Novice investors ask “When will the market recover?” Securities companies are inundated with inquiries as stock prices plummet, causing confusion NISA beginners face challenges.
Stock prices have plummeted on the Tokyo Stock Exchange, causing confusion among novice investors who entered the market after the new tax-free small-scale investment system (NISA) began in January. Investment professionals are calling for “long-term savings” and urging people to remain calm. Can people continue building assets amid lingering concerns about further stock market declines? New entrants are facing challenges. The drop in the Nikkei average on the 2nd was the second largest since 1987, when stock prices in the United States and elsewhere around the world fell on “Black Monday.” The call center of a major online securities firm was inundated with phone inquiries that same day. The sudden drop in stock prices caused losses to balloon, leading to a flood of questions such as, “Should we change our investment practices?” Another online securities company also received many voices expressing concern about “when will the market recover?” According to the Japan Securities Dealers Association… Read more jiji.com.
This is a good lesson for those who bought stocks without realizing that the results were good because of a currency gap. If the valuation loss is more than the tax deduction, you’re a complete idiot.
Companies whose stocks have fallen now are the ones that will be hit hard by rising interest rates. They won’t be able to borrow money from now on and will go bankrupt. If they don’t sell quickly, they’re finished.
>>26 You think so, right? The banks that make money from interest rate hikes are falling, while the automakers that lose out on the strong yen aren’t falling as much as you’d expect.
There’s no point in contacting a securities company. It’s just some idiot amateur who is being manipulated by Kishida and is jumping in without knowing anything about the percentage of excess assets to be dumped or the stocks, so it’s like they’re grasping at straws. It’s unseemly.
Securities company: “Well, I’m not sure what the future holds, but there’s no need to get too excited or upset.” (If I don’t sell now, I’ll take a huge loss, but even if I do sell, the company will be in trouble.)
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