Gene left his money to WCDF for 3-moves QT's which run once in 2 years. Interest from some CD's today are around 3% which gives us in two years - $3,000. This is enough to secure comfortably event as Gene wished.
Alex
NoIngo_Zachos wrote:Now to something completely different:
There will be a commitee to revise the bye-laws.
That's fine.
Was it decided who is on that commitee?
Ingo
Ingo_Zachos wrote:Dear Eric, did yopu ever re-calculated that?
Given an interst rate of 1 percent a year , you will get a gain of 34 percent after 30 years, so the point is that your gain of 11 percent actually gives proof to the fact that stock market investment in the long run does not promise more gains then a normal interest rate, but rather much lower gains.
Just use your pocket calculator and you will see that even with an interest rate of 0,4 percent (a normal bank account in Germany has more then that) you get a 12,7 percent gain and that beats the stock market in a 30 year perspective.
It is that easy to show that stock market investment does not pay out in the long run, unless you are interested in other goals like the control over a certain company.
It is like a poker game:
The gains are limited and distributed by the stock market, but the market does not create gains.
So like in a Poker game some win and some lose, but overall the money that can be gained is limited and equals the money others lost minus the fees you paid.
If you can make money just by stock market investment then why does your agent demand a fee?
She/he should be able to earn her/his living without a fee if they can really beat the market.
They need no bail out.
But in fact she/he and the investment companies make more profits from fees then from their gains on the stock markets.
There can be bubbles, but in the long run and summarized over all "players" the level of gains is even lower then interests on normal saving accounts.
That fact is known for decades.
Don't get fooled by numbers that on the 1st view appear good.
If you use mathematics you can see how poor the performance really is.
Poker is no game that produces millionaires, but also a game in which millions are lost and the casino gets a gain from the fees they collect.
The stock markets distributes shares that give you the rights to receive a certain share of the profits of a company.
Or a certain share of the losses, which is what all seem to forget.
In the end only the profits of the companies determine the growth of the stock markets and that is summarized over all companies, not very much.
Greetinx from cloudy Germany,
Ingo Zachos
Good oneIngo_Zachos wrote:Sune,
I am asthmatic and don't smoke at all.
Ingo
Very funny IngoIngo_Zachos wrote:
But what did you do?
You took an investment chart for real.
Take a closer look:
1.It is not linear, but "semi-log" ie it creates overportortional growth.
The growth is not real or if there is growth it is overestimated.
Look at the distance on the axis and you see that the diffrence from 12.000 to 14.000 is different from that between 2.000 and 4.000 in order to see what that means.
2. Also, the base was cut.
It does not begin with 0, but at least with 500.
To make an example:
If you bought shares worth 10 and you sold them for 12 a year later, you gained 2 points.
That is 2/10*100 = 20 percent
If I bought shares worth 100 and sold it for 102 a year later I also gained 2 points , but my growth rate is ony 2/100*100 = 2 percent, or 10 times less then the growth of your shares.
BUT:
If I cut out 10 in your growth graphic and 100 in mine (the base) and paste them side by side, it seems, graphically, that we had the same growth.
In other words: cutting the base makes lower growth rates look bigger.
3. Did you realize those "supportive lines" creating kind of "tunnels".
What are they good for?
That is very simply: they create an optical illusion as our mind uses this supportive lines to create a trend and that makes the real line, in between the supportive lines look longer and steeper then it really is.
That is a very poor and old, but silly dirty trick of investment bankers that still works after all those years...
At least you fell for it.
So no, I don't smoke and I don't take an investment chart made with the purpose to sell shares to you for real.
It is a marketing trick, manipulated and not for real.
BTW:
Did you realize the small red column under the chart?
They represent the real growth. Do they look impressive?
Certainly not that much as the graphic above , especially as you can see the decline of the recent years in real proportion
This is kept small, not to scare the possible costumer.
Greetinx from cloudy Dortmund,
Ingo