(6/7) Wednesday's Pre-Market Stock Movers & News

Good morning traders and investors of the r/stocks sub! Welcome to the new trading day and a fresh start! Here are your pre-market stock movers & news on this Wednesday, June the 7th, 2023-


Stock futures slip after S&P 500 notches highest close since August: Live updates


Stocks futures slipped Wednesday aft

Elon Agrees that NVIDIA will dominate for a long time but not forever. Competition is coming...

https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1666479033817653249?s=20

It is well known that Amazon, AMD, Facebook, Google and even Tesla are developing TPUs specifically for training larger AI models. However Nvidia does have a software moat as most of the current development is done via CUDA. What do the others need to do to take away NVIDIAs dominance ?

subm
US Citizen looking to transfer LSE stock options

I'm leaving my current job and have stock options with the LSE. What company can handle these options for a US citizens? Edward Jones and other big companies have said they cannot handle these types of stock options. Any suggestions/advice is greatly appreciated.

submitted by /u/CharlieMan5
Is Twilio ($TWLO) the AI play no one is thinking about?

Twilio had two press releases yesterday. The first about a new partnership with Google and how AI will help power their Flex software and second how segment will provide provide the required data to create generative AI responses for customer service people, to create marketing campaigns, and also further help build customer profiles. Twilio is making moves fast into AI and their products all seem prone to benefit tremendously.

What are these conversion companies called?

Perhaps I am wrong - but I am seeing a unique buying opportunity in companies that specialize in converting commercial real estate into residential real estate, in the next several years. In fleshing out my thought process - I am trying to find the right term to research. Can anyone help? "Real estate conversions". "construction conversions"? Is there a specific term for these companies/investments? Thanks in advance!

If you were asked to foresee an upcoming Black Swan event, what potential event do you believe might occur in the future?

Hey fellow Redditors, if you were tasked with foreseeing an upcoming Black Swan event, what potential event do you believe might occur in the future? Black Swan events are those rare and unpredictable occurrences that have a significant impact on our lives. While it's challenging to accurately predict such events, it can be fascinating to explore various possibilities and share our imaginative insights. Curious to see if anyone will somehow guess it correctl

Historical data on market cap by sector between 2000-2023

Hello,

I am thinking of master's thesis ideas and one of them would require getting market cap of say, top 10 (top 15 or higher too would be nice) companies in each sector for each year (or monthly, quarterly, bi-annual) in the US and other countries like the UK. Does anyone have any idea where I could gather (or get the list of names at least) this info?

submitted by /u
Any suggestion for charting app/site for my usecase?

I don't daytrade and mostly hold ETFs but I buy and sell some stock here and there. I'm looking for an app that would:
1. Allow me to see 5-day charts per stock

  1. Allow me to chart 5-day charts of relative price against SP500

Pretty much every Android app I saw so far shows you a 1-day view by default and to see 5 days you need to open the chart and change the time frame. I would like the 5-day to be the default.

Major Banks Miss the Mark: Should We Trust Analyst Forecasts?

Deep analysis and sound reasoning are essential for making market predictions, but they don't guarantee accuracy. This reality became all the more evident when J.P. Morgan's forecast about the S&P 500 index testing the lows of the first half of 2022 didn't come to fruition. Similarly, Bank of America analysts, despite their thorough understanding of market conditions, also mi

Is this one big problem with the belief of a recession?

Okay so there are actually many problems with the belief of a recession including but not limited to: There are still too many open jobs, inflation is not getting under control with fed raising interest rates, etc. However the one big problem anyone should see that will make a recession hard is the fact that the wealthy are not investing like they normally do. The wealthy, who typically own 55% to 60% of the entire stock market are not investing as aggressively.


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