Inexorable Username
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So here was my kind of crazy initial jump into investing on the stock market....
Note
In an effort not to ramble, I've titled certain paragraphs ramblegraphs and provided a summarization. If you'd like to skip the fluff and skim effectively, read my ramblegraph headers, enclosed in // // . FYI. Ramblegraphs were written in during post-processing. Just so you know. It's not like I summarized my thought first and then proceeded to undisciplinedly ramble on about it. Yes that's a word, because I say so. And I'm the writer. So suck it.
// ramblegraph. //
// I suck at making money/being money-motivated but my parents are money-skilled people and I felt inspired by them, and people here, to hop into the stock market. //
Okay, so - partly inspired by @Serac and @Rebis, partly inspired by my parents, I decided to test the waters with the stock market. Mom is an INTJ, and she likes to help other people make themselves profitable. Dad's a self-made man who is quite stock-savvy. I'm a space cadet and a weirdo visionary who does the art thing and the anti-social thing, and gets off on research rabbit holes and doing data analytics...My potential for making money is, I would say, average or less so. I struggle to be money-motivated. Typically, the thought of having to "make money" just depresses me - I associate it with grueling discipline and boredom, and to be honest, I'm a very down-to-earth kind of girl with cheap needs. I like my white board, my markers, my art stuffs, and I have a really nice electronic Kurzweil keyboard that is my "big thing" - in addition to my computers - and that's pretty much all I want in life. Simple needs for simple people. Oh - and wine. I like my wine.
Wait....I had a point here. It seems to me I was making this post for a reason. OH!
That's right. Okay. More on that reason. Wait - more backstory first....sorry. Fingers feel compelled to type more backstory. They come here to play so I let them have at it - I exercise reservation elsewhere in life. This - this is my outlet. Right...so.
// ramblegraph. //
// It was bought to my attention that I might have a skillset that could be valuable to me if I played the stock market, and that playing the stock market could be the very thing I needed to make my not-for-profit project a reality. Also, this was largely because of my awesome mom. Thanks mom! Love you lots. //
So the thing about me - even though I suck at making money, and I'm not very money-motivated, I'm good at helping other people make money. I get inspired by making other people's dreams come true - which is why I love my job - media marketing. But I also love my job because it suits my lifestyle. I LOVE researching. Today, in fact, I realized that my research has been getting far too undisciplined and random because YouTube's algorithm thought a hot video pick for me would be "Analyzing 12 strains of rice under a microscope and cooking them" - something to that effect. You know when a computer has decided a video such as this suits you best - you've got to reign in the random research binges...right, in any case.
So typically I'm the lazy visionary artsy kind of person who loves doing excessive amounts of research, and adores data analytics and writing research reports - and especially graphs and real-time numerical metrics. Oh my gosh, real-time numerical metrics...be still my heart. If a man had ever said "Why don't you come in? We can drink wine and watch real-time data on trends in the marketing industry"....I might have ended up married. Not sure. It could have happened. (dodged that bullet! whew!)
Anyways...since no guy ever offered to "data analytics & chill" with me, here I am - a solitude-obsessed hermit who spends all day researching and making marketing assumptions. Due to a lack of being brilliant, though, it just never occurred to me that this skillset could translate in a valuable way to playing the stock market. The stock market has always scared me. Big, nasty, money-thing that it is....scaring people with percents and red stuff. (I don't trust money. Money and I...well we have a weird relationship). It's my mom that connected the dots and told me that not only might I be very good at stocks BUT I have a stock wizard for a father and if my dream lifestyle is really to not have to work with people, but to spend all day researching and drawing up infographics and things such as this, then I should take a peak at the stock market. With her encouragement and enthusiasm, I soon found my money motivation - which would be the ability to self-fund my pet project. A not-for-profit for animal welfare and charity.
Which is awesome, because the idea of having to try to get investors has been the major hang up in this project for me. It's paralyzed my motivations. Sigh.
Devising my stock market strategy....
Dad encouraged me in a certain direction and I rolled with it. I came up with a plan that I think, potentially, could help me make about 8% - 10%, on average, about 4 times a month. Very obnoxiously limited by the fact that when you sell your stocks the stuff doesn't go through for three days (counting sale date). Ugh.
Getting into the market....
So anyways, I start this e-trade account, and I felt like what I really needed was to try to get a bit of practice. So I decided to do a little bit of research, check out what's trending, do some analysis and compare some graphs, and make some very small investments in some low value stocks so I can learn by experience. I'm a big "learn by experience" kind of girl.
When I pick a new subject to learn, I'm okay with putting money towards quickly learning the basics. In the case of digital painting, I hired a couple of tutors, but in this instance, I figured a few cheap experiments would get the ball rolling.
So I thought - well, how do we approach this. I searched tech stocks for 2020 on Google and Youtube, read a few articles, and observed some live data from Yahoo's real-time trending stock page..thing....And I decided, hey, I'll do this stock "INPX". Everyone's talking about it, it's trending, it's going up. I could buy it now and sell it at the end of the day, and probably make a profit. (At the time I didn't realize everyone sells at the end of the day - beginner's learning experience #1!)
My stock "jackpot"? (aka curse)....
Well this stock blew up. It got to the point where I actually put a somewhat decent amount into it to follow my tiny investment.
Now - I'm in this awkward position! I have a stock that I think long-term will end up realizing significant gains, BUT - a few things.
So on the one hand, some people are saying "Stocks like this only come around once in a millennia! Anyone who sells now is a fool!". On the other hand, there's day traders swamping the internet being like "Yeah, you got to get while the getting is good. There's bulls and bears and lions and things - get on this other stock instead."
@_@ You guys...this is like...it's so anxiety inducing.
Ahh...If I make the wrong decision, I'm going to start thinking I'm shit at stocks, and probably I'll go wander off to do non-profitable things with my life. Maybe. The risk is real. I'm a wanderer.
Brain: Inex sabotages herself again...
Body: (does that mean we can stop dieting now?)
Brain: Only if she gets super flaky about the promises she makes to herself.
Body: (wow. roasted.)
Inex: Shut up you guys.
Body: (but we're hungry....bring on the roasting!)
Anyways. I don't know. Maybe you guys have some ideas?
I chose to keep the stock, being that it's Friday. Honestly, I didn't pour so much money into it that I would be distressed if I lost my investment. My policy atm is pretty much to invest to learn, and consider the money "spent". I have no delusions about my ability to succeed in stocks. Being a numbers/data freak and a great lover of stuff like tycoon games and in-game video game markets does not make me a wizard at humaning in the real world.
So I figured, for the price I spent ($450), and the potential lesson to be learned here...and the growth potential (maybe?), I'd probably regret losing the money less than I'd regret taking it out if the stock does what I think it will do. On the other hand...that cash could be used to further my fairly solid plan for how to almost always end up in the green, even if it's a bit slower that way...Ugh.
Nobody told me how anxiety-inducing and emotionally addictive the stock market is!
Especially the live data. Wow. What a way to guarantee that I will remain glued to a screen for four straight hours.
The Question
About this stock...
It's super sketch.
Some other thoughts
Second Wind :
Looking ahead, I think we'll see another flare up from this stock once their work with the government starts bringing them into the green from a budget perspective. Investors will get all excited about their initial growth on the market, and assume that the same may happen again. The question is - should I sell then, and what should I be looking for to indicate that this growth may be coming?
Politics vs Stocks :
I don't keep track of elections, but I think we're heading for them this upcoming year. Correct? Well, if we get a Democrat here the in the USA (which seems unlikely), then I'm almost positive that this stock will not only bomb miserably, but that they may lose their contract with the government. Not a lot of presidents care very much about technology and security. One of the people the democrats think is going to run against Trump is some super old guy that seems to maybe have some mental degeneration going on. I can't see him being overly invested in improving the government from a technological standpoint.
Concluding
Let me know if you guys play with the market. I'd love to hear some perspectives from fellow INTPs about how they feel about stocks, and maybe some decisions they've made and stories they have. Learning from the experiences of other people is a major weapon in my arsenal when it comes to understanding a subject I'm largely unfamiliar with.
I still wonder if it's maybe just better to take that investment and put it towards something that offers solid returns...Hmm...Decisions decisions.
Note
In an effort not to ramble, I've titled certain paragraphs ramblegraphs and provided a summarization. If you'd like to skip the fluff and skim effectively, read my ramblegraph headers, enclosed in // // . FYI. Ramblegraphs were written in during post-processing. Just so you know. It's not like I summarized my thought first and then proceeded to undisciplinedly ramble on about it. Yes that's a word, because I say so. And I'm the writer. So suck it.

// ramblegraph. //
// I suck at making money/being money-motivated but my parents are money-skilled people and I felt inspired by them, and people here, to hop into the stock market. //
Okay, so - partly inspired by @Serac and @Rebis, partly inspired by my parents, I decided to test the waters with the stock market. Mom is an INTJ, and she likes to help other people make themselves profitable. Dad's a self-made man who is quite stock-savvy. I'm a space cadet and a weirdo visionary who does the art thing and the anti-social thing, and gets off on research rabbit holes and doing data analytics...My potential for making money is, I would say, average or less so. I struggle to be money-motivated. Typically, the thought of having to "make money" just depresses me - I associate it with grueling discipline and boredom, and to be honest, I'm a very down-to-earth kind of girl with cheap needs. I like my white board, my markers, my art stuffs, and I have a really nice electronic Kurzweil keyboard that is my "big thing" - in addition to my computers - and that's pretty much all I want in life. Simple needs for simple people. Oh - and wine. I like my wine.
Wait....I had a point here. It seems to me I was making this post for a reason. OH!
That's right. Okay. More on that reason. Wait - more backstory first....sorry. Fingers feel compelled to type more backstory. They come here to play so I let them have at it - I exercise reservation elsewhere in life. This - this is my outlet. Right...so.
// ramblegraph. //
// It was bought to my attention that I might have a skillset that could be valuable to me if I played the stock market, and that playing the stock market could be the very thing I needed to make my not-for-profit project a reality. Also, this was largely because of my awesome mom. Thanks mom! Love you lots. //
So the thing about me - even though I suck at making money, and I'm not very money-motivated, I'm good at helping other people make money. I get inspired by making other people's dreams come true - which is why I love my job - media marketing. But I also love my job because it suits my lifestyle. I LOVE researching. Today, in fact, I realized that my research has been getting far too undisciplined and random because YouTube's algorithm thought a hot video pick for me would be "Analyzing 12 strains of rice under a microscope and cooking them" - something to that effect. You know when a computer has decided a video such as this suits you best - you've got to reign in the random research binges...right, in any case.
So typically I'm the lazy visionary artsy kind of person who loves doing excessive amounts of research, and adores data analytics and writing research reports - and especially graphs and real-time numerical metrics. Oh my gosh, real-time numerical metrics...be still my heart. If a man had ever said "Why don't you come in? We can drink wine and watch real-time data on trends in the marketing industry"....I might have ended up married. Not sure. It could have happened. (dodged that bullet! whew!)
Anyways...since no guy ever offered to "data analytics & chill" with me, here I am - a solitude-obsessed hermit who spends all day researching and making marketing assumptions. Due to a lack of being brilliant, though, it just never occurred to me that this skillset could translate in a valuable way to playing the stock market. The stock market has always scared me. Big, nasty, money-thing that it is....scaring people with percents and red stuff. (I don't trust money. Money and I...well we have a weird relationship). It's my mom that connected the dots and told me that not only might I be very good at stocks BUT I have a stock wizard for a father and if my dream lifestyle is really to not have to work with people, but to spend all day researching and drawing up infographics and things such as this, then I should take a peak at the stock market. With her encouragement and enthusiasm, I soon found my money motivation - which would be the ability to self-fund my pet project. A not-for-profit for animal welfare and charity.
Which is awesome, because the idea of having to try to get investors has been the major hang up in this project for me. It's paralyzed my motivations. Sigh.
Devising my stock market strategy....
Dad encouraged me in a certain direction and I rolled with it. I came up with a plan that I think, potentially, could help me make about 8% - 10%, on average, about 4 times a month. Very obnoxiously limited by the fact that when you sell your stocks the stuff doesn't go through for three days (counting sale date). Ugh.
Getting into the market....
So anyways, I start this e-trade account, and I felt like what I really needed was to try to get a bit of practice. So I decided to do a little bit of research, check out what's trending, do some analysis and compare some graphs, and make some very small investments in some low value stocks so I can learn by experience. I'm a big "learn by experience" kind of girl.
When I pick a new subject to learn, I'm okay with putting money towards quickly learning the basics. In the case of digital painting, I hired a couple of tutors, but in this instance, I figured a few cheap experiments would get the ball rolling.
So I thought - well, how do we approach this. I searched tech stocks for 2020 on Google and Youtube, read a few articles, and observed some live data from Yahoo's real-time trending stock page..thing....And I decided, hey, I'll do this stock "INPX". Everyone's talking about it, it's trending, it's going up. I could buy it now and sell it at the end of the day, and probably make a profit. (At the time I didn't realize everyone sells at the end of the day - beginner's learning experience #1!)
My stock "jackpot"? (aka curse)....
Well this stock blew up. It got to the point where I actually put a somewhat decent amount into it to follow my tiny investment.
Now - I'm in this awkward position! I have a stock that I think long-term will end up realizing significant gains, BUT - a few things.
- Firstly, on paper, this stock is super shady looking.
- Secondly, I've been told that the goldilocks range for stocks is apx $10-$70 (roughly), and this is a penny stock, which I've been cautioned against. (I only invested in it because it was a cheap way to experiment, and I thought it seemed like it had real potential, so when I lost my money and way proven wrong, it would be a very useful lesson in learning where my thought process was illogical.)
- Thirdly, I feel like this stock's success has been a result of the stock being blown out of proportion by the media, and a whole bunch of frivolous stock-buyers (myself included), are bound to get cold feet the moment the hype dies down.
So on the one hand, some people are saying "Stocks like this only come around once in a millennia! Anyone who sells now is a fool!". On the other hand, there's day traders swamping the internet being like "Yeah, you got to get while the getting is good. There's bulls and bears and lions and things - get on this other stock instead."
@_@ You guys...this is like...it's so anxiety inducing.
Ahh...If I make the wrong decision, I'm going to start thinking I'm shit at stocks, and probably I'll go wander off to do non-profitable things with my life. Maybe. The risk is real. I'm a wanderer.
Brain: Inex sabotages herself again...
Body: (does that mean we can stop dieting now?)
Brain: Only if she gets super flaky about the promises she makes to herself.
Body: (wow. roasted.)
Inex: Shut up you guys.
Body: (but we're hungry....bring on the roasting!)
Anyways. I don't know. Maybe you guys have some ideas?
I chose to keep the stock, being that it's Friday. Honestly, I didn't pour so much money into it that I would be distressed if I lost my investment. My policy atm is pretty much to invest to learn, and consider the money "spent". I have no delusions about my ability to succeed in stocks. Being a numbers/data freak and a great lover of stuff like tycoon games and in-game video game markets does not make me a wizard at humaning in the real world.
So I figured, for the price I spent ($450), and the potential lesson to be learned here...and the growth potential (maybe?), I'd probably regret losing the money less than I'd regret taking it out if the stock does what I think it will do. On the other hand...that cash could be used to further my fairly solid plan for how to almost always end up in the green, even if it's a bit slower that way...Ugh.
Nobody told me how anxiety-inducing and emotionally addictive the stock market is!
Especially the live data. Wow. What a way to guarantee that I will remain glued to a screen for four straight hours.
The Question
- What do you guys think?
- Was it a mistake to stay in INPX for the weekend?
- How would you have made that decision?
- Do you think that the growth and potential of the stock outweighs the fact that it's a risky penny stock that flunked 2019?
- Is it worth holding for a year?
- How do you decide how long a stock should be held for - if you play the market?
About this stock...
It's super sketch.
- They had a lot of times where they "split" the stock, I guess? They've done this splitting thing three times...apparently to compensate for the fact that their price per share was too low, because I guess some mutual funds won't invest in any stocks under $5. (Talk about a red flag, Inex. Colorblind much?)
- They really took off when they initially went public, and then dropped like a rock and have remained low. Major ouch.
- They're not a startup - not really, so there's not much of an excuse for them to remain in the dead zone for as long as they've been there. Somebody is potentially asleep at the helm when it comes to making company decisions.
- The concept behind the product is excellent - very marketable to a large range of clients.
- They recently acquired a government contract, which is likely to be much more stable, with lower overhead, than their previous approach in B2B corporate-level marketing. This change in target audience suggests the company is pivoting. The product has implications for industrial defense and real cyber security that could actually work. (not the snake oil software nonsense)
- My experience with tech companies tells me that they are volatile and experience extreme downturns, but, given enough capital, and the right target audience, they have a massive potential to pivot and become exponentially productive.
- If this company were a client, I would feel extremely excited about their prospects and working with them.
Some other thoughts
- They seem to suck, somewhat, at marketing. Their material is high-quality but their strategy is scatter-brained. They don't seem to know exactly who they're looking to target or which target audience represents the most value.
- They appear to potentially have been guilty of making poor decisions, and sticking with those decisions. Perhaps they're pivoting, but they probably should have done this much, much sooner. That suggests that whoever they have working for them from a market-research standpoint probably is not that great at what they do, or the head honchos don't listen to them.
- I wouldn't have that much confidence in the business guys who are managing this company, really, if I worked with them as a client. Based on their track-record, I would assume that, potentially, these business guys are the arrogant sort that think they know how to market their product and who to market their product to - or they've been duped by a marketer that doesn't know their trade all that well. The "business guys" that run a company are, in my mind, one of the biggest liabilities to a company's success. If you've got dumb guys at the top, and they can't manage, and their employees either (A) hate working for them, or (B) fail at what they do, that's a problem. Even a company who is holding the golden goose can shoot themselves in the foot by just being managed by an arrogant, greedy, condescending, small-minded business man - and these creatures are PLENTIFUL in business. I would say probably a majority. I left my last major clients because one of these people was at the helm, so despite their excellent prospects, I knew they weren't going to fly high enough fast enough to be worth the time and energy on my part, from the perspective of boosting my professional portfolio. Sorry. That sounds cold. It's the truth though - I'm cold like that. I don't work with people who won't succeed. It damages my value as a contractor.
Second Wind :
Looking ahead, I think we'll see another flare up from this stock once their work with the government starts bringing them into the green from a budget perspective. Investors will get all excited about their initial growth on the market, and assume that the same may happen again. The question is - should I sell then, and what should I be looking for to indicate that this growth may be coming?
Politics vs Stocks :
I don't keep track of elections, but I think we're heading for them this upcoming year. Correct? Well, if we get a Democrat here the in the USA (which seems unlikely), then I'm almost positive that this stock will not only bomb miserably, but that they may lose their contract with the government. Not a lot of presidents care very much about technology and security. One of the people the democrats think is going to run against Trump is some super old guy that seems to maybe have some mental degeneration going on. I can't see him being overly invested in improving the government from a technological standpoint.
Concluding
Let me know if you guys play with the market. I'd love to hear some perspectives from fellow INTPs about how they feel about stocks, and maybe some decisions they've made and stories they have. Learning from the experiences of other people is a major weapon in my arsenal when it comes to understanding a subject I'm largely unfamiliar with.
I still wonder if it's maybe just better to take that investment and put it towards something that offers solid returns...Hmm...Decisions decisions.