Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Puts. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Puts Quotes And Sayings by 83 Authors including Bernard Baruch,Walter Schloss,Maxwell Maltz,Benjamin Graham,Thomas W. Lamont for you to enjoy and share.
The stock market is people.
You never really know a stock until you own it.
Do your worrying before you place your bet, not after the wheel stops turning.
The best values today are often found in the stocks that were once hot and have since gone cold.
There has been a little distress selling on the stock exchange.
We bought a doomed textile mill [Berkshire Hathaway] and a California S&L [Wesco] just before a calamity. Both were bought at a discount to liquidation value.
Picking the right stocks is one of the hardest parts of investing, and every night on Mad Money, I try to take some of that burden off your shoulders.
When you're down to small stakes, you have to play long odds.
We upgrade URZ to a Buy; we see an entry opportunity with investors.
Behind every stock is a company. Find out what it's doing.
There are two hedges I know of; one is cash and the other is knowledge.
In the world of money and investing, you must learn to control your emotions.
Buy stocks like you buy your groceries, not like you buy your perfume.
I don't buy stocks, I make stocks.
Looking into it a bit, Jamie found that the model used by Wall Street to price LEAPs, the Black-Scholes option pricing model, made some strange assumptions.
Stocks are the only thing that people are happy to buy when the price goes up.
Invest in stupidity, its stocks never go down.
In rising financial markets, the world is forever new. The bull or optimist has no eyes for past or present, but only for the future, where streams of revenue play in his imagination.
When good news about the market hits the front page of the New York Times, sell.
Sometimes your best investments are the ones you don't make.
Putting is like wisdom - partly a natural gift and partly the accumulation of experience.
When the market is just going up, up, and up, we all tend to be blind to the holes in the market. They're all papered over by the rise.
If you have good stocks and you really know them, you'll make money if you're patient over three years or more.
Each year we buy stocks and they go up, we sell them and then we try to buy something cheaper.
I can never predict what the markets will do. Sometimes it does the exact opposite of what I would have expected.
nine categories of value ideas: Graham-style deep value, Greenblatt-style magic formula, small-cap value, sum-of-the-parts or hidden value, superinvestor favorites, jockey stocks, special situations, equity stubs, and international value investments.
Any time you speak to people about their posture, you learn about their most recent investment activity. When someone just bought stocks, they tend to be bullish; someone who just sold is bearish.
We make a series of investments, some will pan out and some won't.
The broker said the stock was "poised to move." Silly me, I thought he meant up.
First of all I trust my own instinct, experience that I gained over years and feeling when the moment is right for buying shares. That is what one calls intuition.
Be cautious and content with low positive returns in 2015. The time for risk taking has passed,
Patience in Market, is worth Pounds in a year.
We attracted a lot of market timers and asset allocators. I don't need those ... amateurs in my fund.
When its going good, cash in as hard as you can.
A Quantitative Approach to Tactical Asset Allocation.")
Some days I make 20 bets. Some days, I make none ... so I wait, plan, marshal my resources. And when I finally see an opportunity and there is a bet to make, I bet it all,
I am always looking for options that yield something unexpected.
What the investment community does like is short-term measures designed to boost share prices.
Don't gamble; take all your savings and buy some good stock and hold it till it goes up, then sell it. If it don't go up, don't buy it.
Technical Analysis of the Financial Markets,
Buying Gold Is Just Buying A Put Against The Idiocy Of The Political Cycle. It's That Simple!
Do not buy the hype from Wall St. and the press that stocks always go up. There are long periods when stocks do nothing and other investments are better.
The time to worry is before you place the bet - not after the wheel is spinning. Once it spins, you forget about it.
When times are rough and people predict the end of the world, remember that short-term uncertainty provides to the keen investor many long-term opportunities
Make sure you have the courage to stay true to your convictions and not let the market affect your emotions.
Be extra careful when buying into companies and industries that are the current darlings of the financial community ...
Short on money, long on hope
When stock prices are rising, it's called "momentum investing"; when they are falling, it's called "panic".
"Now you can trade the S&P 500 Index in real time" was the slogan in the newspapers for the first ETF. What kind of nut would do that?
The very first day, we said, 'There's going to come a time when we're going to make a fortune shorting this stuff. It's going to blow up. We just don't know how or when.
Yeah, I like to gamble.
What's hot today isn't likely to be hot tomorrow. The stock market reverts to fundamental returns over the long run. Don't follow the herd.
Invest at the point of maximum pessimism.
Market like the year you are in.
Everybody thinks that they're going to time the market, they're going to sharpshoot the market, and buy right at the bottom. The truth of the matter is that nobody is good at it.
Keep your money in your pocket. Or bet it on a good horse.
Choosing individual stocks without any idea of what you're looking for is like running through a dynamite factory with a burning match. You may live, but you're still an idiot.
Markets go up. Markets go down. We always make money ... Get used to it
Too many people say to their brokers, I can't deal with this. Take my money. Do what you want. That's the worst attitude you can have.
The whole secret to winning big in the stock market is not to be right all the time, but to lose the least amount possible when you're wrong.
It's about pressing palms, bro. Getting the funds under management. Money into the market. After that, the shit's on autopilot.
The media and marketing deluge has spawned a new type of Wall Street loser: the armchair momentum player. These are novice investors who engage in short-term stock buying and selling based on media reports or an expert's enthusiasm.
Buy into a company because you want to own it, not because you want the stock to go up.
Buy when most people, including experts, are pessimistic, and sell when they are actively optimistic,
Markets love volatility.
If you diversify, control your risk, and go with the trend, it just has to work.
When you gamble with your time, you may be placing a bet you can't cover.
You know what term you don't hear anymore? Arbitrage. The markets have gotten too efficient.
There are no 'holds.' Everyday you're either willing to buy more at the current price, or, if you aren't, you should redeploy the capital to something you believe does deserve incremental capital.
have gambled and stalled.
What I'm saying is that there are bargains right now, there are stocks right now that if you're shrewd enough, you will be able to buy them at the opening today and I you'll make money in a year from now.
If you can't sleep at night because of your stock market position, then you have gone too far. If this is the case, then sell your position down to the sleeping level.
You're looking for a mispriced gamble. That's what investing is. And you have to know enough to know whether the gamble is mispriced. That's value investing.
If you must invest in paper, learn to be an options trader. Then you will know how to make money whether the markets are going up or down.
I want attractive stocks that will benefit from persistent institutional buying pressure.
Having different types of stocks in your portfolio can enhance returns.
If the stock goes down we want to buy more.
Pressure is trying to make a putt for a $10 bet with only $5 in your pocket.
Have you ever heard of the law of large numbers? If you carry on betting large sums day after day, then sooner or later you are bound to win everything back. As far
Investing is like waiting for paint dry and grass grow so. If you like fun, let handle 800 USD and headed to Las Vegas
There is nothing wrong with a big bet, if a big bet is a good bet.
We are facing extreme volatility.
I never bought a stock in my life. I don't understand it. To me it is like Chinese.
I'm primarily just an investor.
The wisest rule in investment is: when others are selling, buy. When others are buying, sell. Usually, of course, we do the opposite. When everyone else is buying, we assume they know something we don't, so we buy. Then people start selling, panic sets in, and we sell too.
This year I invested in pumpkins. They've been going up the whole month of October and I got a feeling they're going to peak right around January. Then bang! That's when I'll cash in.
When even the analysts are bored, it's time to start buying.
The philosophy to 'buy and hold' is a philosophy that I use to manage funds.
Invest in inflation. It is the only thing going up.
Every once in a while, the market does something so stupid it takes your breath away
You have to understand what market history looks like. What market history tells you is that the very, very best investments are made when things look the worst.
That is, many times we're not risking our own money, we're risking somebody else's money, or maybe that someone is going to back stop or downside, but we still get the upside.
First check whether the market as a whole is rising or falling. In other words, are you in a bull market or bear market? If the latter, stay out. The odds are against you.
One of the funny things about the stock market is that every time one person buys, another sells, and both think they are astute.
If you're indexing to the S&P 500, you're buying the most expensive names in the market.
Putting is a fascinating, aggravating, wonderful, terrible and almost incomprehensible part of the game of golf.
Never buy a stock because it has gone up or sell one because it has gone down.
Trading is a waiting game. You sit, you wait, and you make a lot of money all at once. Profits come in bunches. The trick when going sideways between home runs is not to lose too much in between.
Understanding the value of a security and whether it's trading above or below that value is the difference between investing and speculating.
I know where I'm putting my money.