| ▲ | Marsymars 3 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
Sure, but there was nothing stopping people with $10k in savings in 2015 from buying Nvidia. If someone with $10k in savings had bought Nvidia in 2015, they’d have $2.5m today. But that only works for a relatively small number of people before the $2.5m is no longer $2.5m - they’re all drawing from the same $6 trillion pot. “Everyone with a good tech job” is accurate, but besides the point, it would work exactly the same if you limited it to “everyone who’s a plumber” or “everyone who’s a fedex driver”, but literally cannot work for everyone at the same time. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | fooker 3 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
> it would work exactly the same if you limited it to “everyone who’s a plumber” or “everyone who’s a fedex driver” Yes, "Everyone with a good tech job" has a significantly higher chance of keeping or holding tech RSUs, and have conviction that investing in tech is going to pay off. > but literally cannot work for everyone at the same time Yes, that is how the world works. Anything that makes you successful would not work for everyone at the same time. | |||||||||||||||||
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