First and foremost, if you have lost a lot please don't do anything rash. It might be a good idea to cash out and salvage what you can. Take some time off from this stuff to recoup.

Resources to stop gambling on stocks: 1 , 2 , 3 , 4 , 5 . Thanks to /u/read_freire for providing these.

This will be the last one of these for a while. I assume a lot of people are burnt out or bored. I just wanted a debrief thread before going back to AOC struggle sessions and talking about student loans.

I don't have a technical analysis of what happened or what will happen. Reddit is quickly becoming more useless due to infighting. I expect a lot of them to sell tomorrow. More and more the "diamond hands" threads are being overtaken by criticism. By next week, this will just be another quirky thing that happened in hell world 2021.

I bought in around $240 with $50. That's now worth $15. For my own personal situation I'm better off waiting until it hits $100 again and then pulling out. I suggest everyone think about their own needs and pull out when you need to. No shame here. Paper hands is just a meme.

As far as lessons go, I think the one people said at the beginning is good. If you're just hearing about it on social media, it's probably over. By the time it got hyped enough on reddit to break on r/all and twitter, the time to get in was gone.

Companies had to cover shorts but they actually didn't. Or they had enough tools to hold off until the price plummeted. Or they did cover and nobody (on reddit) noticed. Either way, you can't rely on "but they have to do this thing by this date or else" because they don't.

If you make assumptions about the market, you have to be able to test those assumptions and have a plan for when you're wrong. Here the plan should have been to pull out at $400 and then reinvest if necessary. It's just that when the price was $400 a lot of people were locked into selling only and locked out of buying.

Another thing is to not trust your brokerage app. If there's ever a situation where the plebs are making money, it will be restricted. Just like social media, these apps are only going to end up serving higher interests rather than be actual democratic platforms.

All this passive income stuff is going to go away because the people at the top can't let people sit at home and collect money. Not even when it's capitalism doing it. When they say 'side hustle' they mean driving for uber or making some other SV prick rich. With covid killing so many, all those jobs need to be replaced. That means you. They need bodies not home investors. They have investors that are worth more to them than you will ever be.

So I guess that's it. Final thoughts before we pretend we never did this?

  • longhorn617 [any]
    ·
    4 years ago

    Just got off the phone with my Trump voting father, and I have to say, this is the most I've ever gotten him to agree with me that the system is/might be fundamentally broken and can't be repaired. Voiced support for more universal programs ad stuff like UBI. Not there yet on nationalizing the banks but I can feel him breaking down, and he seems more amenable to nationalizing stuff like the DTCC. The Secretary of the Commonwealth of MA is apparently going to investigate DeepFuckingValue and that has him pissed of. He is not a redditor and did not invest in any meme stocks.

    • Des [she/her, they/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      I think they are going to find anyway they can to strip DFV of all his gains and possibly charge him. they are going to make him a scapegoat. funny thing is he seemed to have played it really safe but being a broker is what will allow them to destroy him.

      • longhorn617 [any]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Unless he was involved in trading stocks there and/or MassMutual was holding GME, I'm not sure how they are going to get him into much trouble. It sounds like he was mainly a content creator there. I have no doubt they will try to, though. You can already see it in how all the future gulag residents at the NYT and CNBC are 100% focusing on retail investors and spending absolutely no time talking about the hedge funds that actually caused this whole thing.