Wednesday, August 18, 2021

Trading Update III

Sold some VPU @ 150.39 to buy VZ @ 55.98.

New IRA asset allocation:


Lured by Verizon's 4.5% dividend that seems reasonably safe, or as safe as an illusion of prosperity blogger could reasonably hope to expect. Safe is relative in a -0.27% 30-year TIPS world, of course.

Once again, not investment advice.

6 comments:

Mr Slippery said...

Welcome to the party, pal. I also own VZ. I bought it before my current dividend achiever screening criteria, not sure it would have passed or not.

Market feels like it is rolling over, but I am less concerned about draw downs than I used to be. Would I rather be getting a 4.5% yield from a bond, yes, but these are the next best things.

Stagflationary Mark said...

Welcome to the party, pal.

By the time they figure out what went wrong, we’ll be sitting on a beach, earning 20 percent (minus 15.5 percent).

Yields died hard.

Anonymous said...

I still remember when I thought GM's dividend was reasonably safe.

Stagflationary Mark said...

I thought my stock options as a game developer seemed reasonably safe. That was before I found out that the CEO was committing fraud.

https://www.cnbc.com/2007/01/17/excendant-chairman-sentenced-ordered-to-pay-33-billion.html

Ex-Cendant Chairman Sentenced, Ordered to Pay $3.3 Billion

Later, precious metals seemed reasonably safe. That was before I found out that CEO was committing fraud too.

https://www.justice.gov/usao-wdwa/pr/former-president-and-ceo-now-bankrupt-precious-metals-firm-convicted-mail-and-wire

DOJ: Former President and CEO of now bankrupt precious metals firm convicted of mail and wire fraud for Ponzi-type scheme

Defrauded more than 2500 customers of $25 million


In 2004, I bought precious metals there. Sat in his office and we had a fairly long conversation. They were very slow delivering the metals and returning my phone calls. Made me so nervous that I drove down multiple times just to make sure they were still in business.

In 2006, sold the metals back to them. Dodged a bullet.

They say there is safety in numbers. Doesn’t seem to apply to the numbers 2500, $25 million, and $3.3 billion though. Go figure.

Mr Slippery said...

"vires in numeris" is the tagline for bitcoin. Strength in numbers.

Bitcoins are literally numbers. Long hex numbers. Why people are paying $50,000 for hex numbers baffles me, but as long as enough other people want to pay for hex numbers, the game will continue.

A related side note. I was browsing the local library (an underutilized resource) last week and counted the bound volumes of federal laws on banking (CFR). 9 hardbound books worth of laws and regulations. If bitcoin was governed by 9 books of federal laws, I might be more interested.

Stagflationary Mark said...

Two camps:

1. Seems like a new bitcoin age.
2. Seems a bit like new age coin.

I’m in the second camp. I will never willingly own bitcoin.

At what point do the late night psychic bitcoin infomercials appear? Picturing a witchcraft theme, with plenty of hexes. If you can’t trust a new age bitcoin witch to predict the future of bitcoin, then who can you trust?