Latest Insights on LOVE
EVs Tangled Tax Weave, Power Grids Be Jammin’ & Volatility Be Slammin’ December 3, 2021 Great Stuff Friday Feedback: The “Spirit Of Great Stuff” Edition End the week with a friendly voice, a companion so obtrusive. Plays that song that’s so elusive, and the magic lyrics make your portfolio move. Off on your way, hit the open market, there is Great Stuff at your fingers. Mr. Great Stuff ever lingers, undemanding contact […]
Your Omicron Investing Game Plan December 3, 2021 Investment Opportunities, Real Talk, Stocks, U.S. Economy (3-minute read) Omicron is sparking another round of ups and downs for the markets. But Charles kept you covered this week with an investing game plan for this changing new normal…
Boeing Bites Back; Whistling Tesla; Dolla Dolla General December 2, 2021 Great Stuff A Flight Of Fancy On A Windswept Field Into the distance, a ribbon of sell-offs … stretched to the point of no turning back. Great Ones, I can’t keep my eyes from the circling sky today. Tongue-tied and twisted. Just an earthbound misfit, I … by golly, by gosh, I think Boeing’s (NYSE: ) learning […]
Omicron’s Market Madness, Meta’s Gif Horse & Raptor’s Wreckage November 30, 2021 Great Stuff Don’t Panic & Carry A Towel The market gets to the bottom then goes back to the top of the slide, where it stops and it turns and it goes for a ride … ‘till it gets to the bottom and it does it again! Yeah, yeah, yeah! Do you, don’t you want me to […]
To Win at Investing, Accept That There Is NO Normal November 29, 2021 Big Picture. Big Profits., Investing, U.S. Economy At times of extreme uncertainty, external factors drive the prices of individual stocks. Some are “a bit” predictable, like the actions of the Federal Reserve. Others are true “Black Swans” — completely unpredictable events such as Omicron. In “normal” times, on the other hand, we’re supposed to be able to predict the movement of stock prices using standard models. But what if there are no normal times? A fascinating article by a famous investment analyst convinces me that this is exactly the case.





