Now in my 30’s, I’ve built up significant wealth and passive income, paid off all debt, and enjoy working hard and traveling the world with my husband. When I was a child, I was homeless for several years, then grew up in a trailer park for over a decade, put myself through university with part-time work and considerable student debt, and have been financially supporting my mother since my 20’s. Investing has a reputation of greed and elitism, but I approach this with real-world experience and empathy. I increased my exposure to some of the best growth stocks on sale right after the Christmas Eve panic at the end of 2018.īut despite taking an emotionally unattached approach towards the markets themselves, I love connecting with my readers and hearing their stories. When oil crashed again in 2018, I made a nice quick gain in oil once again. When Brazil entered a serious recession in 20, I invested heavily. When precious metals hit a high in 2011 I was selling and when they hit a bottom in 2016 I was buying. When oil crashed in 2015, I went on a shopping spree for undervalued energy and pipeline stocks. In 2009, I was buying stocks hand over fist. I’m always looking for things that are down. I have a contrarian streak, and view volatility and market disruptions as places to benefit from. For international ETFs, I take into account economic growth, equity valuation, debt levels, political stability, and currency strength for 30 countries when determining which countries likely offer strong risk-adjusted forward returns. In addition, it gives me technical insight into some important industries including automation, software, semiconductors, solar energy, communications, and other areas of 21 st century growth.įor individual stocks, I often emphasize growth-at-a-reasonable-price companies with a blend of growth and value that enjoy wide economic moats and strong returns on invested capital, or companies that I expect to turn around and achieve that state. I’ve found that taking an engineer’s approach to the markets has given me a unique and emotionally detached way of looking at things layer by layer with a strong quantitative background, which has thus far been quite successful. My investment approach combines my experience with finance and engineering. I began my engineering career as an electronics engineer in the automation and simulation industries about a decade ago, and gradually shifted towards finance and management, eventually coming to run the day-to-day operations of an engineering facility and a team of engineers and technicians, including overseeing the facility’s finances and approving major technical decisions. I have 15 years of investing experience, a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, and a master’s degree in engineering management with a focus on engineering economics and financial modeling. My name is Lyn Alden Schwartzer, and I’ll be covering North American stocks and international ETFs here. I take a conservative, low-turnover, long-term approach to investing for the base of my portfolio, with some opportunistic trading around the edges. There are some new people here, so I want to formally introduce myself and the work I’ll do here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |