Individual investors are responding calmly to the volatility in stock prices. According to securities companies and others, despite the sudden market fluctuations that are enough to shake even investment professionals, many individuals taking advantage of the NISA (tax-free small-scale investment system) appear to be following the classic approach to asset management: long-term, regular savings, and diversification. Rakuten Securities, a major internet securities firm, had 5.52 million NISA accounts as of the end of June. At the earnings briefing on August 6, President Yuji Kusunoki pointed out recent trends among individual investors, saying, “Among NISA users, there are an increasing number of people who are not concerned about short-term fluctuations, and we are not seeing much fluctuation such as selling investment trusts.” Kobayashi Ryohei, who provides information on asset formation through the video site “Bank Academy,” says, “People with more than four years of investment experience who have seen stock prices recover after plummeting during the coronavirus pandemic are completely calm.” Kobayashi has also been consulted by beginners who have only just started investing after the new NISA that began in January, asking if they should stop for now. However, he says that many individual investors reconsider when he explains the history of domestic and international stock prices and encourages them to continue investing. Current events.
Japan only gives out 100,000 yen, and the people who are in debt and run a loose business never have enough money (in the end, they turn into skeletons or zombies). In other words, the military power given to the entire population in terms of the latest weapons and money is less than 1/10 of the world’s. Furthermore, thinking that the country can win if it collects money (metal) and uses it for military power, it mobilizes (deceives) all the money that individuals have in their hands and collects it, and uses it in the war (metal) NISA. Losing because of metal stolen from others lol. It’s a scene that was also in 2. Broken people continue to run the country with the mindset of the ghosts.
While beginners are busy buying experimental items and trying out buying and selling in the NISA quota, the quota for the year narrows, so even if the price falls, they can’t buy anything, and even if the stocks within the quota fall, they just sit there with their fingers crossed.
To begin with, I don’t invest in individual Japanese stocks.
Those who have recently started are mainly investing in US/global indexes.
You could say that Japan has crashed from the interest rate hike shock…
but as for global stocks, it’s just an adjustment level.
If you get used to your assets being gradually eroded by the weak yen and can withstand the many adjustments that occur, you’ll be able to save for retirement in 20 years.
It’s only the stupid media that’s making a fuss. It’s only natural that if there is an upswing there will also be a period of processing, and being swayed by temporary fluctuations and fussing is not the way to go for this, so cut your losses early and quit.
It’s not some low-tier lefties, it’s the bigwigs in the leftist world who are calling for margin calls in NISA. No wonder the low-tier lefties are being fooled.
Even if it increases by 10% in 40 years, it’s still a total loss when you consider the rate of material growth. You’d be better off looking at other investments.
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