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Use This Strategy to “De-Risk” Your Portfolio

Use This Strategy to “De-Risk” Your Portfolio

When most people buy stocks, they find cheap ones and wonder why their trades don't work.

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Your Top-Down Approach to Investing for Long-Term Success

Your Top-Down Approach to Investing for Long-Term Success

The stock market is no place for amateurs.

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Avoid Stupid Decisions—Set It and Forget It

Avoid Stupid Decisions—Set It and Forget It

As you approach retirement, the pressure to create a strong portfolio that will support you during your golden years can be overwhelming.

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How to Survive the Las Vegas Money Pit

How to Survive the Las Vegas Money Pit

I just got back from Las Vegas, so this seems like a fine time to talk about personal finance when you vacation there… because when you are in Vegas, you are hemorrhaging money.

Las Vegas is one of the most expensive places in the United States, right behind cities like San Francisco and New York. Everything’s more expensive in Vegas: gambling, shopping, dining, entertainment, nightlife, you name it.

I'll give you a quick example. I was in Caesars Palace in the cigar lounge, and I picked out a Padrón, which is a nice cigar. It was $56. That same cigar in the lounge in Pawleys Island where I live is $26. That's Vegas, man.

Gambling, though… that’s where you can lose a ton of money in seconds.

After I landed, I went to the sports book and started betting on the Yankees. They were playing the Twins, so I think the Yankees were favored -140. I put a hundred dollars on the Yankees, and they go down 9–0 in the first inning.

It was like setting a hundred dollars on fire. And that was just the start of my gambling for the weekend.

So, what role does gambling play in personal finance? Are you allowed to gamble if you want to lead a stress-free financial life?

“The ‘Go-To’ Investor Conference of the Year”: SIC 2023

Every year, Mauldin Economics receives hundreds of emails raving about the expert faculty and quality content at the Strategic Investment Conference. One attendee even graciously called the SIC “the ‘go-to’ investor conference of the year.”

With the markets so volatile this year, John Mauldin has tapped his famous rolodex and called in favors to make this the best conference in the conference's 19-year history.

Over 1,000 attendees have already reserved their virtual pass for this year’s SIC. Please join John's expert faculty (including Jared Dillian) as they show investors how to navigate market risks and uncover the biggest opportunities ahead.

Click Here to Reserve Your Virtual Pass to SIC 2023
Before We Start on Monday!

(From our partners.)


My Rule of Thumb

You can gamble, but it must be a small amount of your money. My rule of thumb is that it should be 0.1% of your income.

If you make $100K a year, you can gamble $100 a year—and that's it. If you make $1 million a year, you can gamble $1,000 a year.

Now, these are incredibly small sums of money, and most people would disagree with this approach. But that's basically what I do. I’m not a big gambler, and that's the rule I follow. You can observe it or not.

Plus, I’m building a house. I don’t want to lose a couple grand playing craps and blackjack. 

The key takeaway is that you should view gambling as an entertainment expense. Not a way to get rich. It's like going to the movies or a concert. It's an entertainment expense.

Don't look at it as a way to make money.

The Materialism of Vegas

Of course, one way to survive Vegas is to avoid Vegas. There are a lot of cheaper places to go on vacation. You can go camping for 18 bucks a night at a campground, for instance.

But I love Vegas. I love the materialism of it. The nightclubs, the (window) shopping at the Tom Ford store, etc. You also see a lot of wild stuff there that you’re not going to experience in a tent.

Just don’t gamble away your life savings if you go.

On a personal note, my book, Those Bastards: 69 Essays on Life, Creativity, & Meaning, has been out for about three weeks. It's doing great. Sold a lot of copies so far.

I am going to be doing a book signing in New York City on Wednesday, May 3 at a bar called Irregulars on the Upper East Side. I hope you can make it.

If you bought the book and enjoyed it, please leave a review on Amazon. The reviews really help.

Jared Dillian
Jared Dillian

 

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  1. How Do I Start Investing? FREE Course: The thought of learning how to invest can seem intimidating. But it doesn’t have to be.

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  1. Jared Dillian’s Strategic Portfolio: Get access to Jared’s stress-free portfolio with this monthly newsletter.

    Timely, actionable investment ideas on exchange-traded funds that can help you mitigate volatility and build a resilient and profitable core portfolio, protecting you in bad times while prospering in good times. Yearly subscriptions available.

  1. The Daily Dirtnap: Jared’s macro newsletter for investing professionals. This daily letter takes a top-down approach, looking at the various asset classes, including stocks, bonds, currencies, and commodities. Join over 4,000 readers who read his market insights every weekday.

  1. Street Freak: As the most active of Jared’s portfolio products, Street Freak is an aggressive stock-picking newsletter. It’s written for astute investors who crave creative, fresh macro analysis and forward-looking trade ideas so they can invest more opportunistically, without much hand-holding along the way.

    Adjusted for risk, of course. But this is not for the faint of heart. Jared and his readers are trying to make a lot of money here.

 
An Emergency Fund Will Save You

An Emergency Fund Will Save You

Seems like every time I turn around, I need to pay to fix something. These unforeseen expenses… we have no choice but to pay ’em.

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