Greetings r/stocks I hope this post finds you well!
This tool is still in development and requires tuning! At this point I think Chat-gpt 4.0 code interpreter has taken me as far as we can get without expanding the effort with additional minds.
https://github.com/NerdyBurner/SAStocks
This tool is meant to replicate this research from the university of Florida:
Taiwan Semiconductor is trading at a P/E ratio of 15. ASML, a similarly important semiconductor company who is also the global leader in its respective field commands a P/E of 37. Nvidia, and AMD also trade at far higher multiples despite being largely dependent on TSM for chips.
The reason TSM is so cheap compared to these other companies is because of the geopolitical risks associated with investing in a Taiwanese company. However, this risk is way over
Researching it has given me no results, even google had no search results on it. Im just curious as to why the stock price of biopharma company Acelyrin went from over $2.5k in October 1998 to $25 in January of 2001. That's an absolutely insane spread, and is there a possibility of it ever returning to it's price in the 90s?
So i’m 21 years old and currently have 100% of my roth in total us market fund (vtsax) and 100% of my brokerage in 10 equally weighted individual blue chips. Vtsax takes about 35% of my overall portfolio and the individual stocks take up the rest. My question is, is this too risky even at 21 years old? Should i look to add an etf to my account? I run into the problem of whenever i look at the weighting of top growth etfs i already own most of their top holdings.
The Russell 2000, a measure of small-cap US stocks in the Russell 3000 index, often outperforms the large-cap S&P 500 during times of economic turbulence, but over all it seems like RUT underperforms when compared to the SPY or QQQ.
For those who are bullish on Small Cap Stocks what are some of your favorite companies and why?
This is probably a dumb question, but my grandmother recently passed away and left each grandchild Apple stock. She purchased each of us one share back in 2011/2012 not entirely sure on the year, I’ve read that Apple has split twice since then, a 4 for 1 split and a 7 for 1 split. Does that mean each person will actually have 28 shares of apple?
Williams Sonoma Inc is trading at a PE of 7 compared to a historical PE closer to 15. It has no long term debt and its mostly in e-commerce now so doesn't have the drag of brick and mortar stores, has strong brands like Pottery Barn and has a consistent ROCE above 20 as well as a new area of growth in B2B sales where they do the whole stack from design to providing the furnishings. It's seen consistent top line revenue growth of 7% a year for the last te
I have a relative who swears an ETF just like an individual stock could go belly up and all money in it could be lost. I told them this is not possible unless every single stock in that ETF was to go to zero. The example was JEPI (which pays a nice dividend). I have money in JEPI to give me a check (pays monthly dividends). My relative told me JEPI could go to zero overnight. I told them no it cannot because it is made up of very many stocks. Who is wrong and wh
I have watched the stock market since the 1970s. Never in my life have I seen so many people think a recession was coming before. Yet this has gone on for about 9 months, and no recession. In fact, when recessions do come it is normally when people are optimistic. The below charts confirm my perception is correct, it terms of maximum recession fears. (Note for charts, symbols and links search for the title of this post and you will find the article that has them
My dad was fired from a company that he put $10,000 lf his money in worth of their stocks, after he was fired they wouldn't let him take the money back out (or sell it back idk how it exactly went down I was little). He thought after the crash it was all gone. But that company is still in business and is making millions a year. Would he still be entitled to any of the stocks still?