He is true only if someone like him is a long-term investor. The short-term things are chaos and noise. But Saylor too is overstretched and an obsessed investor. It's more about your intention not about the impulsive decision.
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I never felt that Saylor was a nervous and obsessive investor. In general, I saw that he had a relaxed attitude in his speeches.
He says he usually thinks long term
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When Saylor insisted his followers buy Bitcoin at the 60k level and even to the extent of telling fellow investors to sell everything to buy Bitcoin at 60k level, what would you say? Even moderate investors in Hive could advice better to his followers. I was surprised when I found those tweets when Saylor was obsessive at 60k level anticipating a blow off top which did not happen this time
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You may be right about this, but in the end, everyone gives advice. Frankly, I don't invest with someone's advice, so I ignore such statements.
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Yeah, as far as investing is concerned it should be convivning for the investors. The whole idea of engaging over social media and even for the matter of investment advice is more about having an exposure to different perspectives. Blinidly subscribing to anything is detrimental to overall financial health.
Anyone who invests blindly will eventually lose their assets.
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If you take disciplined form of DCA or see things from truly long term perspectives, none of it matters.
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