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Apple stock advice
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Clinically Insane
Join Date: Mar 2001
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Would now-ish be a good time to sell? Why or why not? When would you sell?
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Pink Lady apples are nice. I only buy them though.
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Originally Posted by mattyb
Pink Lady apples are nice. I only buy them though.
They're my favorite too! But I think the OP is asking how to make vegetable stock from them. That I've never tried. And I think you need a license and inspections if you want to sell home-made vegetable stock.
Either that or it's a typo, because apples don't have stalks.
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Clinically Insane
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I welcome edible apple advice in this thread too, because I'm a believer in multi-purpose threads. For that matter, I was thinking of creating a Winnie the Pooh thread, inspired by the conversation in the Charlie and the Chocolate Factory thread, so I'm cool with talking about some Pooh here too.
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Clinically Insane
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What's you investment philosophy and time horizon ?
Why did you buy AAPL in the first place ?
-t
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Originally Posted by turtle777
What's you investment philosophy and time horizon ?
Why did you buy AAPL in the first place ?
-t
My parents helped me buy some AAPL stock for me when I was teenager, it was inheritance money. The stock has obviously done quite well, but I'm wondering whether future growth is reasonable to expect.
I don't really have a time horizon, but my philosophy is to have a diverse portfolio that can include some risky investments, I'm not necessarily adverse to some risk, but if it is time to sell high on this I'd be happy putting this money into a less risky investment (i.e. mutual funds, our IRAs, whatever) and perhaps getting back into something a little riskier in the future should something else come along.
Does this help? I appreciate your advice here, Turtle.
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Originally Posted by Uncle Skeleton
They're my favorite too! But I think the OP is asking how to make vegetable stock from them. That I've never tried. And I think you need a license and inspections if you want to sell home-made vegetable stock.
Either that or it's a typo, because apples don't have stalks.
Don't you mean stocks that you put nasty people in and then throw vegetables at them? Rotten ones of course.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by besson3c
My parents helped me buy some AAPL stock for me when I was teenager, it was inheritance money. The stock has obviously done quite well, but I'm wondering whether future growth is reasonable to expect.
As far as AAPL is concerned, it's really hard to predict if it will do well (again), or stay range bound for a longer time. It depends on the next big thing, or better, whether there will be one or not.
The main thing you should do is make sure your total portfolio is halfway balanced. Balanced means different things for different people, depending on your risk tolerance and investment time frame.
Right now, I would make sure that now single stock is more than 10-15% of your total portfolio. You don't want to put all your eggs in one basket.
Here are some basics that I recommend:
1) Absolutely stay away from bond fund, especially government bond funds
2) If you do want bonds (your are risk averse or depend on fixed income), work with a professional to create a laddered bond portfolio
3) Dividend paying blue chip stocks should probably be overweight to risky growth stocks
4) everyone should have some fire insurance in the form of precious metals (gold, silver, between 5-15% of your portfolio).
-t
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Originally Posted by mattyb
Don't you mean stocks that you put nasty people in and then throw vegetables at them? Rotten ones of course.
I was referring more to the apple William Tell shot off my head way back when. We can't do that game any more because he needs a new gunstock. Prices are too high thanks to everyone stocking up on gun stuff before Obama takes it away, dontcha-know. I have some stock footage that explains the whole situation...
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Videos, investment advice, shooting. All sounds a bit suspect to me.
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Clinically Insane
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by turtle777
As far as AAPL is concerned, it's really hard to predict if it will do well (again), or stay range bound for a longer time. It depends on the next big thing, or better, whether there will be one or not.
The main thing you should do is make sure your total portfolio is halfway balanced. Balanced means different things for different people, depending on your risk tolerance and investment time frame.
Right now, I would make sure that now single stock is more than 10-15% of your total portfolio. You don't want to put all your eggs in one basket.
Here are some basics that I recommend:
1) Absolutely stay away from bond fund, especially government bond funds
2) If you do want bonds (your are risk averse or depend on fixed income), work with a professional to create a laddered bond portfolio
3) Dividend paying blue chip stocks should probably be overweight to risky growth stocks
4) everyone should have some fire insurance in the form of precious metals (gold, silver, between 5-15% of your portfolio).
-t
Thanks! We have a whole bunch of other investments in addition to this single stock. I don't know what percentage it represents right now, but we definitely understand the diversification thing. We have mutual funds, two IRAs, joint savings, and money market funds in addition to this stock.
I guess it will be nearly impossible to anticipate the next big thing, but my gut feeling is that we won't see another next big thing for quite a while. The mobile thing was special. I don't think wearables or a TV system will be anywhere close to a big thing.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I guess it will be nearly impossible to anticipate the next big thing, but my gut feeling is that we won't see another next big thing for quite a while. The mobile thing was special. I don't think wearables or a TV system will be anywhere close to a big thing.
I have the same expectation. That's why I'm not investing in Apple at this time.
-t
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I don't know what percentage it represents right now, but we definitely understand the diversification thing. We have mutual funds, two IRAs, joint savings, and money market funds in addition to this stock.
Don't forget to look at the 10 largest holdings of your various mutual funds, in and out of retirement accounts. A lot of them include Apple, what with Apple being such a large and profitable company, so you might be less diversified than it first appears.
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Canned foods and shotguns.
You're welcome.
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Originally Posted by Uncle Skeleton
Don't forget to look at the 10 largest holdings of your various mutual funds, in and out of retirement accounts. A lot of them include Apple, what with Apple being such a large and profitable company, so you might be less diversified than it first appears.
I have a general American mutual fund which may have Apple, and an international one. The American one may very well carry Apple, I might look into that.
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