Anyone who talks about dips at 2%... is just difficult. What do I want with 2%? 2% doesn't matter at all if I'm looking for a long-term return.
I find companies difficult whose share prices have risen sharply for a longer period of time and now sometimes have the largest market capitalization. It would stand to reason that a company with the largest market capitalization in the world would not become the next tenbagger. Before that, market saturation, regulatory measures, etc. occur.
Pure gut feeling at this point, but I think it sounds logical. I don't bother with studies, as such shares are not currently among my investments.
I still buy ETFs immediately. 2% is nothing when you consider how long the uptrend has been running since the first ATH of this uptrend. Large corrections of 40-50% due to crises would worry me more. But I can't foresee them.
I find companies difficult whose share prices have risen sharply for a longer period of time and now sometimes have the largest market capitalization. It would stand to reason that a company with the largest market capitalization in the world would not become the next tenbagger. Before that, market saturation, regulatory measures, etc. occur.
Pure gut feeling at this point, but I think it sounds logical. I don't bother with studies, as such shares are not currently among my investments.
I still buy ETFs immediately. 2% is nothing when you consider how long the uptrend has been running since the first ATH of this uptrend. Large corrections of 40-50% due to crises would worry me more. But I can't foresee them.
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@SchlaubiSchlumpf When Apple was the first company to break the 1,000 billion barrier, everyone thought it could hardly rise any further. Nevertheless, it has risen another 250% so far. And many companies are already over the threshold. I think the increasing globalization means there is still a lot more to come.
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@Baluga Yes, there is certainly still room for improvement. However, many believe that globalization is on the decline. Towards a 5-polar world in which each economic grouping (China, Russia, Europe, America, India) tends to want to keep supply chains in its own region to make itself more independent. Of course, this does not necessarily mean that companies cannot grow at an absurd rate. We also celebrate when Tesla or AMD build plants in Germany. But it could take some of the momentum away.
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