It's still under the category of "speculation" by the way I categorize things.
By the way, I was thinking again about what you wrote:
I congratulated you on a job well done. And I mean that sincerely. You may have that special skill of speculating. You may prefer to call it "correctly assessing situations based on careful research" instead, but whatever you want to call it, some people
can do it. They can make a lot of money and have whole careers honing and utilizing this skill. You may be one of those people.
Here's the bigger picture, though: most of us
can't. I should know; I'm one of them.

We may get lucky from time to time, but then our amateurism and jittery psychology will wipe out many of those gains, and furthermore we will also inevitably be
unlucky from time to time. In trying to beat the market, we will end up doing far worse than we would have with a diversified portfolio -- we may even lose a significant portion of our money, maybe even all of it (especially if we decide to play around with leverage or do complex, fancy things we don't understand). So even if you are one of those few insightful masters who has succeeded in predicting the future and thus beating the market, it is still horrible, horrible advice to encourage someone to try to follow in your footsteps.
999 times out of 1000 (probably more) a man will be better off with a diversified portfolio. That way, he can preserve his wealth and even get to watch it slowly but surely grow.
I also do not agree with your advice to not be "much in the market" after age 45. That's a lot of years, even decades, to be "sitting on" your money and missing out on any growth. With a diversified portfolio that includes non-stock-market assets, such as Harry Browne's
Permanent Portfolio, many of the wild swings of the stock market can be avoided, smoothed out. Observe: