 As I want to welcome everybody back to the independent investor channel, we're going to jump in and do a review of the self-directed Roth IRA account number two. This is one of six major accounts that I have in the total comprehensive portfolio. The whole idea here is to tax protect dollars and wealth preserve them going forward. Those two aspects are really the root and the backbone of the independent investor channel. If we're not doing those two things, we're missing out over time. It's just that simple. So if you're really here in the niche of my message, it's to understand the power of a liberated dollar into the future, free of fees, and liberated to grow to potential of your dollars. Super, super important to understand that point and takeaway from my message. Without further ado, we'll jump in and we'll conduct the review. I'd like to welcome everybody into the Roth IRA number two. This is going to be the chronicle, the holdings in my account. This is the one that I've had. Oh, just going on about 15 or 16 years now anyway. And it's evolved over time. A lot of trading action in here, a lot of investing action. A lot of the everything of the above in this. It's really evolved over time. There's no doubt a few cornerstones in here that I insist upon owning just straight through Johnson and Johnson sticks out on the list here. But we're owning a big position here and Apple computers on the top end to take up some technology space. Next on the list is Abvy in the healthcare space. Alibaba out of discretionary here a 15 share position. I've already swung trade that couple times this year. I've been profitable every single time and thought it was a nice reentry here in Alibaba city group. I've owned for a long, long time. It's obviously increased in value. We had it in some real deep water here in the low 40s. Fought all the way back and it's nice to see that the company is up just to dab seven percent and with just over 51 shares. Salesforce, we just took an up in Salesforce of 10 shares. So we added again to that position. Glad to do so. I think over the next five years, this salesforce.com position is really going to become very valuable in the portfolio. Right below that, a space that gives me some exposure and online security is CrowdStrike, which I think is the best in breed, the best in what they do in the online security space, a 15 share position, relatively small, comparatively speaking, maybe a point and a half a percentage to the total overall portfolio value. But in the large, large growth space technology, it's a good holding technology is a very tricky, tricky sector for me to fill and CrowdStrike and Salesforce help fill out some of those areas, both in the cloud and in cloud cybersecurity, actually, so somewhat related there, but kind of the emergence of where things are going with technology. Right below that in the telecom space, we've got Google three shares, nice big position in the online search giant, really difficult to own discretionary without owning this fine name. Then right below it, we've got highly on holdings as well in the industrial space, just about 2200 shares there that we're working with IBM right below that in old tech has really kind of caught some fire, came off a nice quarter and has run up into a little bit more of a respectable territory. IBM has just been kind of a dog over the last five years, but I like it for the dividend and I like what they're doing here with their smart cloud technology and just acquiring red hat a couple years ago, it's a good acquisition for them with their legacy businesses and now their smart cloud technology or the hybrid cloud technology very good stuff. I'm glad to own IBM here, just shy of 4,026 shares, social capital, we need to get that through SPAC merger, we'll convert those warrants over and we'll hold 400 shares here in this portfolio and own them in both Roth's obviously those are the two spec positions, obviously bullish on both, getting punished in the short term but hopefully medium to the long term is really going to pay off long as I look at those as having some real long term growth prospects into the future and really look to embolden the portfolio with those two holdings with some nice capital growth prospects. J&J is the cornerstone, probably my absolute favorite, I mean it really is one of my absolute favorite stocks to own, almost a $10,000 bill, we've upped that position 20 more shares, easy justification to take up the lion's share of the healthcare sector, it is my largest of the healthcare holdings J&J, couldn't ask for a better performance, a company dividend pair at 3%, fantastic, we'll continue to own this and it's one that I look at, I monitor but I don't I don't mess with it, if I was going to do anything with Johnson & Johnson I would just continue to add to it going forward. Kimberly Clark came off a tough one, it's been up and down but nonetheless very very happy to own Kimberly Clark, we monitor for many many years insisted upon owning Procter & Gamble exclusively but we've split those two since then and to get myself some staples exposure, Kimberly Clark and right below it Coca-Cola right, so they complement each other, Pepsi and Coke, Kimberly Clark and Procter & Gamble I own all four, I don't discriminate between them, they're all great companies and their own right and might as well just own them all. McDonald's and the discretionary space has just done well, it came off a really just non-fire quarter just shy of 5,000, just over 20 shares, rather large positions, second largest holding a discretionary for me right behind Amazon, so this is a big one, up 17%, we're good with McDonald's, we'll just continue to own it, it's one of those top 10 companies, Dow Component that I think you can just buy and own forever, we're good to go, Merck another Dow Component here, Health Care's come off, this is one of the names that I've been rather disappointed on from a value proposition, it's undervalued, however just out of favor right now and that happens, we'll continue to sit on the dividend and we'll live to fight another day and look to the horizon for Merck, big oil here on the bottom of Royal Dutch Shell and ExxonMobil respectively, just oil can't get out of its own way, it's just absolutely terrible, the ExxonMobil position I will say we were down 50% in that, so to be down 15% right now and to have that ExxonMobil position looking at a $6500 bill just speaks on how persistent I've been, how patient I've been and how bullish I am on the big oil companies especially Chevron, Royal Dutch and Exxon, I have the biggest positions in these, I do round out the portfolio using M1 Finance and the Energy Space with Valero, Marathon Petroleum, Enbridge, some other names like that, Total Energy I'm very bullish on that I own in the other, Conoco Phillips, Phillip 66, so one of my favorite sectors it always has been, I don't know why, it punishes me to invest in it, however it does pay a nice dividend on all of them and you know you've got to fill out the energy sector, I'm kind of right on the money, I'm a little overweight in energy right now, basically because of that ExxonMobil, kind of running away from me a touch, which is totally fine, we'll continue to monitor that position and you know it's kind of fighting back some really good value there in big oil and then finally Raytheon Technology, they're the RTX position in industrials, relatively small, $2,500, 30 share position, love Raytheon, Raytheon's just won a huge contract with Lockheed Martin, Defense I really enjoy, I own Northrop Grumman in General Dynamics and the other portfolio industrial sector, I own Raytheon in the other portfolio too, one of the very rare opportunities that I take to double up on a position, I'm that bullish on it, Raytheon's one of my favorites, the only one that I don't own is L3 Harris that I cover but I don't currently own and Huntington Ingalls really being the five that I kind of cover in the defense space, I always keep my eye on it but I do have my faves and I'm invested in those respectively, okay, so with that that kind of concludes the review of the Roth IRA number two, hope you guys enjoyed the review, I don't roll these out very often but when I do this is an opportunity for you to jump into a real portfolio, this thing is alive and well, summer up summer down but this is investing 406 right here, this is in the trenches investing and glad to share it with you guys and the subscriber base and with that we'll kick you back and we'll conclude the video. All right guys so we've come out of the Roth IRA account number two, this is an account that kind of started it all for me, this was the account that was started with $1,500 just seems like yesterday, it's just amazing how wealth grows, it's amazing how if you mentally put yourself on a plan how you can get there, you really can, a lot of this is mental and you know it just takes that little bit of motivation to start and hopefully we can provide that little spark for you and sometimes that's what people need is just a little bit of inspiration to say you know what if this guy can do it I can do it too and you absolutely can, so if you appreciate the motivational angle to my message and to make sure and subscribe to the channel and leave your comments at the bottom, share the message with anybody out there that's looking for some introductory information on the stock market, what it means to be a self-directed investor what it means to be an empowered investor bring them on the channel we'd be glad to have them we're building a community of self-directed investors and all is welcome it's great the initiative is very very positive and your success is is really indicative of the channel's success so appreciate you guys tuning in to the message good luck in your investment future