Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees

Why Sequence Of Return Matters So Much

Let’s pretend we have two retirees, Jim and Marty McFly. They both look the same financially. They are retiring in the year 2000 with $1,000,000, all invested in the S&P 500, and plan to begin withdrawing $40,000/year. The only difference is that Marty McFly has the ability to travel to 2020 and go do retirement in reverse…

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Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees

Why I'll Never Find The Next Amazon

It sounds great in theory.

Step 1 - Find the next Amazon while it’s still a small and unknown company.

Step 2 - Hold it forever.

Step 3 - Make a bazillion dollars and retire on my own private island.

Let's go ahead and say I did the impossible and got Step 1 right. I say impossible because even Jeff Bezos wasn't sure it would become what it did.

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Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees

Long-Term Investors Playing Short-Term Games

Last month Elon Musk tweeted two words – “Use Signal.” He was referring to an encrypted messaging app you can get on your phone. Signal is a private company meaning most of us can’t buy the stock. However, there is a company called “Signal Advance,” a completely unrelated biotech company that happens to share the same “Signal” name as the messaging app Elon mentioned.

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Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees

The Real Magic Behind Warren Buffett’s Success

Many investors, including myself, admire Warren Buffet for his calm demeanor, timeless wisdom, and incredible investment success. However, the secret ingredient to his enormous net worth, which is north of $80 billion, is not his ability to time the market or pick winners – it’s simply time IN the market. Warren Buffet started investing as a young boy at the age of 11…

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Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees Investment Strategy Alex Voorhees

The Worst Market Timer

With the market near all-time highs, investors are often weary of investing, wanting to wait until there is a sell-off. It is a very rational thought, especially when the economy is hurting like it is now. When it comes to investing cash, the question you should ask is “When will I need it?” not “Is this a good time?”

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