mrfit wrote:ranger wrote:MRapp wrote:I was calling you a liar. You didn't perfectly time the two bubbles
Yes, I did.
I took all of my retirement money out of the market 12/29/2000, parked it annuities making 6%, waited for the crash, and then started buying back in at the bottom at a rate of 10% of the total plus interest per year.
ranger
What did you use to buy back in? Those annuities you parked your retirement in are locked up and do not pay out until 59.5 without all kinds of penalties.
Nope.
They can be distributed to other investments in 10-year "payouts," as I mentioned, at 10% of the total plus interest. Given the uncertainties and fluctuations in the market over a recovery period, this is actually a pretty productive strategy, because you stick to a practice of steady buying over a sustained period while the market is going up, as it has done so nicely after both of the bubbles. Even nicer, these two 10-year "payouts" that I have used to buy stocks, as the market has risen from the bottom to the top, have overlapped, both with each other, and with a third that I started before that, so that in the middle of the period, I did large stock buys three times a year, plus smaller buys each month from my regular contibutions plus the contributions of my employer. Given that rise in the price of the stock itself as the market climbs back to its peak, this expands my stock holdings from the bottom to the top at a rate of about $100,000 a year, which is plenty fast to take advantage of the rise in valuations.
Great stuff.
Everyone else gets slaughtered.
I lose nothing; then I make money hand over fist for the next 10 years.
Then I do it again.
And again.
In overlapping waves.
Profits compound very quickly.
Money makes money.
Of course, exactly the same is true of "profits" you can earn from technical advances in your rowing.
Advances make possible other advances.
These technical gains compound quickly.
If you use your legs correctly, you ease the burden on your back and arms.
If you lower the drag, you increase the ratio and therefore your rest time between drives.
If you speed up the drive, in order to stay in good rhythm, you speed up the recovery of your arms and back in prep postiion so you spend less time in the bow/or a backstops and therefore increase your slide control.
If you increase you slide control, you have more time to set up and get good compression on each stroke at the catch, increasing your length.
If you increase your length, you get in a better position to get your weight more effectively up on the balls of your feet at the catch for the leg drive and therefore make more effective/explosive use of your quads before you set your heels and finish your legs with your hams and gluts.
If your legs are faster, you can delay your back and core more effectively and therefore really explode with your back in the middle of the drive.
And so on and so forth.
Result: Your stroking power goes up 50%, from 9 SPI to 13.5 SPI and therefore, when you are properly prepared to race, you can row a pb 2K that you use to have to rate a frenetic 38 spm in a 1-to-1 ratio to achieve now a at leisurely 30 spm, in a wonderfully relaxed 3-to-1 ratio.
ranger
Rich Cureton M 72 5'11" 165 lbs. 2K pbs: 6:27.5 (hwt), 6:28 (lwt)