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Ryan Foote
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Ryan Foote
@RyanFoote_
Travelling 2026 🌏 Long Term investing | Building wealth for freedom | Helping you get you’re first £100K invested
Katılım Ocak 2016
201 Takip Edilen247 Takipçiler
Ryan Foote retweetledi

@fReshhhh26 @GrindeOptions I guess that’s where we disagree. Both will win however I think $AMD will preform stronger from a stock POV. Time will tell
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@RyanFoote_ @GrindeOptions You got one problem, amd wont be gaining market share from nvidia ever. They dont have AI ecosystem around chips like nvidia has. The overall market will be much much smaller for amd and your expectation that they will magically take marketshare from leader and innovator is 😂😂
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Do you think that the likes of $ELF, $RVLV and $CELH will continue to be forgotten about whilst the talk of the town is around AI / Tech and the infrastructure that’s being built?
Once this cycle / narrative changes and big investors start selling the popular names, they will move more into consumer brands such as $ELF etc?
Or do you think these three companies will rise naturally just based on beating numbers and guidance, even in the current market focused on AI?
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Which of these stocks go up the most between now and year end?
Jeremy Lefebvre@HolySmokas
$3.903 million dollars. What do you like vs dont
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It’s interesting watching the narrative with the stock market and certain ‘hot’ stocks that become popular.
In the case of $TSLA I feel like lots of retail investors have fallen out of love with the name.
It will be interesting to see this narrative change in the next 1-2 years as they ramp up Robotaxi & FSD subscriptions, along with energy and Optimus.
I truly belive the patient investors will be rewarded but I guess time will tell.
Which stock did you stay with even when it fell out of popularity?

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@IndexAndForget Yeah man, having a solid ‘safe’ bet as your main capital can make sense, but definitely worth having some smaller part to have the opportunity to explode higher
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@RyanFoote_ I get what you mean maybe not too much exposure but at least keep it there just in case
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@IndexAndForget That’s fair enough. I’ve also lost money in the past and it’s set me back.
However I’d always have at least 25% in individual stocks, because all you need is 1 to do super well and it will completely change your portfolio.
It’s risky to not have a ‘risky basket’ IMO
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@RyanFoote_ I like safety im in $QQQ
Im done with risk after crypto
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@RyanFoote_ Free means you can work remote and have at least 3k/mo ressources with your online business
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@A_Vautrelle I generally agree, but does free mean like never have to work again? Or like a buffer for 5-10 years of expense and just head off to travel?
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@RyanFoote_ Lock in and get free, then travel for as much as you want
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I’m still heavy on individual stocks rather than S&P 500. I’m still young, I take more risks!
Polymarket@Polymarket
BREAKING: The S&P 500 has officially posted its best month since 2020.
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@UKsterlings Depends on your risk tolerance, expectations and ambitions etc. It might make sense to go 50% in index funds and 50% in a few individual stocks (assuming you’ve done research or feel you have an edge the market isn’t pricing in yet).
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@cryptog65230648 @2147mill $TSLA & $AMD it’s been a long wait on Tesla but I’m confident the next 5-10 years will be huge for the company
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Although I think it’s smart to own individual stocks and index’s, to say it’s just luck that makes your picks go well is far from true.
If you can spot trends and are willing to be patient, if a company grows top line and bottom line, over time the stock will follow in the upwards trajectory.
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Let me be honest about stock picking.
It can work.
But only if:
→ You get lucky on your picks
→ You can sit on your hands during 40-50% drawdowns
→ You have the discipline to never panic sell
→ You’re right consistently over decades
Most people have none of those things.
Meanwhile:
A simple index fund:
→ Zero stock research required
→ Historically beats 85% of active fund managers
→ Never requires you to be right about a single company
→ Just needs time and patience
The stock picker needs luck AND discipline.
The index investor just needs discipline.
Removing luck from the equation is the whole point.
Are you making investing harder than it needs to be?
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