Some of these Reddit people really do get it
(media.greatawakening.win)
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I cannot get over my self doubt about the Wall Street situation no matter how many GME tendies I have. I'm a XXX hodler, so I'm fairly deep in. I never worry about the long term safety of my money because I see what Ryan Cohen and his team are doing to revolutionize and modernize Game Stop, and I really do see it becoming as big as Amazon in the future.
Quite a few of the financial "experts" were arguing back and forth on the MSM that Game Stop is only worth $10 - $20. I can't recall who set them straight, but they basically said that when you give a guy like Ryan Cohen over $6 Billion dollars in capital to work with, they can take a company like Game Stop trading at $10 and turn it into a company worth easily $1000 or more.
Too many of the "experts" didn't realize that the game has changed, literally and figuratively. Retail investors are realizing that they have the power to revitalize brands that they like and enjoy with an investment in some tendies, and a group of leaders willing to step in and take the helm of the company in the right direction.
But yeah... its really unreal. I am reasonably well off right now. I have a good job that pays well. Nothing over five figures though. I never want for food, shelter, or spare cash for my hobbies, but then again I am single, no wife or kids to worry about taking care of. I've realized I am living like a gold fish in a bowl. I've purposefully kept my spending to a minimum, and live a minimalistic lifestyle. I don't have a fancy truck, or a boat, or an extravagant house, etc. I've never even seen my bank account or investment portfolios grow to six digits. I'm still in my 30s, so I guess I have to count my blessings that I don't have a mortgage, credit cards, or student loan debt to pay off. I'm blessed that I have enough money on hand to yolo into GME.
I'm still in that twilight zone of disbelief. Like... can this really happen? Can I really become a millionaire in my 30s by simply hodling some GME tendies? Unreal man...
It's very unreal indeed. I grew up poor. My entire family is poor, however always very hard workers. Moved to the city and busted my ass to get a good paying job. It's plenty of income for me, but it will never be enough to help my family in a great way. Always dreamed of buying up 50+ acres with killer privacy and hunting, and build my entire family their own houses on it and paying for it all. But heck... if MOASS pans out well, I sure am buying hell of a lot more than 50 acres. =)
Please tell me those hobbies include an ever expanding arsenal of boomschticks and bullets, cause you are about 80% of the way to making me extremely jealous.
i have like 1.5 shares of gme haha. 30 shares of tesla, hundreds of shares in undervalued companies that dropped to half their values (but long term any decent company will increase as much as any) 33 of amc, few hundred ounces of silver, and a few ounces of gold.
I'm retarded crayon eating Ape. I will be quite honest, I probably did what many financial "experts" would consider a stupid move yoloing this kind of money at GME. I had a "go big or go home" moment back in March where I decided to take a leap of faith. We'll see if it pays off or not. If anything else, I can rest assured that I can at least get my initial investment back with a bit of growth the way Ryan Cohen is steering Game Stop.
:)
It's NOT too late. Tickets are only $220 each as of this morning.
I bought my first handful of shares back in February. Whenever I can, I read the reports, the "DD" Due Diligence, and follow the Reddit boards as a lurker. I've been buying the dips as funds become available.
If you have a 401K fund manager, most of them offer brokerage accounts. You could open a new cash account or possibly draw a small amount from your retirement account just to get your foot in the door. Do not use a "margin" account, they can loan your real shares out to the hedge funds.
Nothing is guaranteed, so DO NOT invest money that you can't afford to lose if something goes wrong.
This is NOT financial advice, I'm an idiot.
Not financial advice...
But yeah, I'd still buy in today if I had no shares.