I feel like our window of opportunity to really capitalize is now. That being said what are you looking at to flourish in the Golden Age?
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (28)
sorted by:
I recently inherited stock from a sibling who died with no heirs.
Apparently she had stock invested in quite a few companies from across the spectrum.
I received a lot of mail to vote for each companies Board of Directors . So I had to do my homework on what each company did and who they were requesting I voted for. Anyone who was a member of the world economic forum got a vote of no from me. In some cases I was given up to 3 votes i believe is based on the number of shares I hold? But not sure. The majority of them were one vote only.
I voted the opposite way down the list for everything in Google, Goldman Sachs and a few other woke groups I inherited. Since I inherited the stock in Jan it took a dive in general so I may wait and see what it does.
Since I do not have a clue how to follow stock buy it or trade it I’m on a learning curve. I may decide to sell it and cash it all in at some point.
You could sell and put it in an index fund,if you dont know the companies, or just trust your sibling....
If you are unsure and want to get out, check out Kirk Elliott Precious Metals. They are Christian based business and can help you convert what you inherited into something less volatile that has more future potential.
3 votes from the same brokerage?
Its usually based on accounts you have.
acct 1 with fidelity with 500 shares: 1 vote acct 2 with fidelity with 4 shares: 1 vote
acct 3 with computershare with 400 shares: 1 vote acct 4 with 30 shares: 1 vote acct 5 with 6000 shares: 1 vote.
So you get 5 "votes" but you are actually voting 6,934 times for your 6934 shares.