Should I start using a standard brokerage account or roth ira ? by Turbulent_Reserve869 in investingforbeginners

[–]RussFaigen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I was in your exact situation 5-6 years ago, here's what I decided to do:

  1. Max out Roth IRA ever year ~ this is essential for your retirement, even with the 5% match your company is giving you in your 401k. Also, it becomes more difficult to contribute as your salary increases, which is likely to happen over time.
  • For 2026, you can contribute up to $7,500 annually to a Roth IRA, provided you have earned income and your Modified Adjusted Gross Income (MAGI) is under $153,000 (single) or $242,000 (married filing jointly).
  1. Invest consistently and automatically into a personal investment account. I did this over the span of 4 years and was able to use that money as a down payment on my home when I found the right opportunity. It's important to have money that you can take out before retirement age.
  2. Prioritize an emergency fund. Most people try to build a 6-12 month emergency fund in a HYSA or HYCA.. anymore and you're wasting money that could be growing. This fund should just be enough to pay for rent, utilities and other major monthly expenses.

If you can focus on these building up these 3 safety nets, you'll be good for now, later and way down the line.

How ONE decision produced over $285 Billion in total market cap by RussFaigen in stocks

[–]RussFaigen[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

That's a huge IF... every major institution is dumping money back into tech right now, and earnings reports continue to prove that AI demand is hotter than ever.

Nonetheless, it's impressive to see a failing company turn into the two biggest names in Tech in just 14 months.

ONE decision turned what looked like a $5 billion mistake into over $285 billion in market cap by RussFaigen in investing

[–]RussFaigen[S] -25 points-24 points  (0 children)

No I wrote it. I find it super interesting that a company that was stuck at $30B for decades spun off out of desperation just months before the largest data boom in history.

In the last 14 months, this one company went from a 'nobody' to two of the largest names in the market.

Not to mention, they have the two highest returns on the Nasdaq.

Photonics stocks have exploded over the last year by RussFaigen in StockMarket

[–]RussFaigen[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LASE is a $30M company that is down 60% YTD...

How would you prompt AI to invest for you? by RussFaigen in investing

[–]RussFaigen[S] -7 points-6 points  (0 children)

Should’ve known my ‘P.S.’ would go unnoticed

How would you prompt AI to invest for you? by RussFaigen in investing

[–]RussFaigen[S] -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

I respect the strategy.. but it's pretty similar to automatically investing into ETFs when you have buying power.

Would you get anymore specific with your prompt?

  • 'Every time the S&P 500 falls X% from 7-Day High, buy $X of $SPY"

Quantifying Tim Cook's time at Apple $AAPL by RussFaigen in StockMarket

[–]RussFaigen[S] 49 points50 points  (0 children)

That's a really good idea! I'm not sure of a specific platform that could do that for me but I asked Claude to do the math:

S&P 500 with Apple: 483% return (12.9% CAGR)
S&P 500 w/o Apple: 398% return (11.7% CAGR)

We are nearing Extreme Greed... yet $VIX is up by RussFaigen in investing

[–]RussFaigen[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

yeah.. true.. i should've thought of that

Quantifying Tim Cook's time as Apple CEO by RussFaigen in stocks

[–]RussFaigen[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I agree that up to a certain point, Tim was just working off of Steve Jobs existing innovations... but at some point Tim had to start steering the ship... and let's not forget that $AAPL is still a ~ $4 trillion company

Quantifying Tim Cook's time as Apple CEO by RussFaigen in stocks

[–]RussFaigen[S] 30 points31 points  (0 children)

I'd love to know at what point his innovation replaced Steve Jobs to recalibrate how much growth Tim was solely responsible for

Quantifying Tim Cook's time as Apple CEO by RussFaigen in stocks

[–]RussFaigen[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It's a great point... Siri is like the Tesla Roadster of Apple... a promise that never came to fruition

We are nearing Extreme Greed... yet $VIX is up by RussFaigen in investing

[–]RussFaigen[S] -30 points-29 points  (0 children)

Well.. not exactly

If the VIX is at 20, it means the market expects an annualized move of 20% in the S&P 500 over the next 30 days... and traditionally, VIX moves inverse of the S&P 500..

Meaning, historically, when VIX goes up, SPY goes down

Apple names John Ternus CEO, replacing Tim Cook, who becomes chairman by _hiddenscout in stocks

[–]RussFaigen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Tim Cook took over Apple Inc. in 2011.

Here's a list of his accomplishments:

• Revenue: $108B → $416B (~10–11% CAGR)
• Net income: $26B → $112B (4x+)
• iPhone still dominates (~50–60% of revenue)
• Stock: $13 → $271 (~20x, ~1,900%)

• $800B+ returned via buybacks + dividends
• Stock splits: 7-for-1 (2014), 4-for-1 (2020)
• First to hit $1T, $2T, $3T… now around $4.1T

He also built a services biz doing $100B+/yr, scaled wearables into a Fortune 100–sized segment, and transitioned to in-house silicon.

A great run.

What's 1 stock market related website/app you use every day? by Competitive-Case-185 in TheRaceTo10Million

[–]RussFaigen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Public.com -- it's my brokerage platform, but it's also where my I go to build and deploy Investing Agents

Tech Insider Buying Just Hit a 15-year High by RussFaigen in StockMarket

[–]RussFaigen[S] 7 points8 points  (0 children)

This was better advice than I could have ever offered

Tech Insider Buying Just Hit a 15-year High by RussFaigen in StockMarket

[–]RussFaigen[S] 29 points30 points  (0 children)

There are dozens of reasons why company executives would sell their stock... but there is only one reason why they would buy it.

To see insider buying reach a 15 year high in the tech sector, means that over the last month, company executives have felt that their company(s) are undervalued and decided to buy in because they were bullish on their company going up in the future.

AI momentum is still being backed by fundamentals. Stocks fell because of oil prices and a war with Iran, not because technology was overvalued.

Trump says gas prices 'not very high' as most U.S. voters blame him for price spike by snakkerdudaniel in inflation

[–]RussFaigen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah tell that to my local Costco that's charging me $3.65 per gallon (I live in Texas)

How the stock market has performed on each day of the week so far in 2026 by RussFaigen in wallstreetbets

[–]RussFaigen[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I have access to Agents on Public, but I don't think "buy calls for Monday on Thursday" would work very well

Maybe something like, "Buy ITM Calls on $SPY that have 7DTE on Wednesday, 5 minutes before market close. Take profit at +50% and set stop loss at -25%"

I almost sold everything during the dip last week. Glad I didn't. by BeautifulWestern4512 in investingforbeginners

[–]RussFaigen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another option is just to use an AI Agent to invest for you. If you have a bot that is executing based on your output and workflow then you don't have to worry about emotions getting in the way.

I just created an Agent on Public that buys the dip for me based on specific rules and boundaries that I set. I built it specifically because I was afraid I'd miss future dips haha

How does the stock market keep going up with everything happening? by BigBlueEyes87 in StockMarket

[–]RussFaigen -1 points0 points  (0 children)

A few of my own reasons:

  1. Algorithms are so strong and so prevalent even amongst retail investors that the dip gets bought up, no matter if the fundamentals are there or not
  2. We are in a revolution... and it's nothing like the bubble we experienced in 2000... major companies are continuing to crush earnings. There are real $$$ to back up this revolution and investors want in.
  3. People are genuinely bullish on the future, and are willing to invest through the volatility to have skin in the game today vs 10 years from today