RE:RE:what does hyperinflation mean for stocks?Larrymartin77 wrote: WeedTheNorth wrote: Just like with any other item, it means more dollars per item (or share). When they short, they aren't locking in a value based on the strength of the currency at that point, they are locking in a definite price. If a can of coke over the next 5 years becomes $10, you can imagine how many dollars the stock will need to be worth a share. GL all longs, time is on my side and hopefully yours too (stay away from debt or margin).
interesting
Two upvotes for an "interesting" for answer, with thousand of upvotes? When you see this, the guy must be excellent, informative and not in the red, without a fixation on one stock,
or a fraud. As for quinlash, listen you id!ot, it would lead to a crash in the stock market, with good opportunities to buy.
Who would buy a $10.00 can of coke? Surely not you, the way you supposedly invest, which I don't believe, but to lure people to adopt your d4mb strategy. You would be too broken by then, to buy a coke at the current price. In his mind, the share price would reflect the can of coke at $10.00. Nobody would buy a coke at this price you id!ot. They would have to buy overprice breads and food.