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What's up guys, it's graham here so over the weekend, i've received hundreds, if not thousands, of comments either mentioning or asking me to share my thoughts about meet kevin selling off his entire 20 million dollar portfolio, with the expectation that things are about to get a whole Lot worse over the next few months, now i'm not one for drama, and i really do my best to stay out of heated discussions. But it's hard not to read the comments and see the polarization that his video has caused. People either feel as though he was encouraging them to buy the dip, while he unexpectedly sold everything 48 hours later without warning, or they wholeheartedly agree with this decision and think it's a great choice with a high probability of paying off. So here are my thoughts about his decision to sell everything how and where i'm investing, while the market's continuing to drop and several of the issues that i see in today's market that are worth addressing, because, let's be real during a bull market, everyone is going to Look like a genius, but now is the time that you're going to see who's investing responsibly and by the end of the video you're going to know exactly how to do that.

But before we start, this video is sponsored by the subscribe button which, for the cost of absolutely nothing, gets you three videos a week on personal finance and investing for totally free or if you're, already subscribed, feel free to hit the like button. If you've lost money in the markets like i have today, thank you guys so much now with that said, let's begin alright. So, first, let's jump right into the drama with me: kevin for anyone who's not seen his entire 35 minute long, video i'll link to it down below in the description, but for those that are watching here. I'll summarize his rationalizations, as well as my own thoughts about.

What's going on, he starts this video by comparing today with the events that took place in world war, one when agriculture shortages led to an increase in prices and therefore an increase in debt, as farmers took on more land to increase their profits. However, farmers expanded too much and when demand began to slow down that caused a mass sell-off amongst prices. The great depression in 1929 also saw something similar prior to then speculating on stocks became a hobby, as banks began lending money for the sole purpose of investing, because prices only went up, but that created a problem in that the stock market rally was almost entirely financed By debt, so when price is no longer kept, increasing people began to sell off, causing the price to fall even further, causing banks to then call their loans and causing the entire market to fall into a depression. That's somewhat similar to the 2001.com bubble as well.

This was a time where internet innovation was expected to change the way we interact and do business and, as a result, speculation was everywhere. People were just buying anything they possibly could whether or not they were profitable, because the internet was going to be the future right. Well, that was unsustainable and as internet companies couldn't actually make any money, they ended up collapsing, wiping out most of their value and then finally, we have the 2008 great financial crisis. This happened when banks began lending money to people who are not qualified, who went to go and buy houses, boosting their values to the moon, and then once those people couldn't sustain those payments, they began defaulting.
The banks who issued those loans began defaulting people were losing their homes left and right. The entire market dropped 50 percent in value the fed stepped in to then bail them out, and now that brings us to today as kevin theorizes, our days of cheap money supply chain shortages in a tight labor market are coming to an end. These companies begin to realize that interest rates are about to increase, stimulus is going to wind down, growth is beginning to slow, and things will begin to normalize to where we once were. That means that either our entire economy is going to shrink or it grows much more slowly, but that's just the tip of the iceberg and in terms of the psychology behind his all-or-nothing massive cell.

He says this since the stock market is largely built on expectation. If companies report really great earnings over the coming few weeks, people will rationalize that it's already been priced in and unless the outlook over the next year is strong, they're likely to go lower so sell. On top of that, good earnings would only give the federal reserve more reason to raise rates, which is bad. On the other hand, if companies report weak earnings, people may interpret that as only being the very beginning.

Financials could get so much worse when the fed actually starts raising rates. So because of that, you should also sell. It's also worth mentioning that the personal savings rate in november of 2021 dropped to just 6.9 percent. So that brings the fear that people now have less discretionary income to spend throughout the next year.

Given this, he believes that everyone is looking at the federal reserve for guidance with hopes that they'll either provide support for the markets or take it easy for rate increases. So as not to cause everyone to panic, but in the meantime, he's taken the approach to sell off his entire 20 million dollar stock and real estate portfolio, with the expectation that he'll be able to buy in at a lower price over the next 60 days. So as to profit, the difference, this of course caused quite the controversy, because most of us preach the strategy of buy and hold and don't time the market with this being well pretty much the exact opposite. Quite literally, this is the epitome of what every single highly respected investor tells you not to do in a way.

I think that his viewers felt misled because his actions changed so quickly and for the longest time he was always an advocate of buying the dip. Now, in reality, what kevin does with his money is his business and he's free to do whatever he wants in theory, it really makes no difference to you if he sells, doubles down, takes on margin or just holds as usual, but in this case it appears as Though a lot of people look at kevin as a leader for their own decisions so when he holds they hold when he buys they buy now. This is not kevin's fault necessarily, but when he places himself in front of so many people, a large enough portion inevitably are going to copy those trades, and with that comes a certain level of trust that you should, in theory, practice what would be in the best Interest of the majority, it's really tough, because on the one hand i agree that he should be able to make whatever trades he wants to when he feels like it. But when you broadcast those trades to hundreds of thousands or sometimes millions of people, it's going to leave a portion of those people feeling as though you've altered their own strategy or if they end up holding they're going against the person who they're listening to personally in Kevin's case i've been quite open throughout a lot of these live streams that, if i were him, i would have sold a long time ago by the time his account grew to 30 million dollars with the rapid appreciation of tesla apple and several other tech companies.
I thought he already won the game, so why take the extra risk he's got low expenses more than enough invested to live comfortably for the rest of his life? He has a high income, and that would be a great time to sell everything, diversify into a slower, growing, safer portfolio of index funds and then play around with 10 percent as a risky fun speculative portfolio that you could just mess around with. From this perspective, purely from a diversification standpoint, i think selling off his highly concentrated portfolio was a good thing only because he was so heavily invested in a few very volatile risky stocks that could either skyrocket to the moon or lose a lot of money up until Recently, i think the risky approach worked quite well, but when you see your account drop from 32 million down to 20 million dollars in a few months, let's be honest with ourselves. That would cause even the best investors to rethink the risk, tolerance strategies and investing to the point where selling is probably the best possible outcome, so in terms of kevin selling. Yes, i do think it was rather abrupt and rather confusing to his viewers who see him as a sound board for simply just buying the dip.

But the issue is that there's so much nuance when it comes to investing that no two people are going to be the same if kevin was all in index funds, for example, and then decided to sell everything, i would say that would be a very foolish decision. That's no different than gambling, but when he has life-changing money, highly concentrated in a few very volatile companies, i do think that it was somewhat smart to rotate out and hopefully invest in a more diversified portfolio of index funds. Even though, probably he's not going to do that at all, we'll see so in terms of what i'm doing about this, here's what you should know. First, let's talk about the market.
As of today, the s p 500 officially enters a correction which marks a 10 decline from the recent peak. The russell 2000, which encompasses small cap companies throughout the us, is also officially now in a bear market with more than a 20 decline from the peak and the tech focused nasdaq is also on track for a bear market with a similar decline. In terms of how common this is a market correction between 10 and 19 percent happens on average of every 16 months plus, if you're anything like media, like averages, the average drop so far has been 15.6 percent and lasts for 71.6 days now. Bear mark it's of 20 or more happen on average every 7 to 10 years, with an average drop of 33 over a period of 363 days now.

Any drops of more than 39, though, are actually pretty rare throughout the entire market. A drop of 40 or more has only happened four times throughout the last 120 years, so even though it's certainly possible - and all of us will probably see one to three drops like this in our lifetime - it's also not that common. All of this is to say that, honestly, what we're seeing in the markets right now is not unique. It's not special and if the market has taught us anything, it's that it happens on a regular basis and every single catalyst is always going to be different.

Second, no one knows what they're talking about and there's no way to give an accurate prediction, even though it's easy to point to a michael bury quote that the mother of all crashes is coming during times like this. We often forget about all the incorrect predictions that people just forget about when they don't come. True, take ray dalio, for example, in 2021 he called for a market crash, calling it a bubble in 2020. He said we're heading for a great depression in 2019.

He said the next crash is coming in 2017. He said the magnitude of the next crash will be epic in 2015. He said it reminds him of the 1937 market crash and that continues same thing applies to michael bury in 2017, he predicted an imminent stock market crash. Then in 2019 he called passive investing a bubble in 2020 at the bottom of the market.

He warned about a selling stampede. It also reminds me of this chart here, going all the way back to 2010, quoting each economist and hedge fund manager is calling the top each and every year, even though a decade later, we're 200 to 400 percent higher, and you would have missed out on quadrupling Your money just waiting around for the right buying opportunity. All of this goes to show that, yes, if you cherry pick data, you could successfully find someone who has correctly predicted when and how the market is going to fall. But to me, that's no different than calling a person, a genius who correctly predicted the right number on the roulette wheel, sure it might happen, and some people have correctly predicted market cycles over time.
But in the big picture consistently getting them right is next to impossible and because of that, here's, what i'm doing. I've acknowledged that i'm terrible at timing, the market and i shouldn't even bother trying. However, i have a slightly different strategy than most and i take on a rather conservative approach when it comes to asset allocation. See two months ago, i posted the breakdown of my entire 22 million dollar portfolio and in there you could see that only 35 of my assets are held in stocks and index funds.

The remaining 40 percent are held throughout residential real estate. 8 is allocated to private startup ventures 5 in cryptocurrency and the remaining 12 in cash over the last 13 years. I've done my best to design a lifestyle where i could keep my living expenses extremely low. My rental properties are either completely paid off and full, or they have relatively low leverage compared to the value of the property.

I've diversified my income, so i have plenty to fall back on and, as a result, market swings like this have absolutely no impact making it very easy to continue buying as usual, as though nothing has happened, even though losing money sucks and seeing my account down two Hundred thousand dollars in a single day is horrifying at the end of the day. I just know that it's a part of investing and as long as i don't need this money over the next 20 years, anything that happens between then is just white noise. The only time i would ever suggest somebody panic is if they're over leveraged, over-invested, overly concentrated and highly volatile or risky assets and cannot afford to hold on to them if they drop even further. Those people might be able to benefit from the risk of selling reallocating to a diversified, safer portfolio, beefing up an emergency fund and then sticking with a long-term portfolio that doesn't put him at risk of losing everything for anyone who wants to get started with long-term.

Investing by the way, i'll put a link down below in the description where you could sign up for public and get a free stock worth all the way up to a thousand dollars. When you use the code, gram they're, not sponsoring this video or anything. But since we're on the topic of stocks and it's free may as well, the link is down below in the description anyway. In terms of what you should do about this, i want to give a shout out to the instagram account personal finance club, who made this graph that really stuck with me.

He analyzed the last 40 years of the s p, 500 and simulated three investing styles tiffany had the worst timing in the world and invested 200 a month in a high interest. Savings account only to invest it all entirely at every single market. Peak right before a crash over 40 years, her 96 000 investment turned into a 663 000 mini fortune. At the same time, we also have brittany who had the best market timing in the world.
She saved her money and invested it all precisely at the bottom of every single crash, even though it would have been virtually impossible to perfectly time the market like she did down to the exact day. Her 96 000 investment turned into a 956 000 amount today, and then we have the slow and steady sarah. All she does is set 200 a month to be automatically invested in the stock market, regardless of where it's trading and guess what, after 40 years, she has 1 million 386 000. That just goes to show you that, with real data and real numbers timing, the market is horribly inefficient and it's the best instead to just invest consistently and then do absolutely nothing.

That's why? Even if we do see a further decline, it's only going to be bad for the people who stop investing and for anyone who continually buys in through the highs and the lows. You'll have the ability to increase your returns a lot as long as you just don't panic, don't sell, subscribe and hit the like button for the youtube algorithm. So with that said, you guys thank you so much for watching also make sure to add me on instagram and to my second channel. The graham stefan show i post there every single day.

I'm not posting here. So if you want to see a brand new video from me every single day, make sure to add yourself to that and then lastly make sure to get that free stock down below in the description. That's worth all the way up to a thousand dollars and you sign up for public using the code graham enjoy. Let me know which talk you get.

Thank you so much for watching and until next time.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

32 thoughts on “Selling everything”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars RMACSPORTCG says:

    How about when you buy a course from him and everything he said to do he didn’t do….smh

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kitz Clav says:

    My sell button not working, but I smashed the like button

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars JB ATL says:

    How do you expect to learn the market following somebody else… Especially somebody that hasn’t been in long enough to under all of it…

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Adams says:

    You know how when you start investing they ask you what your risk tolerance is? On a scale of Kevin to Graham, I definitely find myself leaning more toward Graham. For the same reason I never Yolo'd everything into Tesla. Both smart investors. Both do their research. But no one should go after Kevin thinking he's a Graham. When Kevin sold everything to time the market I rolled my eyes. If Graham sold everything, I'd probably drop my jaw to the floor.

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars OBrien says:

    I liquidated everything last week. It's better to be out of the market wishing you were in, than to be in the aren't wishing you were out.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tyler Compton says:

    Hey graham where do you pull you statistic’s?

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Laurie Kline says:

    Is he nuts. Can you imagine the tax ramifications on this sale.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bruce Alexander Sinclair says:

    Your viewpoint is like someone twice your age. Thank you for the videos!

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Baris Selcen says:

    Hahah it seems like all Kevin’s friends are being pressured more than Kevin to make a video😅

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Team Skovhugger says:

    😂 yes sell … sell everything i will buy it

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joni Sousa-Guthrie says:

    Excellent video Graham. Love the three examples at the end of the video. 💕👍👍

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ken Stock Investment says:

    Kevin hasn’t been the same since he lost the election

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Alain Gutierrez says:

    It would only make sense to sell out of the very high risk cryptos and stocks but for high conviction stocks and cryptos like BTC/ETH it just makes sense to hold and dollar cost average so long as you’re risk managing

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars My Lyfe says:

    Wish I could insert Kevin's meme video where paperhands were falling off the titanic.

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Matt says:

    Can never trust someone that dyes their hair neon colors.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Greg Anthony says:

    I agree Kevin can do what he wants with his money, but I don't think he should be shocked at any backlash. People like it when you practice what you preach. Even if he looses 100% of his subscribers he's going to be OK.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Daniel D says:

    It’s every man for themselves. Come for the info but don’t mimic trades.

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lee Montes says:

    You don’t actually lose money unless you SELL! :).

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Amir Aboud says:

    Graham Kevin and a handful of other “investors” are the least credible people on this website. the only decent content he has is for personal finance a credit card advice that’s basically it

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kirus says:

    Reality: Kevin is cashing in because he's sick of living in PR.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tyler ca says:

    Watched Jeremy’s video and just made the same thing

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Adam Mcgrath says:

    This is why you have the best finance/entertainment channel on YouTube. Meet Kevin lost a lot of respect. You should talk to him because he's commenting back some nasty crap. He's spiraling.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GTM9164 says:

    I believe Kevin said he going to mainly reinvest into 10 high potential small cap growth stock sooo more risky

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars KhalilsLife says:

    Meet Kev is smart lol get out and then put the money back in.

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Song says:

    Maybe Kevin have different personality disorder lol

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Fists of Fury says:

    I’m trying a new strategy this year. I am investing half my paycheck into value stocks and ETFs bi weekly for the entire year. I am keeping my portfolio balanced so when I reinvest so let’s see if “time in the market” pays off.

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Carlos Ortiz says:

    Is anyone gonna say it ….. WARREN BUFFET WAS RIGHT !

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ayanna Grady, MBA says:

    I hope 🤞🏾 things stabilize soon. Thanks for the informative video.

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tommy says:

    It's really Market manipulation what he has done. How many people sold out of the market today just to follow him in what he does. 400.000 people selling today can make a big difference. Whos know how many people.

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lincoln Gaffney says:

    I like to have a market correction list for the few stocks I own that I can't DCA into. Since I can buy SPY, Berkshire Hathaway, and blue chips like Coca Cola and never think about but there are some growth stocks like Netflix, Apple and Microsoft that I do like to buy the dip on

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Zane Miracle says:

    During a bull market, everyone is a genius. During a bear market, everyone is the oracle of Delphi.

    Bull: Should I buy?

    Bear: Should I sell?

    Smart: How can I hedge responsibly?

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ron Yeahright says:

    If you're an investor, you need to stay the course. The market will go up; it will go down. But over the long haul, its up up up. Where you get into trouble is when you're dumb enough to think you're smart enough to "time" the market, by jumping in and out like you're jumping on and off a bus. Plus when you do a big sell off, you're getting tagged with a huge cap gains tax. Stay the course, and if you don't have the stomach for the down turns, you shouldn't be in the market; buy bonds.

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