Thursday, December 22, 2022

2022-12-22 Portfolio Update

 Put in $1000. Then purchased:

  • $200 for SPY

  • $200 for VWO 

  • $300 for AMZN

  • $352.07 for TSM ($52.07 from dividends and interests)

Kept averaging down on solid tech stocks. AMZN and TSM have such a wide moat that their recurring earnings inevitably go up year after year at 15+%, so I am confident that their stock prices will follow a similar pattern in the long run.

Transactions


Portfolio

All-time return:


One-year return:


Holdings:


All-time returns for holdings:


Last prices:

Brief portfolio holdings comments


The plus (+) sign after the following stock symbols represent new shares are purchased since the last update.


SPY (+)


Warren Buffett recommends most people to buy S&P 500 index fund. 90% of his estate is handled this way as well, so I just followed his advice to buy some SPY most of the time when I put money into this fund. I don't aim for the 90% allocation, though.


VWO (+)


Emerging market ETF. It has Taiwan Semiconductor, Alibaba, Tencent, and other companies I like. Its portfolio is over 30% in Chinese companies, so it's a low long-tail risk vehicle to invest in China.


ADC

Agree Realty is one of the lowest leverage triple-net lease REITs with a debt to EBITDA ratio of 4.9x. Its tenants are mostly investment grade (67%) retailers and restaurants. At the worst time of 2021, it collected 95% of the rents, which shows the quality of its assets. 


One special thing about Agree Realty is its 14% portfolio in ground leases, which has low default risk, low cash flow, with short-term inflation risk, but long-term stable return. It diversifies the risk portfolio of the company.


Its acquisition and disposition ratio is 4.2% in 2021. The ratio is kept low for the past, which again, shows the quality of the assets, so that it does not have to sell many non-performing assets.


TSM (+)


Taiwan Semiconductor is a global leader in chip manufacturing. It has passed Intel and is getting farther and farther ahead of Intel. It has a wide economic moat as a popular company in Taiwan beloved by common people. It's a national treasure.

With all technological gadgets today requiring chips to operate, including military weapons, its business is neverending. Supply problems are just small hiccups which do not hurt the fundamentals of the company.


SQ


Paypal is the leading payment company online, and Square (or Block) is the physical point-of-sale leader with a market share of 22%. Its Cash app is doing great in fintech with a bright future. CEO Jack Dorsey's big bets on bitcoin ensures Block a distinct leader in the fintech world.


META


Global Monthly Active User (MAU) above 2.8 billion. Facebook is the biggest social network in the world. There will always be people buying Facebook/Whatsapp/Instagram.


The economic moat is weakened by Tiktok, but Tiktok is not really a social network that connects users who are familiar with each other, but another variant of youtube, so Facebook is still the top dog in social networking, although user time spent is definitely hurt.


Given Facebook's investment in VR; optional values in Facebook dating, and Facebook shops; Facebook Pay and Messenger have good monetization potential; Instagram has a unique position for people to express themselves; the improvement in Ads Infra to compensate for the loss in Apple App Tracking Transparency, I believe Facebook will come back. Long term annual growth of 15-20% should not be a problem.


BRK.B


Berkshire Hathaway in the current form was found by my idols, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger. I will try to buy more if it's not very expensive.


AMZN (+)


The biggest e-commerce company outside China. Amazon is the top company in the cloud business. The prime memberships are sticky because of the great value. Its IoT devices, while not complete, are all very popular. Amazon also owns the largest ebook market including the ebook hardware reader: Kindle. Its advertising business is growing rapidly as well. It also has a huge potential in the medical drugs market.


Basically, Amazon has potential in a lot of daily life goods and services which do not require high-end technology. It challenges incumbents with high profit margins. Amazon is definitely a killing machine. The only drawback is that the stock is quite expensive today. Annual growth around 15-20%.


PYPL


Analysts expect Paypal 2023 EPS to be $4.72, and will grow more than 20% annually for a few years. 2023 P/E ~ 18 is quite attractive. Paypal's economic moat did not change recently. It has a few short-term catalysts: amazon partnership, BNPL, continuous growth of users in Venmo, shopping super app. The stock price is depressed now only because the market worries about its short-term growth.


PLTR

Palantir is a big data analytics company that mainly services democratic governments in the West, especially America, the strongest in the world, for the sake of global peace and prosperity. I think it's a very bold statement that is not easily found in innovative tech companies in Silicon Valley. It also services large scale manufacturers, medical and financial institutions.

Palantir builds solutions for customers, so the service it sells often needs some long lead-time, which creates a natural barrier of entry. Once Palantir gets into the business process of a customer, it's sticky. Its support of the US military makes it stand out among other Silicon Valley high tech companies, which eliminates a lot of competition.

One saying is that Palantir and Google are two sides of a coin in terms of handling customer data. Google gathers a lot of user data but the usage is very restrictive, and it focuses a lot on privacy. Palantir, on the other hand, only processes data gathered by clients, to help clients "process users".

It is going to earn about $1.98 billion in revenue. Assuming a long-term profitability of 20%, that is about $400 million in earnings. With a market cap of about $17 billion, a P/E of 42.5 is definitely expensive. However, despite the lumpy growth nature of the business, the company should have no problem maintaining a 30% annual growth in revenue for quite a lot of years as expected by the management, mainly due to the needs of the government in big data. That makes the company a great company trading at a fair price at this point.

MCHI


Almost like a China technology ETF composed of the blue chips like Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, JD. It also has some other blue chips which I like like China Construction Bank, Ping An Insurance. To avoid the long-tail risk of China, I will invest in VWO instead of MCHI in the future.


OPK


A free stock came from opening this stock account. Not sure what it does.


Friday, December 9, 2022

2022-12-09 Portfolio Update

Sold the whole STOR position to get $1283.83 in proceeds. Then purchased:

  • $800 for TSM

  • $300 for AMZN 

  • $242.34 for META

The acquisition of Store Capital (STOR) by Oak Street at $32.25 will be closed pretty soon. The premium is so low that I sold all today at $31.98 to buy some tech stocks which have done horribly lately. I earned 16.67% return from this investment excluding the dividends received for the past year.

TSM is doing well and just announced 50% revenue growth in November. More and more electronics today use multiple kinds of chips to add intelligence, so the demand for chips manufactured by TSM will keep growing. The company is supply-constrained now, which is not something investors should worry too much. As long as the demand is there, the financial numbers are going up, and the company has a solid balance sheet, it's a good company. Given its forward P/E less than 14 with ~10% annual growth rate, it's a good stock as well.

For Amazon, 2029 EPS is expected to be $11. With a 15% discount rate, It's trading at around 2023 P/E = 22. It's not cheap, but reasonable.

Meta, or Facebook, is the riskiest among the three. It has a strong moat in social networks, user time spent can be challenged by other newcomers like Tiktok. Given 2023 P/E ~ 15, a lot of shortcomings are priced in, so I think it's a good bet.

Transactions



Portfolio

All-time return:



One-year return:



Holdings:



All-time returns for holdings:





Last prices:



Brief portfolio holdings comments


The plus (+) sign after the following stock symbols represent new shares are purchased since the last update.


SPY


Warren Buffett recommends most people to buy S&P 500 index fund. 90% of his estate is handled this way as well, so I just followed his advice to buy some SPY most of the time when I put money into this fund. I don't aim for the 90% allocation, though.


VWO


Emerging market ETF. It has Taiwan Semiconductor, Alibaba, Tencent, and other companies I like. Its portfolio is over 30% in Chinese companies, so it's a low long-tail risk vehicle to invest in China.


ADC

Agree Realty is one of the lowest leverage triple-net lease REITs with a debt to EBITDA ratio of 4.9x. Its tenants are mostly investment grade (67%) retailers and restaurants. At the worst time of 2021, it collected 95% of the rents, which shows the quality of its assets. 


One special thing about Agree Realty is its 14% portfolio in ground leases, which has low default risk, low cash flow, with short-term inflation risk, but long-term stable return. It diversifies the risk portfolio of the company.


Its acquisition and disposition ratio is 4.2% in 2021. The ratio is kept low for the past, which again, shows the quality of the assets, so that it does not have to sell many non-performing assets.


TSM (+)


Taiwan Semiconductor is a global leader in chip manufacturing. It has passed Intel and is getting farther and farther ahead of Intel. It has a wide economic moat as a popular company in Taiwan beloved by common people. It's a national treasure.

With all technological gadgets today requiring chips to operate, including military weapons, its business is neverending. Supply problems are just small hiccups which do not hurt the fundamentals of the company.


SQ


Paypal is the leading payment company online, and Square (or Block) is the physical point-of-sale leader with a market share of 22%. Its Cash app is doing great in fintech with a bright future. CEO Jack Dorsey's big bets on bitcoin ensures Block a distinct leader in the fintech world.


META (+)


Global Monthly Active User (MAU) above 2.8 billion. Facebook is the biggest social network in the world. There will always be people buying Facebook/Whatsapp/Instagram.


The economic moat is weakened by Tiktok, but Tiktok is not really a social network that connects users who are familiar with each other, but another variant of youtube, so Facebook is still the top dog in social networking, although user time spent is definitely hurt.


Given Facebook's investment in VR; optional values in Facebook dating, and Facebook shops; Facebook Pay and Messenger have good monetization potential; Instagram has a unique position for people to express themselves; the improvement in Ads Infra to compensate for the loss in Apple App Tracking Transparency, I believe Facebook will come back. Long term annual growth of 15-20% should not be a problem.


BRK.B


Berkshire Hathaway in the current form was found by my idols, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger. I will try to buy more if it's not very expensive.


AMZN (+)


The biggest e-commerce company outside China. Amazon is the top company in the cloud business. The prime memberships are sticky because of the great value. Its IoT devices, while not complete, are all very popular. Amazon also owns the largest ebook market including the ebook hardware reader: Kindle. Its advertising business is growing rapidly as well. It also has a huge potential in the medical drugs market.


Basically, Amazon has potential in a lot of daily life goods and services which do not require high-end technology. It challenges incumbents with high profit margins. Amazon is definitely a killing machine. The only drawback is that the stock is quite expensive today. Annual growth around 15-20%.


PYPL


Analysts expect Paypal 2023 EPS to be $4.72, and will grow more than 20% annually for a few years. 2023 P/E ~ 18 is quite attractive. Paypal's economic moat did not change recently. It has a few short-term catalysts: amazon partnership, BNPL, continuous growth of users in Venmo, shopping super app. The stock price is depressed now only because the market worries about its short-term growth.


PLTR

Palantir is a big data analytics company that mainly services democratic governments in the West, especially America, the strongest in the world, for the sake of global peace and prosperity. I think it's a very bold statement that is not easily found in innovative tech companies in Silicon Valley. It also services large scale manufacturers, medical and financial institutions.

Palantir builds solutions for customers, so the service it sells often needs some long lead-time, which creates a natural barrier of entry. Once Palantir gets into the business process of a customer, it's sticky. Its support of the US military makes it stand out among other Silicon Valley high tech companies, which eliminates a lot of competition.

One saying is that Palantir and Google are two sides of a coin in terms of handling customer data. Google gathers a lot of user data but the usage is very restrictive, and it focuses a lot on privacy. Palantir, on the other hand, only processes data gathered by clients, to help clients "process users".

It is going to earn about $1.98 billion in revenue. Assuming a long-term profitability of 20%, that is about $400 million in earnings. With a market cap of about $17 billion, a P/E of 42.5 is definitely expensive. However, despite the lumpy growth nature of the business, the company should have no problem maintaining a 30% annual growth in revenue for quite a lot of years as expected by the management, mainly due to the needs of the government in big data. That makes the company a great company trading at a fair price at this point.

MCHI


Almost like a China technology ETF composed of the blue chips like Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, JD. It also has some other blue chips which I like like China Construction Bank, Ping An Insurance. To avoid the long-tail risk of China, I will invest in VWO instead of MCHI in the future.


OPK


A free stock came from opening this stock account. Not sure what it does.


Friday, September 16, 2022

2022-09-16 Portfolio Update

 Put in $1000:

  • $100 for SPY

  • $300 for VWO 

  • $300 for META

  • $300 for PLTR

The US stock market was tumbling recently because of the persisted high inflation and the expectation of more Fed interest rate hikes (source). This is just a transient issue and does not affect the US companies' fundamentals, so it's a good opportunity to invest more. My adding of money into this fund does not time the market, but I am glad that I am adding when the market dips.

Chinese stocks in VWO are very cheap due to the sell off along with the US market, so I am buying more of it. 

META has also dipped a lot recently without any news except for persisting pessimism on Facebook, negative narration of Zuck, etc. Those bearish sentiments ignore Instagram's and Whatsapp's strong network effect and the low valuation of META. For PLTR, it just dipped for no news at all, so I am taking the opportunity to add more.

Store Capital (STOR) is going to be acquired by GIC and Oak Street at $32.25 per share (source). I will have to find another stock to replace it later. For now, I am just holding the shares.

Transactions



Portfolio

All-time return:



One-year return:



Holdings:



All-time returns for holdings:



Last prices:



Brief portfolio holdings comments


The plus (+) sign after the following stock symbols represent new shares are purchased since the last update.


SPY (+)


Warren Buffett recommends most people to buy S&P 500 index fund. 90% of his estate is handled this way as well, so I just followed his advice to buy some SPY most of the time when I put money into this fund. I don't aim for the 90% allocation, though.


VWO (+)


Emerging market ETF. It has Taiwan Semiconductor, Alibaba, Tencent, and other companies I like. Its portfolio is over 30% in Chinese companies, so it's a low long-tail risk vehicle to invest in China.


STOR


Store Capital Corporation is a single tenant triple-net lease REIT. One of its unique characteristics is its emphasis on tenants' unit-level operating profits and financial statements. The management has a long tenure with a very conservative underwriting standard that focuses on replacement cost of the properties. Its tenants are diversified and internet resistant. It has very transparent reporting in its financial reports. This REIT has a narrow economic moat.


Store Capital is going to be acquired by GIC and Oak Street at $32.25 per share (source). I will have to find another stock to replace it later. For now, I am just holding the shares.


ADC

Agree Realty is one of the lowest leverage triple-net lease REITs with a debt to EBITDA ratio of 4.9x. Its tenants are mostly investment grade (67%) retailers and restaurants. At the worst time of 2021, it collected 95% of the rents, which shows the quality of its assets. 


One special thing about Agree Realty is its 14% portfolio in ground leases, which has low default risk, low cash flow, with short-term inflation risk, but long-term stable return. It diversifies the risk portfolio of the company.


Its acquisition and disposition ratio is 4.2% in 2021. The ratio is kept low for the past, which again, shows the quality of the assets, so that it does not have to sell many non-performing assets.


TSM


Taiwan Semiconductor is a global leader in chip manufacturing. It has passed Intel and is getting farther and farther ahead of Intel. It has a wide economic moat as a popular company in Taiwan beloved by common people. It's a national treasure.

With all technological gadgets today requiring chips to operate, including military weapons, its business is neverending. Supply problems are just small hiccups which do not hurt the fundamentals of the company.


SQ


Paypal is the leading payment company online, and Square (or Block) is the physical point-of-sale leader with a market share of 22%. Its Cash app is doing great in fintech with a bright future. CEO Jack Dorsey's big bets on bitcoin ensures Block a distinct leader in the fintech world.


META (+)


Global Monthly Active User (MAU) above 2.8 billion. Facebook is the biggest social network in the world. There will always be people buying Facebook/Whatsapp/Instagram.


The economic moat is weakened by Tiktok, but Tiktok is not really a social network that connects users who are familiar with each other, but another variant of youtube, so Facebook is still the top dog in social networking, although user time spent is definitely hurt.


Given Facebook's investment in VR; optional values in Facebook dating, and Facebook shops; Facebook Pay and Messenger have good monetization potential; Instagram has a unique position for people to express themselves; the improvement in Ads Infra to compensate for the loss in Apple App Tracking Transparency, I believe Facebook will come back. Long term annual growth of 15-20% should not be a problem.


BRK.B


Berkshire Hathaway in the current form was found by my idols, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger. I will try to buy more if it's not very expensive.


AMZN


The biggest e-commerce company outside China. Amazon is the top company in the cloud business. The prime memberships are sticky because of the great value. Its IoT devices, while not complete, are all very popular. Amazon also owns the largest ebook market including the ebook hardware reader: Kindle. Its advertising business is growing rapidly as well. It also has a huge potential in the medical drugs market.


Basically, Amazon has potential in a lot of daily life goods and services which do not require high-end technology. It challenges incumbents with high profit margins. Amazon is definitely a killing machine. The only drawback is that the stock is quite expensive today. Annual growth around 15-20%.


PYPL


Analysts expect Paypal 2023 EPS to be $4.72, and will grow more than 20% annually for a few years. 2023 P/E ~ 18 is quite attractive. Paypal's economic moat did not change recently. It has a few short-term catalysts: amazon partnership, BNPL, continuous growth of users in Venmo, shopping super app. The stock price is depressed now only because the market worries about its short-term growth.


PLTR (+)

Palantir is a big data analytics company that mainly services democratic governments in the West, especially America, the strongest in the world, for the sake of global peace and prosperity. I think it's a very bold statement that is not easily found in innovative tech companies in Silicon Valley. It also services large scale manufacturers, medical and financial institutions.

Palantir builds solutions for customers, so the service it sells often needs some long lead-time, which creates a natural barrier of entry. Once Palantir gets into the business process of a customer, it's sticky. Its support of the US military makes it stand out among other Silicon Valley high tech companies, which eliminates a lot of competition.

One saying is that Palantir and Google are two sides of a coin in terms of handling customer data. Google gathers a lot of user data but the usage is very restrictive, and it focuses a lot on privacy. Palantir, on the other hand, only processes data gathered by clients, to help clients "process users".

It is going to earn about $1.98 billion in revenue. Assuming a long-term profitability of 20%, that is about $400 million in earnings. With a market cap of about $17 billion, a P/E of 42.5 is definitely expensive. However, despite the lumpy growth nature of the business, the company should have no problem maintaining a 30% annual growth in revenue for quite a lot of years as expected by the management, mainly due to the needs of the government in big data. That makes the company a great company trading at a fair price at this point.

MCHI


Almost like a China technology ETF composed of the blue chips like Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, JD. It also has some other blue chips which I like like China Construction Bank, Ping An Insurance. To avoid the long-tail risk of China, I will invest in VWO instead of MCHI in the future.


OPK


A free stock came from opening this stock account. Not sure what it does.


Friday, August 26, 2022

2022-08-26 Portfolio Update

 Put in $1000:

  • $100 for SPY

  • $300 for STOR

  • $300 for VWO 

  • $300 for PLTR

Chinese stocks are having a good time for the last two days because there is some progress between PCAOB and CSRC which would allow US auditors to get the auditing papers of the US listed Chinese companies (source). The agreement has to be tested in practice to see how practical that is, but it's a good step for both parties to reduce the risk of delisting of big Chinese companies from the US stock markets. This is addition to the Chinese regulators being more supportive of the Big Tech Chinese companies (source). That being said, the Chinese stocks in VWO are still very cheap, so I am adding more.

Transactions



Portfolio

All-time return:



One-year return:




Holdings:



All-time returns for holdings:



Last prices:



Brief portfolio holdings comments


The plus (+) sign after the following stock symbols represent new shares are purchased since the last update.


SPY (+)


Warren Buffett recommends most people to buy S&P 500 index fund. 90% of his estate is handled this way as well, so I just followed his advice to buy some SPY most of the time when I put money into this fund. I don't aim for the 90% allocation, though.


VWO (+)


Emerging market ETF. It has Taiwan Semiconductor, Alibaba, Tencent, and other companies I like. Its portfolio is over 30% in Chinese companies, so it's a low long-tail risk vehicle to invest in China.


STOR (+)


Store Capital Corporation is a single tenant triple-net lease REIT. One of its unique characteristics is its emphasis on tenants' unit-level operating profits and financial statements. The management has a long tenure with a very conservative underwriting standard that focuses on replacement cost of the properties. Its tenants are diversified and internet resistant. It has very transparent reporting in its financial reports. This REIT has a narrow economic moat.


Warren Buffet invests 10% of the company in 2017, so it's approved by Buffet. He invested again in 2020 to keep the 10% position, which was diluted with the equity offerings the company had done for the past several years. It shows that Buffet likes the company a lot.


2022 expected AFFO is $2.22, P/AFFO ~ 13, dividend yield 5.3%, with an expected growth of 5-7% annually, pretty attractive.


ADC

Agree Realty is one of the lowest leverage triple-net lease REITs with a debt to EBITDA ratio of 4.9x. Its tenants are mostly investment grade (67%) retailers and restaurants. At the worst time of 2021, it collected 95% of the rents, which shows the quality of its assets. 


One special thing about Agree Realty is its 14% portfolio in ground leases, which has low default risk, low cash flow, with short-term inflation risk, but long-term stable return. It diversifies the risk portfolio of the company.


Its acquisition and disposition ratio is 4.2% in 2021. The ratio is kept low for the past, which again, shows the quality of the assets, so that it does not have sell much non-performing assets.


TSM


Taiwan Semiconductor is a global leader in chip manufacturing. It has passed Intel and is getting farther and farther ahead of Intel. It has a wide economic moat as a popular company in Taiwan beloved by common people. It's a national treasure.

With all technological gadgets today requiring chips to operate, including military weapons, its business is neverending. Supply problems are just small hiccups which do not hurt the fundamentals of the company.


SQ


Paypal is the leading payment company online, and Square (or Block) is the physical point-of-sale leader with a market share of 22%. Its Cash app is doing great in fintech with a bright future. CEO Jack Dorsey's big bets on bitcoin ensures Block a distinct leader in the fintech world.


META


Global Monthly Active User (MAU) above 2.8 billion. Facebook is the biggest social network in the world. There will always be people buying Facebook/Whatsapp/Instagram.


The economic moat is weakened by Tiktok, but Tiktok is not really a social network that connects users who are familiar with each other, but another variant of youtube, so Facebook is still the top dog in social networking, although user time spent is definitely hurt.


Given Facebook's investment in VR; optional values in Facebook dating, and Facebook shops; Facebook Pay and Messenger have good monetization potential; Instagram has a unique position for people to express themselves; the improvement in Ads Infra to compensate for the loss in Apple App Tracking Transparency, I believe Facebook will come back. Long term annual growth of 15-20% should not be a problem.


BRK.B


Berkshire Hathaway in the current form was found by my idols, Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger. I will try to buy more if it's not very expensive.


AMZN


The biggest e-commerce company outside China. Amazon is the top company in the cloud business. The prime memberships are sticky because of the great value. Its IoT devices, while not complete, are all very popular. Amazon also owns the largest ebook market including the ebook hardware reader: Kindle. Its advertising business is growing rapidly as well. It also has a huge potential in the medical drugs market.


Basically, Amazon has potential in a lot of daily life goods and services which do not require high-end technology. It challenges incumbents with high profit margins. Amazon is definitely a killing machine. The only drawback is that the stock is quite expensive today. Annual growth around 15-20%.


PYPL


Analysts expect Paypal 2023 EPS to be $4.72, and will grow more than 20% annually for a few years. 2023 P/E ~ 18 is quite attractive. Paypal's economic moat did not change recently. It has a few short-term catalysts: amazon partnership, BNPL, continuous growth of users in Venmo, shopping super app. The stock price is depressed now only because the market worries about its short-term growth.


PLTR (+)

Palantir is a big data analytics company that mainly services democratic governments in the West, especially America, the strongest in the world, for the sake of global peace and prosperity. I think it's a very bold statement that is not easily found in innovative tech companies in Silicon Valley. It also services large scale manufacturers, medical and financial institutions.

Palantir builds solutions for customers, so the service it sells often needs some long lead-time, which creates a natural barrier of entry. Once Palantir gets into the business process of a customer, it's sticky. Its support of the US military makes it stand out among other Silicon Valley high tech companies, which eliminates a lot of competition.

One saying is that Palantir and Google are two sides of a coin in terms of handling customer data. Google gathers a lot of user data but the usage is very restrictive, and it focuses a lot on privacy. Palantir, on the other hand, only processes data gathered by clients, to help clients "process users".

It is going to earn about $1.98 billion in revenue. Assuming a long-term profitability of 20%, that is about $400 million in earnings. With a market cap of about $20 billion, a P/E of 50 is definitely expensive. However, despite the lumpy growth nature of the business, the company should have no problem maintaining a 30% annual growth in revenue for quite a lot of years as expected by the management, mainly due to the needs of the government in big data. That makes the company a great company trading at a fair price at this point.

MCHI


Almost like a China technology ETF composed of the blue chips like Tencent, Alibaba, Baidu, JD. It also has some other blue chips which I like like China Construction Bank, Ping An Insurance. To avoid the long-tail risk of China, I will invest in VWO instead of MCHI in the future.


OPK


A free stock came from opening this stock account. Not sure what it does.


2024-12-27 Portfolio Update

Put in $2000, then purchases: $500 for APO $500 for BN $695.79 for PAX $300 for AHH $200 for WPC Just keep buying alternative asset managers...