Hey all! I have been investing for a little while and want to start to dive into options (buy/sell put/call).
I don't really understand what I have read online, and basically need a quick and simple breakdown of what combination to use and where. I understand this: The strike price is the price you agree to buy/sell at (if you want to) if the stock goes up and down. I just don't know when to use an option or how I could use it to m
We can debate if we are in a recession, nearing one or not. I believe there is a better chance than not of having one. My exact timeline would look something like this: Inflation still remains high and J Powell keeps raising rates every few months (anyone who thinks he is stopping at raising rates in the coming weeks needs to realize this is the same guy who said months before several rate increases that intseeest rate hikes were not even on the table). Prices o
Hi everyone,
I want to start by clarifying that this is not financial advice.
I believe that there is a semiconductor bubble that is anywhere between 2 to 3 quarters from popping.
A combination of growing recession, war, supply chain, and decreasing demand pressures exasperated by overvaluation in the chip space is a ticking time bomb.
Let's start by reviewing the decreasing demand for semiconductors...
My 14-year-old (12 at the time) was interested in investing. On my Father-in-law's advice we got a Stockpile account and bought a share or two of Microsoft stock. We largely forgot about it and apparently the emails were going into a spam folder of my Email account. I just saw an email saying that I have insufficient funds to pay my membership. It looks like they went membership awhile back and just started billing that against my son's stock. It was a f
I'm wondering why FDIC took control so ?soon
I understand FRC lost 100 billion in deposits
That they have written many mortgages and loans at low interest rate under current treasury yield
That any new debts they borrow from the government would result in higher interest rates
But given that rates will not be up for too low (?at most 2-3 years), why can't FRC just keep borrowing government money to offset this relatively small am
I am relatively new to Finance and I have been asking this question for a while now. My assumptions are, that they were able to loan money at a very low interest rate due to their AAA creditworthiness and used it to finance projects + to reduce it's tax since interest expenses are not getting taxed. Are my assumptions right and are there points that I am missing?
Im basically going activist on $PYPL but I have no chances because I am small.
They are sleeping at the wheel when they have some of the best assets.
They need to use their app as a marketplace and their data as advertising revenue.
I think the stock is decent value here if they execute.
Hello everyone. I built this website as a stock analysis tool. The tool includes key metrics that in my opinion, are helpful when assessing a stock. Additionally, I included calculated statics datas that I believe are not typically offered by other services in financial statement. Along with all the other data required to analyze a stock when using the discounted cash flow tool. Please have a look and let me know if
This week's casual valuation is Match Group. It is one of the companies that I've looked into many times and liked the business model and the financials, however, I find it quite expensive. Hence, disclaimer, I do not own any shares of Match Group (Ticker symbol: MTCH)
I hope you enjoy these weekly posts and feel free to add your take as well as agree/disagree with what is mentioned below.
The post is divided into the following sections:
I like to short or buy companies' stocks ahead of earnings. I use basic website analytics from Semrush to help me make my decision. I haven't see a website lose so much monthly traffic like Coinbase.com has. How could they possible raise guidance? Would a giant earnings miss be already priced in? It seems major tech companies (FB, Microsoft, Apple, Google) are making a comeback but 'miscellaneous' tech companies