Without saying "buy Chainlink", what's the best financial advice you were given or that you live by, that brought you success.
Best financial tips
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Find one good investment that you are an expert on and go all in. Diversitication is for idiots
timing the market is better than time in the market
Spend less, save more, buy YFK, max out your Roth IRA before investing in crypto.
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"stop being a faggot" dad circa 1995
save 10-40% of your income to invest in assets
Don't have a gf at Christmas time.
buy chainlink
Extremely high risk, extremely high reward.
Brilliant
very based, I often break up with girls before christmas or their birthday
Wish I did this when I was younger lol
>sportsball
cringe
This. I understand domain names. So I keep buying them.
You can't really predict when and how much you'll sell them for. But no other assets gives me as many 1000x returns as domain names.
Wouldn't advise newfags to get into this though. I've been at it since 2008 and understand instinctively what makes a "good" domain name.
And like BTC, I'm buying up all the good .coms
In 5 years, you wouldn't be able to start a company with a good brand name without paying me for your domain.
Invest in LINK tokens my friend.
only invest/trade in a few selected stocks/cryptos so you can feel confident in your decision making
Kill people richer than yourself and live in their homes only moving when bluebottles arrive as that signals a strong smell even though you'll not notice it.
>doesn't follow his own advice
BUY LOW, SELL HIGH
don't tell anyone, it's a secret
whata loser! I had to identify a bus among an array of images to say this, that's how much I think this is true
Thank you.
get married when you are 18. Split finances for the rest of you life.
Don't not purchase Chainlink.
>Without saying "buy Chainlink",
OK the best advice I had was "sell chainlink". I made $60k which may not be make it tier, but it's more than I've ever had
>live with a roommate until you're married, if you're not splitting rent & utilities with someone then you're throwing money away
>before you get married, get a pre-nup, and set the clear expectation that your partner will need to pay for half of everything
>never buy a new car. Only buy a used car. Pay cash, don't finance your car.
>always pay off your credit cards at the end of every month
>if your cell phone or cable comes with a discounted introductory rate for the first year, immediately after it expires call customer service and complain that you're going to move to a different service provider, nine times out of ten they'll extend the introductory rate for another year
>never get a credit card with an annual fee
>get a few credit cards that max rewards in various categories, e.g. get a card that gives you 3% back on gas, get a card that gives you 3% back on groceries, get a card that gives you 3% back on restaurants, and get a card that gives you 2% back on anything else
>don't lend money to friends and family, nine times out of ten they won't pay you back and you'll have to forgive them or give up on the relationship
>when you invest, buy and hold, never sell, otherwise your monkey brain will cause you to buy the top and sell the bottom
Lucky with eth in 2016. 34 k off 5000. Then lost it all on it all on binary options.
Risk management. Never be greedy.
This isn't /r/povertyfinance
Acquire expertise, buy when you know you are right but the mob does not believe you
Fantastic advice.. especially not losing money on rent and the prenup. I hear a lot of guys lately lose everything in divorce...
continued
>compound interest is a big deal. Live frugally and invest heavily during your 20s and it will pay dividends for the rest of your life
>if your friends invite you to go with them on an expensive vacation, or to an expensive concert, don't go, save the money
>buy your furniture on Craigslist or at Goodwill, or even better, look up the bulk trash pickup day in an expensive neighborhood and grab their expensive furniture before the trash men come get it
>if you're near a college, go dumpster diving outside the freshmen and sophomore dorms during move-out week; I once found a working Xbox 360 with four controllers and a bunch of games thrown in there, also lots of TVs and mini-fridges
>vet bills are expensive, avoid getting a pet until you're decently well-off and can afford the extravagance
>instead of buying a new iPhone, ask your parent if you can have their last-gen iPhone that's probably sitting in a closet collecting dust
>don't sign up for monthly subscriptions
>learn to cook at home instead of eating out
>build your own gaming PC instead of buying a pre-built one that's marked up 50%; don't buy an Xbox or Playstation and pay a monthly subscription to be able to play games you already paid for like a cuck
Only the ones who made it while they were married
>>learn to cook at home instead of eating out
Good advice the rest is either obvious or retarded
Save as much as you can
DUDE DONT SPEND MONEY LMAO
>that gaming pc advice
prebuilts are literally less expensive than builiding it yourself now.
Buffet quote is of course fake but Andrew Carnegie actually agrees with You only have so much attention and background knowledge, so making one extremely well-researched bet is better that scattering your money everywhere.
>marriage
>the rest of your life
you're not from around here, are you, user?
and what about not throwing your money at restaurant services was somehow less obvious than the other points?
suddenly i'm on quora