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@tacpoly wrote:
If you expect the stock to be a strong performer in the future, then don’t sell it. Is that 4-6% dividend or stock price increase?
Anyway, why don’t you use that extra 15% savings and put it towards the car loan. Or sell some of the stock, only enough to get your loan in the black, then refinance to a lower rate.
All good points. The stock may perform well in the future - historically it has done well. The 4-6% is stock price increase.
I know it probably sounds counterintuitive but rerouting my savings is a non-starter with me. It took me a long time of living paycheck to paycheck and spending parts of my childhood and early adulthood in effective homelessness to get to where I am. I won't return to that and part of how I guard against it is through savings.
I have thought about selling just some stock and refinancing (and then diversifying the stock because it is a British company, traded solely in London and things aren't looking super secure right now). But I would also really love to not have this car loan to pay when the car will just be sitting idle not being driven for many months. I've also considered selling some stock to get the loan in the black and then selling the car because I don't particularly like the car. But then I'd just have to get another car in about a year and that feels like a hassle?
Ahh. Decisions.
I track the market VERY CAREFULLY.
My methods are not traditional by any means, and I am no financial advisor and not qualified to offer you advise, however, I will tell you this:
I called the top of the stock market on January 28 2018, the bottom of a huge sell off a few days later, tops in March & October, the bottom in December 2018, and another top in May. All of the major pivot points. Here is where I think the S&P 500 is headed next:
We are on our way to a new all-time high (probably around 3028). Then we get a dip, probably to the 2820 area, then one more rise to another all-time high, probably in the 3046 area. After that, look out below. It's going to come down to AT LEAST the December 2018 lows in 2300 area, and likely lower than that, possibly between 1900 & 2000. That's quite a haircut. After it bottoms out, one, final wave all the way back to the top (the suckers rally) which may last until June 2023 before it finally tops out and we have the Doom & Gloom scenarios guys like Harry Dent, etc... have been predicting (and been wrong about) for years. The bottom comes in 2028, after a substantial cut.
That is a lot of volatility. Since I don't know your specific stock (only the general direction of the market), if it trades with any of the big boys, it's likely to follow similiar patterns. I'd get out now. We are near a top at 2980. Keep some of the cash on the side & pay down the car loan (but not to zero) and keep some of it on the side to re-enter the stock if & when the market tanks and bottoms out as I have described.
Go back and look at a chart for your specific stock. Did it rise over the last 9-10 years, take a hit in August 2015, recover, & take hits like the rest of the market in Jan and October of last year, then see gains to the present day? If so.... be careful. If it has been immune to fluctuations I have described, I'd still be tempted to exit at least half of it right now (or over the next week) & keep the cash lying around.
Again, I am not a licensed security broker & trading decisions are your own. These are my observations & predictions based on technical analysis using Elliot Wave & Timing with Astrology. I told you.... my techniques are non-conventional...
OP - Before you go and sell the stock off have you looked at your tax remifications? That would definitely effect your net proceeds. Is the tax more than the interest? That would mean your net gain would be negative from paying the car off.
@sccredit wrote:OP - Before you go and sell the stock off have you looked at your tax remifications? That would definitely effect your net proceeds. Is the tax more than the interest? That would mean your net gain would be negative from paying the car off.
I have and the stars have aligned this tax year to put me in a fairly good position.