Wall Street Week Ahead for the trading week beginning May 22nd, 2023

Good Friday evening to all of you here on r/stocks! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week ahead. :)

Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning May 22nd, 2023.

Stocks end Friday lower as GOP negotiators halt debt ceiling talks, S&P 500 notches best week since March: Live updates -

Which Chip Stocks to Buy?

Hey everyone, recently I’ve been observing the chip sector of the stock market and it’s become difficult to determine which stock would be one of the better investments. I have some pros and cons for some of the big names, but if you guys know of any chip stocks that stand out, leave a comment on the post because I’m curious of what you guys have to say about the whole industry.

TSMC - high market cap, very successful company but high geopolitical tensio

Meta planning to release a text-based app that will compete with Twitter, as soon as June

(Reuters) - Meta Platforms' Instagram is planning to release a text-based app that will compete with Twitter and may debut as soon as June, Bloomberg News reported on Friday, citing people familiar with the matter.

The Facebook parent is testing the product with influencers and some creators, according to the report.

The company did not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment.

Meta has been contacting talent agencies and cel

Options - how to profit?

Ive been reading extensively about options since January, just to learn how they work.

Tell me if I have this down correctly. Profit/value is mainly controlled by three things:

  1. Delta (change in premium price due to change in underlying share price)
  2. IV (volatility)
  3. Theta (time decay)

For #1, its about predicting the correct direction of price movement.

For #2, volatile stocks (which have the potential f

Foot Locker’s 28% plunge, guidance cut may signal trouble ahead for other retailers

stock plummeted nearly 28% Friday after a worse-than-expected consumer slowdown led to a double-digit sales drop, prompting the company to slash its outlook just two months after introducing it.

Earnings per share: 70 cents adjusted vs. 81 cents expected

Revenue: $1.93 billion vs. $1.99 billion expected

submitted by /u/Rockefeller07
What happened? FRC>FRCB

Does anyone know why FRC what changed to FRCB aside from the obvious that they went under and Chase took them over? I 100% don't think it's a good investment, I'm curious to know if it's still actually associated with the bank or is it just a graveyard for the stock that was? Let's say FRC had a crazy good quarterly earnings in the future, what would have more of a jump FRCB or Chase? Again, not thinking of investing. Just curious!

Why Charles Schwab has so much more options for options treading?

Hi, I have been trading options on Robinhood, but with Charles Schwab, I can't find the breakeven price.

I'm sharing a representative image. (I am NOT planning to LUCID) Can you explain how we can calculate the breakeven price for Charles Schwab?

Robinhood example

https://ibb.co/6vhdR95

Charles Schwab

https://ibb.co/y034xSN

Question Regarding Non-Cumulative Dividends

I've been loading up on $PACWP. Obviously it's risky, but I prefer it (no pun intended) to the common shares at this time, given that preferred shares are higher on the liquidation table, and the upside is still quite attractive.

I've also been looking into $WAL-A. However, the yield is much lower, so I was only going to buy if the dividends were cumulative. They're not. Nor are PacWest's preferred shares, but the yield is high enough

Carbon Neutral Commodity Futures Index ETF

I thought this could be an interesting buy for me at $25 a share. Went live today, does anyone have any knowledge about this type of ETF? Ticker is AMPD

https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230519005231/en/First-Ever-Carbon-Neutral-Commodity-Futures-Index-ETF-NYSE-AMPD-

$AAPL - more room to grow?

Looking at the five year chart, it looks like AAPL is almost back to all time high at $179.45 on Dec 10, 2021.

During the past two years, I don’t see Apple releasing any innovative product. Yet the economic situation and consumer spending today is obviously worse than 2021.

What do y’all think about $AAPL at $175 today? Is there more room for $AAPL to grow or is it time to trim down some positions?

submitted by &#32

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