The stock market feels detached from reality right now—stocks are soaring, but the foundations are cracking. Between a weakening job market, rising inflation, and record-breaking government debt, the signs of structural risk are everywhere, yet most investors are ignoring the biggest threat: valuations. I’ve learned the hard way that hype and emotion are dangerous traps, and that’s why I stick to principle-driven investing—buying great companies at great prices, no matter what the headlines scream. When you truly understand value, the chaos doesn’t shake you—it excites you, because that’s where real opportunity begins.
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I have to be honest I don’t know how I can follow you in this channel. I mean one day you’re saying by these stocks in the next day you’re doing stuff like this I mean I give up.
Everyone in the comments listens to most of what you say and decides to ignore all the disclaimers or what Paul actually does with his money. Get a grip folks😂
since u never know what stocks are gonna do, why not put a small amount across 40 or so large cap companies that have performed well over the last 5 years, and only put money in small increments into them if they go up over time. seems hard to lose money that way. its not dca, because u dont know when/if they will go back up if they go down, only put more in if they continue to go up.
We actually are in a bear market if you haven't noticed yet. We got several stocks that is profitable but is still undervalued (paypal). And there is no extreme overvaluation if you exclude extremes like palantir. So in reality the market is pretty bearish.
I bought Nvidia around a 45-50 PE back in 2021. If I had waited for Nvidia to be a cheap stock I would have never bought it. As long as you buy a growing company, one that grows 10 percent plus (preferably 20)every year, that in my mind is the best way to invest. The entry point is super important but waiting for it to be cheap may never happen.
Short quantums everyday
You have to listen to people who you don't agree with. "Everything Money" style bakes in safety and risk management in investing. Although I have not agreed with many things they say in the last 2 years does not mean they will not be right in the next 2 years. Valuations do matter.
Labour market suffers, fed to the rescue?
Based on watching your well detailed videos for a few months now, and similar videos of other value investors, I have recently bought stock of Paypal, Lululemon, Adobe and Nokia, as companies with relatively low P/E combined with relatively good financial health. Touchwood some of these may make a good return in the next few years.
Paul, I respect your discipline but if you have to go back 50 years plus to get fair value then the value is truly higher than the old metrics. The economy is so much greater than in the 20s or 70s. The market is overvalued but not 140%