Melissa Money Meyer
1.4K posts

Melissa Money Meyer
@M3FaithWealth
Retired financial advisor & author. blending faith & finance, Mensa member, metal detecting enthusiast.📚 Helping your money work as hard as you did! 🙌
Katılım Ocak 2018
261 Takip Edilen1.2K Takipçiler

@long_lr @nobleisawinner I wish I could like this more than once.
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@nobleisawinner You should consider yourself fortunate that I don’t reside in your area.I would assemble a landscaping team known as the Banana Hammock Mowing Crew. We’d take it upon ourselves to offer free lawn care services throughout the neighborhood. Our crew would be called the Manscapers!
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@draati3 The couple went for the picnic. All the rest were just details about the family the couple had, but they didn’t say that their kids went with them, not to mention the in laws or grandchildren.
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Melissa Money Meyer retweetledi


@EricLDaugh I wonder if she feels ripped from bow to stern right now?
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What Is a Santa Rally (and Why You Can’t Depend on It)
You’ll hear people talk about a “Santa rally” this time of year — the idea that the stock market often rises in the last days of December and early January.
Sometimes it happens.
Sometimes it doesn’t.
And it’s never something you can plan your financial future around.
Here’s the part that matters more than the definition.
Markets — whether they’re going up or down — are driven far more by human emotion than by logic.
When people see the market rising, most don’t really understand why.
They see green numbers… and some get a little greedy and jump in.
When people see the market falling, fear takes over — fast.
They sell not because they’ve analyzed fundamentals, but because fear is biological.
Fight or flight.
You can’t fight the market.
So people flee it.
That’s why market drops are often fast and violent, while market gains tend to be slower and longer.
Fear is a stronger, quicker driver than greed.
So if there is a Santa rally this year, enjoy it — but don’t chase it.
And if there isn’t one, don’t panic.
Long-term investing isn’t about seasonal patterns.
It’s about discipline when emotions are loud — and patience when nothing exciting is happening.

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