[quote=deadzone]Seriously FLU you have some issues man. All of your responses are so long winded, I mean you just wrote more characters in this response than I have cumulatively in this entire thread. How on earth do you manage people in a professional environment with such poor writing skills?
You really need to learn how to paraphrase. I’ll summarize for you since you have reading comprehension issues:
There are several flashing red signs that the bubble is about to burst. I’ve provided several examples: Tech stocks getting creamed, Rising interest rates, end of covid, return to office, high inflation, all of the public RE companies getting ass hammered (zillow, Redfin, open), etc. etc.
I then said under these conditions it might not be wise to throw cash into the stock market at this moment. I also pointed out that money can be made in a down market, although not specifically advising anyone to do so. I also pointed out that my gold investments are going well. Whether I originally bought them at market price or via professional discount is irrelevant.
In response, all I hear from you clowns is “Opportunity of a lifetime”. You guys really don’t have any more useful advice to offer other than to go back in a time machine to 2012 and buy real estate?[/quote]
I’m in tech, I don’t need to have professional writing skills. I just need to send memes.
And yahoo founder jerry yang wrote emails completely in lower case with no punctuation. I think he made a fortunate… how did you do during the same time?
Besides this is a blog. I just like to write long ass responses to weird ass speculation…..
I’m doing fine professionally, thanks for asking. I guess I don’t work in such an anal retentive industry….sorry if you do.
My reading comprehension is just fine. I’m just going where your rambling is going…
Real estate in 2009 was an opportunity of a lifetime here in SD. No doubt about it. Buying gold jewelry from broke people probably isn’t an opportunity of a lifetime since Americans probably over extend all the time…but ….. The magnitude of people selling off their jewelry out of desperation back in 2009 might have been an opportunity of a lifetime. Not my cup of tea to make money, but nothing wrong with it…I prefer higher rent prices that track inflation once someone moves out…