right, but 1) you have a portfolio with a strategy and 2) you know what to look for / you can read financial statements and such.
for me it would be more like: "Hey, that pizza from whole foods was pretty good, i'm going to buy a share" or "hmm, that new fusion looks decent, get a few shares or Ford" or "that pgekko guy said mReit's pay good dividends, might as well grab a few of those"
If you open a brokerage account they have rating systems etc. You won't be blind unless you want to be, but you don't seem like the type that doesn't enjoy learning/researching things.
There's all sorts of sh1t you can look at with Fidelity and none of it's as granular as reading financial statements.
The mREITs are good to go to 2004. If interest rates rise, get out.
Oh I thought you were talking about your 401.... I wish I was able to pick which companies my 401 invested in. Basically I just get to pick from groups that have like 10 companies in them. Like I said earlier I'm thinking about dropping the amount I put into my 401 and putting that money into my own private account
That company is a growth stock. You could just buy blue chip dividend stocks and be fine. You do need to think mid/long term though. Little blips are really irrelevant for most companies that are solid. Green Mountain is trendy and I'd never even invest in it in the first place.
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