‘I used to trade a lot. I used to be very, very active as a trader. Back in the 90s and early 2000s, there was a lot less money chasing more stocks. And now there’s a lot more money chasing fewer stocks. It’s harder to trade and be successful.’
That’s Mark Cuban, the billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks, talking with Bloomberg TV about why he doesn’t trade the stock market like he did back in the dot-com days.
“I stick to the companies I believe in,” Cuban explained, adding that he’s owned shares of Netflix since they were trading around $50. At last check, the stock was all the way up at $528, rising almost 8% in Wednesday’s session alone.
He also said he bought up chunks of Amazon between $500 and $700, and more recently added more at just under $2,000 a share. The stock’s at $3,385 now.
Cuban said he has some other scattered investments that he’s held on to over the year, but, for the most part, he’s no longer an active trader in the stock market.
“The Fed put is strong,” he said. “That Fed inflation of financial assets gives us a tailwind.”
The metaphorical Fed put refers to the notion that the Federal Reserve, with its steady flow of stimulus, is committed to taking action to keep asset prices moving higher.
This article originally appeared on MarketWatch.