Dan Fleyshman
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
This one will be even shorter than that. I'm going to cover one topic, the stock market. So let's dive in to all things stock related. Now, just to be clear, I don't do day trading and I don't recommend anyone do day trading unless you dive deep, deep, deep, deep, deep down the rabbit hole of studying, researching everything and learn from experts about day trading.
And even then, it is a tough market because you've got to put a lot of time, energy, and focus into it. And you are up against major, major organizations. And if you ever watch the show Billions, there's something called quants. You hear about quants all the time.
And even then, it is a tough market because you've got to put a lot of time, energy, and focus into it. And you are up against major, major organizations. And if you ever watch the show Billions, there's something called quants. You hear about quants all the time.
Those are just super wizards that are behind the screens morning, noon, and night thinking about every little angle, every little detail of every little dollar. And so I don't recommend day trading unless, again, you're a super expert and learn everything. And even then, there's some roller coasters that come along, obviously, because the stock market can be volatile.
Those are just super wizards that are behind the screens morning, noon, and night thinking about every little angle, every little detail of every little dollar. And so I don't recommend day trading unless, again, you're a super expert and learn everything. And even then, there's some roller coasters that come along, obviously, because the stock market can be volatile.
However, and by the way, you can listen to the episode with Timothy Sykes. He's been teaching about stock trading for years. There's people out there that are good at teaching it. But Timothy has obviously been one of the legends in the game teaching about stock trading. But ultimately.
However, and by the way, you can listen to the episode with Timothy Sykes. He's been teaching about stock trading for years. There's people out there that are good at teaching it. But Timothy has obviously been one of the legends in the game teaching about stock trading. But ultimately.
What I'm going to talk about is the obvious thing that we don't think about enough about the stock market is you're buying a small little piece of a company, hopefully a company that you believe in. And so I'm not going to talk about penny stocks. I'm not talking about gambling. I'm going to talk about something that's so obvious that it doesn't seem obvious to most people. And here it is.
What I'm going to talk about is the obvious thing that we don't think about enough about the stock market is you're buying a small little piece of a company, hopefully a company that you believe in. And so I'm not going to talk about penny stocks. I'm not talking about gambling. I'm going to talk about something that's so obvious that it doesn't seem obvious to most people. And here it is.
You are listening to this right now, probably on an iPhone or an Android or a computer. If you are listening to this on an Apple device, iPhone, laptop, iPad, etc., let me ask you a very serious question. Do you think that Apple will be here in five years? Do you think that Apple will be here in ten years? If you do, and you had a little bit of Apple stock, why would you ever sell it?
You are listening to this right now, probably on an iPhone or an Android or a computer. If you are listening to this on an Apple device, iPhone, laptop, iPad, etc., let me ask you a very serious question. Do you think that Apple will be here in five years? Do you think that Apple will be here in ten years? If you do, and you had a little bit of Apple stock, why would you ever sell it?
What's the point? If you bought, let's say, something for $1,000, and then it went to $1,200 and $1,400 and dipped down to $1,300 and then up to $1,500, and just over the course of time, it had fluctuations, but year after year, it kept growing as a business, growing as a company, the stock price would become less relevant to you.
What's the point? If you bought, let's say, something for $1,000, and then it went to $1,200 and $1,400 and dipped down to $1,300 and then up to $1,500, and just over the course of time, it had fluctuations, but year after year, it kept growing as a business, growing as a company, the stock price would become less relevant to you.
I've done my investing into the companies that I buy, which is 10 main stocks based on the company themselves. And now I say less about the price. I don't even think about the price because the price doesn't matter to me. The company itself matters. If I believe that Amazon will be here in five to 10 years and longer, and I believe they're going to go from one trillion to two trillion.
I've done my investing into the companies that I buy, which is 10 main stocks based on the company themselves. And now I say less about the price. I don't even think about the price because the price doesn't matter to me. The company itself matters. If I believe that Amazon will be here in five to 10 years and longer, and I believe they're going to go from one trillion to two trillion.
and two trillion to three trillion, will the stock price will adjust along the way? Will there be different roller coasters and can it shift even if a company's doing really well in sales like Tesla? Tesla does super good in sales and sometimes their stock drops because of the media or emotion or the economy? Sure, but over the course of time, Tesla's stock year after year has gone up.
and two trillion to three trillion, will the stock price will adjust along the way? Will there be different roller coasters and can it shift even if a company's doing really well in sales like Tesla? Tesla does super good in sales and sometimes their stock drops because of the media or emotion or the economy? Sure, but over the course of time, Tesla's stock year after year has gone up.
Tesla has broke record-breaking earnings year after year. They sell more cars than some of the most household name companies that have been around for 80 years longer than them. I want to invest in Tesla. Now, people obviously say, this is not investment advice. I'm not a registered financial advisor. Oh, that's great. I'm talking about something very obvious. The things that you like,
Tesla has broke record-breaking earnings year after year. They sell more cars than some of the most household name companies that have been around for 80 years longer than them. I want to invest in Tesla. Now, people obviously say, this is not investment advice. I'm not a registered financial advisor. Oh, that's great. I'm talking about something very obvious. The things that you like,
If you're willing to spend $500 on Amazon to buy products, maybe you should consider buying some Amazon stock. If you like Tesla or you own a Tesla, well, how dare you not own a little bit of Tesla stock? If you have an iPhone that you paid $1,500 for and you didn't spend $1,500 buying Apple stock, you should reconsider what's going on in your world. Here's why.