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Breaking News, UPI - AP
April 1, 2024
It has been learned that Apple and Samsung have been caught in collusion to boost Smart Phone sales nationwide.
With shrinking national sales of phones both companies combined their sales and marketing efforts to not only sell
more units, but to enhance their stock profitability.
Who would have thought Apple and Samsung would be so devious and ambitious as to create the situation that will
occur on April 8, 2024 at around 2PM Central Time. In a stunning work of technology they have arranged for the
Moon to temporarily block out all sunlight across a huge swath of the North American continent. Through shameless
promotion of the "Solar Eclipse" they've positioned themselves for optimum results.
All Smart Phone users who attempt to directly photograph the Event will most likely "fry" their built-in cameras. When
they realize their Smart Phones aren't as smart as before the Eclipse, they'll rush out to buy a new and fully functional
replacement.
Wall Street analysts expect shares of Apple's and Samsung's common stock to surge strongly about 5 minutes after
the 2PM Central Time event.
What an amazing marketing idea! How did they manage to arrange for the Solar Eclipse, anyway?
What will they try next?
Hi JDerb, Re: This week's v-Wave showing shorter term stress..................................
Seeing the 18 Month v-Wave moving well above the 3-5 Year assessment gives me a sense that the markets are ready for some shorter term consolidation.
Looking at how much better its estimate of the market's potential was back in 2022 and how far the indexes actually moved after that assessment should offer investors and AIMers alike some need for reflection. Market psychology doesn't favor traditional investors and traders who've now been conditioned by a long upward trend. AIMers should be checking to see if they've been following AIM's directions in boosting cash reserves at every opportunity.
I'd guess a year from now we'll be able to judge whether the current cautious outlook for the 18 Month forecast was again considered a 'good call.'
Best wishes,
OAG Tom
You are welcome, Steven. A lot of AIMERS like to use limit orders. But not everyone. 😎
Take care and welcome aboard.
Jon
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of April 12th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 77% (Up 2 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 51% (Up 1 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.51 (Down .12 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
Thanks Jon for the reply.
I've been doing that without knowing the offical terminology. Much appreciated.
Steven
Hi Darth..
From Investopedia:
A trailing stop is a modification of a typical stop order that can be set at a defined percentage or dollar amount away from a security's current market price. For a long position, an investor places a trailing stop loss below the current market price. For a short position, an investor places the trailing stop above the current market price.
Take care.
Jon
What do you mean by trailing stop? Not sure what that is. Did the price of GEO decrease signficantly?
Well GEO pulled back today and my trailing stop was hit.
Sold about 14% of my shares.
Toofuzzy
My account is no where near big enough to own that many foreign funds !
Heck, I don't even want to own that many domestic funds !
I just sent you a PM of how I was looking to pare down what I own.
Toofuzzy
I have my whole stock list on Yahoo.
I also put in a high and low limit which is my hold zone.
I also have individual portfolios on Yahoo for each account.
So I keep track of it as all one account and I decide which account I want to buy or sell in based on which account I either want more cash ( if selling ) or have the cash ( if buying ). I also want all sales to be long term in my taxable account.
I definitely have a preference as to which account I want to ultimately hold a specific security in based on if I want to sell options on it or not. I do all option trading in my tax sheltered account now.
If I really wanted to sell more shares than I had in an account I would sell it all off first and then sell a few in the other But as far as AIM is concerned it wouldn't matter.
What bugs me more is dealing with two different trade lots so if AIM says sell 80 shares but it is coming out of a 100 share buy lot, I may sell the 100 shares.
Each to their own. You can always just own a security in one account.
Hi Tom
The problem with the AAII survey for me is that it is based only on members who decide to give feedback.
It is not a sample.
It would be sort of like asking who are you going to vote for ? If one side is more rabid then the other, that will be the result you will get, meanwhile the actual election could be different if the more rabid side stayed home drunk and on drugs.
Toofuzzy
Hi Toof, Re: EFA volatility and AIMing....................
That's part of the reason I chose to divide up the ex US stock markets by different "styles" of ETFs.
Stock Funds
PIZ
EFG
SCHC
DGS
DOL
DIM
DLS
DEM
VNQI
Cash and Equivalents
MMF
SNVXX
The first three stock funds are mainly growth oriented. Overall it's given a good balance and reasonable return for the ex US markets. Allocations currently range from PIZ at 12.2% down to VNQI at 7%. Cash and equals add up to around 18% currently.
Best wishes,
OAG Tom
Hi Toof, Thanks for sharing. It's probably OK to split an AIM into two accounts, though it makes things a bit more complex. When I've done that I added two columns to my spreadsheet to keep track of the shares in each account. There's an issue if one account is much bigger than the other, then when you get a trade, say a sell, you have to sell a smaller number of shares from the small account and a larger number from the large account; otherwise the large sell will overwhelm the smaller account.
IMO it's best to avoid such splits as it makes the process more complicated and difficult. In a smaller account it's best to limit the number of stocks/ETFs and not share the AIM machine with a large account. The trades should be proportional to the size of the account and yet not be too small to keep the algorithm efficient.
Adam
Hi Jon, We're seeing the ST v-Wave showing stress while the longer term remains steady but well above Median.
I've been doing some work with the American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) "Allocations" database recently. It dates to around late 1987 and shows stock, bond and cash allocations monthly. Thinking back to Norman Fosback's work from years ago on cash allocations at Mutual Funds, I decided to see if there was a similar trend with individuals. Fosback had determined that cash allocations in mutual funds were the highest right at or near when the stock markets bottomed (most cautious) and were lowest at or near market tops (most aggressive). This is pretty much the mirror image of what AIM does so could be considered a very contrary market risk measure.
My preliminary study of AAII's allocations over the decades looks to follow a similar pattern. When individual investors are most optimistic they are lowest in cash allocation. This looks to occur near market tops. When the Big Bad Bear comes out to play, that's when the individual investor moves the cash allocation to the high end of its range. Again this could then be viewed as a contrary indicator - high cash = bullish signal, low cash = bearish signal. Here's a quick look at how this appears when looking at major bearish periods:
I do note that since around 2010 AAII's cash hoard has been smaller and less jumpy than in previous times. This might be because of a newer group of AAII members or a change in how quickly allocations can be changed since ETFs have become very popular. There could be other reasons, too.
In general, it seems to be that individual investors react badly during times of crisis by going heavily to Cash (usually too late). It also seems that they become complacent with their winnings during strong bullish periods and carry less "cash insurance." Mr. Lichello would just smile and shake his head! Of note is that the long average Cash Allocation is 22% and it's currently showing 16.8%, so on the LOW side. This would give us some contrary reason to be cautious, similar to our v-Wave's 18 Month current view.
Comments and Questions welcome!
OAG Tom
Placed a trailing stop for 14% of my GEO shares.
It will be nice to lighten up on this security.
Toofuzzy
Hi Tom
I have been aiming EFA for years and have had very little or no trading the last few years. Not enough volatility.
Toofuzzy
Ohhhh
Can I get a new one ?
Toofuzzy
I just found my secured decoder ring when I moved.
I wish I could give a friend one as a gift.
Toofuzzy
Hi Adam
I also own some securities in two accounts.
Happens when I don't have funds to buy in one account.
Over time I try to consolidate but I just treat it as one AIM machine.
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of April 5th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 75% (Up 5 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 50% (Up 4 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.63 (Down .13 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
I thought it might be interesting to "benchmark" my International ETF portfolio against the MSCI EAFE ETF (iShares).
While my 9 ETF portfolio contains REITs and two Emerging Markets components that are not part of EFA, it still gives a pretty good representation of the ExUS market.
EFA recently did reach past its previous high from late in 2021 where my portfolio is now just about equal to its high water mark. Considering AIM's cash, the three components that EFA doesn't include to any degree and the relatively low price range of my portfolio and we see AIM's done a pretty good job of staying with EFA on the upside while limiting the downside (even with Mr. Putin's activity).
I don't know how AIM would have done with EFA all by itself, but my portfolio's three growth and three value components passed the baton back and forth a bit while EFA didn't have that luxury. Over all, it's worked out fine.
Best wishes,
OAG Tom
Q1 Finals for Tom's International Equity Warehouse:
IRA (no longer a contributing IRA since I retired)
10 Common Stock Composite (each stock a separate AIM engine)
International "Style" type ETF composite portfolio
(Large, Mid and Small Cap ETFs in both Growth and Value plus Intl REITs and Small and Large Emerging Markets Dividend ETFs)
U.S. Business Sector ETF Composite
(built primarily from equal weight ETFs)
Overall these accounts are doing well and equaled or broke into new all time highs in March. Cash is starting to rebuild to healthier levels.
Happy Long Weekend,
OAG Tom
Thanks for sharing, Tom. Nice to have Warren reinforce what many have been thinking.
Take care,
Jon
This from Mr. Buffett's annual newsletter to shareholders:
In Warren Buffett’s most recent annual shareholder letter, he wrote,
“Though the stock market is massively larger than it was in our early years, today’s active participants are neither more emotionally stable nor better taught than when I was in school. For whatever reasons, markets now exhibit far more casino-like behavior than they did when I was young.”
Nicely stated, Mr. Buffett!
Best wishes,
OAG Tom
“The only thing to do is harness the one true constant in stocks: fluctuation.” —-Jason Kelly
That’s exactly what AIMers do. 😎
Take care.
Jon
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of March 29th
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 70% (Down 2 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 46% (Down 2 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.76 (Down .14 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
Thanks Tom. Makes sense (as usual). ☺️
Hi Steve, Re: Cap vs Equal Weight Sector ETFs.............
For me it was to get greater exposure on smaller cap companies while still using primarily Sector ETFs. I know over time there will be sector rotation with either Cap or Equal Weight sectors - that's good news for AIM. I also know there are times of exuberance that will be mostly seen in the very large cap stocks. Small caps generally don't get pumped like the mega cap stocks. I have a secret ingredient in my Sector ETF portfolio, XLG. It's "Top 50 Stocks" of the S&P 500 in capitalization. It behaves like the S&P 500 to a degree since the other 450 stocks don't have the 'push' that those 50 do.
https://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?XLG,SPY&n=1259&O=011000
So, it's a favorite toy in the ETF toy chest. It tends to shine in FOMO markets even thought it crosses over between sectors. One could call it a modern "Nifty 50" I guess. Overall, the portfolio has better diversification with the mix I currently own. It's been a while since my account started using the equal weight sector funds. There's pretty fat cap gains in most of the positions which makes me hesitant to make a change at this point. The tactic of using Sectors and AIM has proved to be successful. The further tactic of using equal weight sectors has given me a portfolio of better diversification, I believe. The Domestic Division of Tom's International Equity Warehouse (T.I.E.W.) has been a solid performer.
In the mean time, TIEW's International Division is doing well compared to typical EAFE type funds. It's based in "style" ETFs (Large, mid and small caps, in both Value and Growth). Years ago there were exUS sector ETFs but they vanished. So, I had to convert the International Division over to its current form. In general it's worked well. Here's the 12 month performances with the far right being the EAFE ETF for comparison:
https://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?PIZ,EFG,SCHC,DGS,DOL,DIM,DLS,DEM,VNQI,EFA&n=252&O=111000
.............and how the composite AIM'd accounts have looked through the end of last month:
Again, I've held this portfolio's structure relatively constant for a long time. It's underperformed the U.S. ETF sector portfolio, but is doing okay. It doesn't represent as many $$$ as does the U.S. portfolio.
Have a great weekend,
OAG Tom
Wow!
Quite a difference!
The #'s for Technology clearly show the impact of 'The Magnificent Seven'. Valuations in the Trillions vs Millions makes quite a difference!
BTW: I know you've mentioned it before, but what was you're reasoning for going with Equal vs Cap?
You're most welcome Tom.
I did this because I wanted to get the actual facts so as to compare with all of the BS out there.
I've responded to that BS quite a few times on various sites since last Fall when I first built it.
Not a lot of replies back to me!
@factsmatter. 😊
For fun, I did a comparison of the Cap Weighted Sector ETFs with their Equal Weight brothers. If you stretch the X-Axis to 252 days you'll have a full year's view:
Cap Weighted
https://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?XLY,XLC,XLK,XLI,XLB,XLE,XLP,XLV,XLU,XLF,XLRE&n=252&O=111000
Equal Weighted
https://stockcharts.com/freecharts/perf.php?RSPC,RSPD,RSPS,RSPG,RSPF,RSPH,RSPN,RSPM,RSPR,RSPT,RSPU&n=252&O=111000
There are similarities and differences. Some Equal Weight beat their Cap Weight brothers and visa versa.
Here's the composite of how mine have done with AIM's management:
(Note: I AIM each of the Equal Weight sectors in my U.S. Sector ETF portfolio)
Have a great weekend,
OAG Tom
Thanks Steve, Re: 4 Year Compound Inflation chart................
That's a very cool history. Thanks for sharing it.
Best wishes,
OAG Tom
will they start to look at other reasons to either go up or down
Apparently not.
All 3 major indices closed at record highs, for the second day in a row.
I listened to much of Powell's commentary and Q&A session yesterday.
Seems to me that his slow and steady approach to reaching the 2% target by 2027 was welcome news save for the addicts of Zero Interest Rates.
If the inflation rate continues to creep up from or match the November low of 3.1 (Dec 3.4, Jan, 3.1, Feb, 3.2), he will hold and not cut in June.
Worst case is if any month hits 4, he may need to raise by 0.25%. That could wake up the market. And not in a good way.
Here's my compounded inflation table for the last 22 four year presidential terms. 2021-2024 ranks as 17th worst of the 22 terms.
v-WAVE 3.0*
Suggested Starting Cash Value For New AIM Accounts/Positions
Individual Stocks
High Risk: At or above 51%
Neutral: Between 37 and 50%
Low Risk: At or below 36%
Diversified Funds
High Risk: At or above 34%
Neutral: Between 25 and 33%
Low Risk: At or below 24%
_________________________
Week of March 22nd
_________________________
Short Term (18 Months)
Individual Stocks: 72% (Up 2 from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds or Portfolio: 48% (Up 2 from previous week)
__________________________
Long Term (3-5 Years)
Individual Stocks: 49% (Unchanged from previous week)
Diversified Mutual Funds
or Portfolio: 33% (Unchanged from previous week)
Oscillator: 1.90 (Down .15 from previous week)
*See posts #44585 and #44588
FYI:
Value Line late on posting data this week.
Will post v-Wave as soon as the information is available.
Jon
He stopped by for some sushi!!!
And here I thought 'Big Bird' was yellow! 😁
It's a white pine at the lakefront of our cottage.
Ice went out last week so Big Bird is back.
OAG
Great pic Tom!
Where was the pic taken?
Hi Tom…
I could always use a new decoder!
Thanks.
Take care.
Jon
RE: Only 3000 more until we hit 50,000!
That is true Tom. But at the current rate, it will take over 3 years to get there!
Keep 'em coming Indeed! 🙄
Hi Steve, Re Posts.....................
Only 3000 more until we hit 50,000!!!
Keep 'em comming!
Best wishes,
OAG
Congratulations JD,
Have you worn out your Decoder yet? If so, replacements are available again.
Nice job!,
OAG Tom
Thanks Jon!
Between the AIM Group's combined 65k posts on Silicon Investor & here on IHub...
I'm, STILL # 1 with 12 Grubs (2 on SI and 10 on IHub)
Codypup at #2 with 9,
You and AIMster are tied for 3rd with 5 apiece.
What's really amazing is we've crossed 65,000 posts!
Of course it's taken 27 years! 😊
Hey Steve!
There is no doubt that you are now back in the game!
What great records!
Take care.
Jon
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Here's a handy "Quick AIM Calculator" for finding the next AIM directed Buy and Sell prices for your portfolio holdings:
A.I.M. Users Bulletin Board (AIMUSERS): Thanks LC, Now they can use the "calculator" again! (advfn.com)
While the AIM book is no longer being reprinted, it is available from Amazon for their Kindle for $5.99.
http://www.amazon.com/How-Make-Stock-Market-Automatically-ebook/dp/B002VKJ1EI/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1395757939&sr=1-1&keywords=lichello
Mr. Lichello wrote the book on AIM in 1977. In the mid-'80s he put an infomercial on AIM on late night TV and attempted to sell his workbook and audio tapes.
(1) How To Make $1Million In The Stockmarket Infomercial - 1985 - YouTube
It's a reasonable review of the AIM method for those who are unfamiliar.
Run A Successful Equity Warehouse
Welcome to the AIM Users Bulletin Board. This is the thread to post your thoughts, questions and comments on the use of Robert Lichello's Automatic Investment Management for handling the risk of being involved in the Equities markets.
The AIM strategy gives the user LIFO gains of 20% minimum if the method is followed "by the book." It is ideally suited to those seeking long term investment growth while managing the risk of being invested.
Thoughts on being a successful Individual Investor
I wrote this book review a long time ago. It's a trader's interpretation of
Sun Tzu's "Art Of War." I related it to AIM as best I could.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mr. Lundell says, "Today's financial markets are the last bastion of unabashed conflict.....
To participate, you must be your own general, devising a strategy, gathering information, executing your plan, and adapting to the situation."
How can we use AIM and the v-Wave for strategic and tactical planning to carry out Mr. Lundell’s requirements to participate in the Equity Markets?
"Be your own general"
You are in charge. You are responsible. When you win, you benefit. When you lose, only you are to blame.
a) Broad trends persist. Discover them. They will survive boom and bust.
b) Don't contemplate engaging in war while beholden to another. They could become your ruler!
To me this means "Stay away from Margin Buying unless you are certain of victory."
c) Establish and maintain a "Baseline of Survival" for your command.
This is the "income" side of my overall portfolio.
d) Know that reality is governed by Darwinism; Long Term Survival belongs to the fittest.
"Devise a Strategy"
Our strategy is to sell inventory into market strength and to buy into market weakness. Robert Lichello's AIM algorithm provides us with a systematic approach to follow that employs this strategy.
a) Sell quality merchandise to all those willing to pay.
b) Buy quality merchandise when the price offers reasonable hope to resell at a profit.
c) Let the allocation of resources and inventory be governed by the course of the market and AIM's guidance.
"Gather Information"
Today there is no excuse for not being informed.
a) Differentiate between information VOLUME and QUALITY.
b) Differentiate between FACTS and OPINION.
c) Find good sources of judgement where you cannot act as judge.
d) Information is trusted only when provided by those proved trustworthy.
"Adapt to the Situation at Hand"
The v-Wave measures general U.S. Market Risk (and may be sensitive to world market risk) from low to average to high. This helps you gauge the situation by:
a) Gauging your initial cash reserve requirements on new investments
b) Gauging your on-going cash reserve requirements on established investments
c) Judging whether to establish a bias for accumulation or distribution
d) Possibly starting no new AIM accounts when the v-Wave is showing High Risk
e) Possibly ignoring all AIM Buy Signals during v-Wave High Risk events.
f) Following all AIM buy and sell signals during v-Wave Average Risk events
g) Possibly ignoring all AIM Sell signals during v-Wave Low Risk events
h) Re-assessing your "Baseline For Survival" at times when AIM has your account heavily in Cash
i) Always attempting to beat measured inflation by 5 basis points minimum after all taxes and living expenses are paid. If you do this consistently, in good and bad markets, you will be winning long term
j) Possibly using "vealies" when your positions are cash rich relative to the v-Wave. Limiting supply helps to keep Momentum player’s Demand high.
"Execute your Plan"
Set the plan in motion; know that it takes time for realization. Follow the plan without hesitation allowing the goals to be realized. The strategy is sound so execution is all that is required.
a) Buy when the plan says
b) Sell when the plan says
c) Be very patient when no buy or sell signals are being generated
Reading Mr. Lundell's interpretation of Sun Tzu's work will help you focus on your own plan. It will arm you with knowledge of what others not using AIM are doing in the market. Understanding Short Term Trader's strategy and tactics is like having a spy in the enemy's camp. AIM users can profit by knowing just how these people think and act. AIM acts as almost a mirror image of what goes on in a trader's mind.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The v-Wave........
Mr. Lichello used fixed cash starting levels; first it was 50/50 then 67/33 and in the last edition of his book 80/20 for the Equity/Cash ratio. This "one size fits all" approach is like a broken watch that shows the correct time twice a day but is wrong the rest of the time!
Minstrlman, a regular contributor here, helped gather data from Value Line and formed a highly capable risk-cash indicator for our use. Since then, J Derb continued his work each week. As an adjunct to the AIM methodology we now have a Cash Indicator which helps guide our starting and ongoing Cash Reserve level of AIM relative to measured market risk. It can be used as a general market barometer or specifically with the AIM method. The v-Wave (or VW) is derived from the Value Line "Appreciation Potential - Next 3-5 Years" (VLAP) indicator shown weekly in their Summary and Index Section for their 1700 stock edition. Looking back through V/L's history we find the peak Appreciation Potential occurred 12/23/1974 at +234%. Our continuous database starts January of 1982 and we scaled our "zero cash" to the market risk low point of early that year. We take the VLAP and manipulate it to get an indication of how much cash should be reserved for diversified mutual fund AIM accounts. It should be multiplied by your stock or portfolio's BETA to get the cash reserve level of less diversified or more aggressive holdings.
v-Wave Weekly Cash Reserve Indicator For AIM Users
Current years of the v-Wave:
For diversified portfolios the Median value for the v-Wave is 29.5%. High Risk is 34% cash or higher for individual company stocks. Low Risk is 24% cash or lower.
To get a more proper cash level for individual company stocks multiply the current "Diversified" value by 1.5. This gives us 51% as the high risk threshold and 36% for the low risk boundary.
Looking at the cumulative risk of the v-Wave gives another perspective:
Cumulative v-Wave is calculated by taking each week's v-Wave Stock value, subtracting the median value from it and adding it to the previous total.
Significant historical events are shown nicely here and the v-Wave's response at those times.
v-Wave Calculations can be found at #30219. The data are a work-in-progress for now.
TooFuzzy provided us with a handy "Quick AIM Calculator" Here's a link to that page:
A.I.M. Users Bulletin Board (AIMUSERS): Thanks LC, Now they can use the "calculator" again! (advfn.com)
(follow the link on the above page)
AIM has a predictable pattern of "cash burn" in a declining market. Depending upon the SAFE settings AIM will generate new buy orders sequentially as share prices decline. It can be helpful to know in advance about how deeply AIM is going to draw down one's cash reserves. This link is to the "Cash Burn" AIM page. It shows various end points based upon the starting cash reserve level. Here's a link to that page:
"" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer ugc" target="_blank">http://www.aim-users.com/cashburn.htm"; rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer ugc">A.I.M. Cash Burn Rate (archive.org)
Best wishes,
Old AIM Guy
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