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🏰 My cash flow fortress: Why I'm not an "S&P 500 bot"! 🛡️🛢️

While the financial police are still discussing whether 5% gold is too risky and whether it is permissible to own more than one global ETF, I am building my empire of real values. 👊


My portfolio is not a "game of chance", but an asymmetrical bet on reality. Anyone who believes that the world will only consist of tech stocks in the next 30 years has not heard the shot.


Here is my setup (30+ year horizon):

1. Firepower (Defense):
$LMT (+0,83%) & $RHM (+0,37%) . 🔫 Anyone who bets on peace is brave - I'm betting on the defense budgets of the next 20 years. State treaties are the safest dividends in the world.


2. The lungs (infrastructure/energy):
$NEE (+0,48%) , $ENB (+0,12%) & $ENR (-2,71%) . ⚡ Without electricity there is no AI (hello to your tech ETFs!) and without pipelines there is no heating. Real assets that you can touch.


3. The monthly cash engine (income):
$MAIN (-3,51%) , $O (+1,12%) & $JPEQ . 💸 While you hope for a return once a year, my securities account pays me every month my bills every month. Cash flow is freedom, book value is just a number on the screen.


4. The safety belt (tangible assets/gold): Yes, I own "useless rocks". Why? Because gold hasn't fallen to zero for 5,000 years - your currencies have.


5. The spearhead (crypto): My TradFi block secures my existence, crypto secures my leap in wealth. Anyone still shouting "scam" in 2026 has slept through the blockchain revolution. 🚀


To all ETF ultras: Have fun with your 7% returns in 40 years. I take the shortcut via direct cash flow and real systemic relevance. My goal is not to "beat the market", but to become to become independent of the market.


Who is with me? Who is also betting on cash flow instead of hope? 👇


#EierAusStahl
#CashflowIsKing
#DividendenStrategie
#KryptoHedge
#TradFi
#GetQuinCommunity

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55 Comentários

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Will your companies still exist in the empire of real values in 30+ years?
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@Alpalaka Interesting point! But let's think this through to its logical conclusion. You ask whether these companies will still exist in 30 years' time? I ask back: will there still be a need for security, energy and food in 30 years' time?
Here's the reality check for you:
1. systemic relevance beats hype: tech companies come and go (remember Nokia or Yahoo?). But my companies are the hardware of civilization.
- Lockheed & Rheinmetall: As long as there are nations, there is defense. If these companies go to zero, we have a global collapse - then your ETF is worthless too.
- NextEra & Enbridge: Do you think we'll stop using electricity? On the contrary: AI and e-mobility are eating up huge amounts of it. These companies own the grid. Whoever owns the grid owns the future.
2. historical survivability: PepsiCo and Allianz have survived world wars, currency reforms and dozens of crashes. They have proven that they can adapt. A company that has increased its dividend every year for 50+ years has crisis management skills that start-ups can only dream of.
3. physical assets vs. bits & bytes: Your S&P 500 is full of software bets. My companies own pipelines, power plants, factories and land. These are real tangible assets. Even in the event of hyperinflation or a complete system reset, the value of the infrastructure remains intact.
My conclusion: I am not betting on the next 'next big thing', but on the basic needs of humanity. People will always eat, drink, be insured and defend themselves.
Good luck with your strategy - I'll stick with the companies that keep the world running! 😉
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You may not be an S&P500 bot, but you still get your posts written by some. 😅
Which AI wrote this post?
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@TotallyLost Just ask your S&P500
The biggest risk when investing is yourself
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@Musikerie In any case, I had to pay dearly for that last year
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Sophisticated professional.
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@DerMartin I'm just learning 😅
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I don't want to dispute your plan, but with the 24 individual positions and the position sizes of 1-30€ you will neither notice the cash flow nor a possible doubling of the price in the portfolio...

Even your largest dividend ETF position ~€100 will hardly be noticeable 🤷🏻‍♂️

I don't know if you have savings plans on everything, but if not, the trading costs will completely eat up the little that comes out of it...

I'd urgently look for a different approach and concentrate on one thing first, otherwise you'll still be pedaling around in 30 years and you'll hardly have made any progress.

That doesn't mean you should throw your approach overboard, but instead simply take a different approach.
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@SAUgut777 thank you in any case for this advice i am definitely aware of this. I am not yet 100% where I want to be in my portfolio, what I definitely have is a structure and a system that I can build up now and don't have to redo next week.

The same goes for the capital, which is still being restructured.

I have found my line, which was very chaotic before and I want to stick to it now
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@OlafTheSnowman As I said, I don't mean any offense, but it will be a rocky road and you will probably reflect at some point and get annoyed that you're not really getting anywhere.

I don't know how high your savings rate is, but a small suggestion from me would be to start by building up certain positions one by one.

This doesn't mean selling everything you have so far, because then you will usually pay order fees and that would be counterproductive for the return.

But you first set a sum X for each value as the first maximum value of your investment sum for this value and build up the value accordingly. Once you have reached your sum, you move on to the next value etc.... just don't want to build up an infinite number of values at the same time and if opportunities arise in existing values, then you make targeted purchases and gradually increase the maximum investment sum....

...that's how I do it, for example, and I'm actually doing very well with it, you can take a look...

...also focus on healthy cash flow/dividends, sometimes also high-yield dividends to optimize the savings rate, otherwise often value stocks with healthy dividends.

Pure growth stocks have also been rarer for me so far, but are now to be increasingly mixed in, but always according to the same investment principles described above.

As I said, you shouldn't throw your plan overboard straight away, but perhaps just take a more structured approach instead... wish you every success 😉
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@SAUgut777 In any case, very good tips that I am very happy to take to heart. Personally, I have built a "good" structure for gradually increasing my capital. What I can say, however, is that I don't work with savings rates but savings quotas. As I don't like to commit myself fully in this area.

Thanks anyway and good luck to you too
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@OlafTheSnowman What can I say, I have set myself a basic sum, which is increased by exactly this amount depending on the dividends, and if things don't work out, then the monthly contribution is sometimes smaller, but basically I stick to the fixed sum.

Be that as it may, you will go your own way, continue to learn and I am pleased if I have been able to help you.
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the poles are melting. in 20/30 years only the carrot will be left of olaf the snowman
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@1Chrischi1 Nice try with the pun! ⛄ But while you're making fun of my name, I've built my portfolio to deliver cash even when the carrot is floating in the water. 🥕🌊
Here's the reality for the 'snowman haters':
1. NextEra Energy: You're talking about the meltdown? I'm investing in the solution. NEE is the world leader in wind and solar energy. The more the world needs to decarbonize, the more my portfolio earns. While you moan, I sell the world green electricity. ⚡
2 Allianz & Munich Re: You think the meltdown is killing insurance companies? Wrong. Climate change means higher risk. Higher risk means higher premiums. Allianz has been an expert in pricing catastrophes for 100+ years. More weather chaos = more demand for cover. The 'carrot' is insured, friends! 📝
3 Lockheed Martin: Melting poles mean new trade routes in the Arctic and new geopolitical tensions. Who secures these routes and builds the satellites for weather monitoring? That's right, Lockheed. Security becomes the most valuable commodity in an unstable world. 🛰️
4 PepsiCo: Even if it gets warmer - we will always eat and drink. Pepsi is investing billions in regenerative agriculture to make its supply chains weatherproof.
Conclusion: You can laugh at Olaf the snowman, but my cash flow is made of concrete. While you watch your 'shares of hope' melt away, I sit in my air-conditioned fortress and collect the dividends.
Maybe in the end, all that will really be left is the carrot - but it will be mine and I will sell it to you at a high price! 😉🚀
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@OlafTheSnowman hehe 😁
don't want to attack you either. have a look at my portfolio 😉
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@1Chrischi1 Neither do I. We are all different and we all think differently. I've tried and tried a lot in my life but I've now arrived at the point where I don't want to impose my strategy or my thinking on anyone - accept my path and move on or be inspired and stay. I like to look at your portfolio.
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@1Chrischi1 I find your portfolio very inspiring. Taking your wife's debt as an asset is also a great investment 😅
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@OlafTheSnowman yes i wanted to display it differently but somehow it doesn't work. that's why it just stays that way now - it doesn't matter because it only appears in aggregated and not in the share portfolio itself 😉

but what I was getting at is that our portfolios have some overlaps 😘
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@1Chrischi1 Yes, I could see that. What exactly are you aiming for? Cash flow or the world?
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@OlafTheSnowman a mix of growth and dividends.
for the last 5 years, my real cash flow has been the 100-hour week.
monday-monday.
self-employed dog trainer, part owner of a club, bartender for events, paid for an apartment and built a few more things (conservatory, solar for water, pv system for electricity.
i'm 37 - by the time i'm 45 i'll be sitting on bali and enjoying life with my wife and dog if things continue to go so fantastically 🤞
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@1Chrischi1 wow Mega congratulations that you have this opportunity I am unfortunately not yet at this level but that is also the standard I would very much like to reach. Maybe a bit late at 29, but the will is there.
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Does the term recency bias mean anything to you? To me it looks a bit like you have picked the sectors that have performed well recently and are now going to continue to do so for the next 30 years. Wouldn't you then fall into the category of tech disciples because they trade in a similar way?
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@U1F34E you might think, but let's take Next Era and Enbridge. Will you stop using electricity tomorrow or in 10 years' time? If we look at the energy sector alone, there are companies behind the ongoing infrastructure that are and will remain relevant for years. To get the comparison to tech, Nokia and Yahoo are a good example. We need energy, security, food and insurance today and in 10 years' time.
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You can sell the last sentence in point 4 to Degussa as an advertising slogan. 🧐
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@Dividenden-Penner I'll throw the profit into gold 🤣
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Good luck as success is only based on substance.
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@ZeissJessy Correctly recognized. That's exactly why I invest in infrastructure, energy and security instead of hype. Thanks for the confirmation! 🤝
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I don't disagree, but didn't you some months ago say, all in ETFs?
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@Stag1440 Good memory! And yes, ETFs are a great starting point. But those who stand still lose out.

1. Evolution instead of stagnation: Just because I once learned to ride a bike with training wheels (ETFs) doesn't mean I can't eventually ride a motorcycle (individual stock cash flow). You learn, you understand the markets better, and you adapt your strategy to your goals.

2. From saving to owning: ETFs are great for building wealth. But now I'm building an income system. I won't just be "participating" in the market; I'll own the companies that keep the world running (energy, defense, staples).

3. Personal goals: My goal has become clearer: maximum, stable cash flow. A standard ETF doesn't deliver that with this level of precision.

Those who never question or adapt their strategy will be overtaken by the market. I've evolved – my cash flow fortress is the result of this evolution. 😉🚀
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Unfortunately, I have to agree with @SAUgut777 that your contribution stands in stark contrast to your portfolio... Target weightings or not, you need volume for these theses.
With positions in the range of up to €100 on so many positions, you need a lot of patience.
Or a lot of capital for re-buttering.
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An unusual approach, but it is an approach. Better than just randomly buying something together. I wish you every success.

However, I do think that you can make more than 7% with ETFs over 40 years. If you make 7% p.a., that would be more realistic and then, with an investment horizon of 40 years, the compound interest effect adds up to quite a lot.
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According to statistics, only the top 4% of stocks provide a return of 7- 8% in the long term. i.e. if you don't have these 4% in your portfolio, you will underperform either way.
If you were thinking purely rationally, you would be better off with an ETF in the end.
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Congratulations! What are your experience in the stock market? What is your current result over 20 years?
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You had 187 euros in your portfolio a year ago and now you have 360 euros. It's better to focus on earning money, because that's where the much greater leverage lies than in your investment selection.
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You want to beat market but you also want monthly dividends. In which world paying 25% tax on returns a sound solution to maximizing your CAGR ?
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Microportfolio. Do you set up a saving plan? I do drip and reinvest all dividends. After a year and half it start to fruit. Providing stable fund for strategic investments.
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Thanks for the article. I joined $MAIN. Hope it develops and distributes diligently.
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😂😂😂
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Isn't that rather the epitome of current trends or hype values? With all due respect, passive global ETFs are ideal precisely because they simply reflect the current zeitgeist and are always up to date. No stress, no bad investments. Simply blunt and mindless investing in the highest current market capitalization. 🤔
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Exciting perspective with the "real assets". Infrastructure, energy and defense are definitely fundamental building blocks of the global economy - without electricity, networks and security, no digital economy can function.

I see the whole thing more as an interplay between different levels of value creation. That's why I try to build my portfolio along several structural drivers:

1. digital infrastructure & scaling
AI, semiconductors and software (e.g. ASML, digitalization and AI ETFs, Atoss). These areas have been driving productivity and scaling for decades.

2. real assets & geopolitical reality
Defense and infrastructure, because countries have to invest here in the long term - regardless of the economic cycle.

3. demographics & structural demand
Health and emerging markets such as India, which generate long-term growth from population and prosperity dynamics.

For me, it is therefore less about "tech vs. real assets" and more about the question:
What structural forces will shape the next 20-30 years - and how do you map them together in the portfolio?

In the end, these worlds are connected anyway: Without chips, no energy grids; without energy, no AI; without security, no infrastrur
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Guys, thanks for the passionate debate! 😂 But seriously, let's put this into perspective:

The depot you see here represents just about 2.5% of my total capital. It's my strategic laboratory where I test the architecture for the future.

Anyone who seriously believes that you can evaluate a system without knowing the remaining 97.5% of the asset allocation should perhaps read the chapter on "Holistic strategy" again. 😉

I am building the foundation here - the substance for the big picture lies elsewhere. Have fun optimizing your 100% share portfolios! ⛄🏰
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