I've been in the market a long time (+20 years) and plan to stay in for at least 20 years more. In my time, I have made some good choices and a few bad ones too. I'm not someone who can buy a lot at a time, but has monthly or quarterly made purchases. Some of my more risky stocks have sunk down to mere dollars each. Obviously my winners have far outpaced my losers, or I'd have stopped doing my own stock picks ages ago and in truth, I now mostly buy E
I am confused about the whole oligarchy mechanism. The big corporates donate to politicians/oligarchs so that they can get tax breaks etc, which is fine. Then these people do very little to curb inflation or pacify uncertain economic conditions. As a result, people keep on hoarding their savings and spending less and less, which will result in reduced revenues for corporations. Hence, I assume endless growth is not possible. So what is the end goal of rich peopl
Hello, I have been trading stocks and options for 3 years now and have built up my account to a modest size after incurring heavy losses buying calls and puts and just generally bad stock picks. I built my account up using a combined strategy of selling puts and swing trading MSFT, GOOG, and some other stable stocks. My question is regarding using large capital (say $10000) to make small, quick daily profits (tune of $100-150; +1-1.5%) only using safe stocks lik
Outside MSFT, who are some of the CEOs that you think are doing a good job (someone one can learn from if they were to follow) and who do you think you would send home if you could (to know what they are doing so as not to do the same).
Does not have to be a large company.
Q1 Earnings Season Started
Banks are posting better Q1FY22 results than Q4FY22 (VISA, JP Morgan e.g)
Tech is also posring higher QoQ earnings (MSFT, GOOGLE today). Their growth rate came bit lower in single digits but still QoQ growth in this time is surprising
Cherry on Top
VISA posted 10% increase in payment volume
I am still looking for when tech, banks report bad earnings or something is clearly hidden
If they have recently gained a lot of money because someone in their family died, and they want to invest the money wisely so that it can grow in value, how should they invest it? Assuming that they have absolutely no experience with investments or stocks or anything of that nature?
UAN: Fertilizer company (little under a billion market cap atm) selling ammonia-nitrogen enrichment products, excellent balance sheet and tax credit stream for its environmentally sound process improvements. Most definitely undervalued, and always quick to distribute its cash flows (in “special” dividends, not regular, for any options traders out there).
Cereals are a giffen good, so when food prices are up or budgets tight, you can expect grains to get
Can someone explain to me why the Palantir 1x ETP for Palantir is pending delisting, and what the consequence of this will be for me?
My investment is showing a loss and I'm concerned that the delisting of the EPT will force a sale of the shares at a loss, when I was hoping to hold the investment for years until there was a profit to be realised.
I had no idea that delisting was a possibility when I invested - so if that's the case then I
Here are the results.
Earnings: $2.45 per share, vs. $2.23 per share as expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv. Revenue: $52.86 billion, vs. $51.02 billion as expected by analysts, according to Refinitiv. Revenue is projected to be up 3% from a year earlier, which would mark a second straight quarter of growth below 10%. Before that, percentage expansion had been in double digits in every quarter since 2017.
I thought that the S&P 500 included all the US companies ordered by market cap (and taking only the top 500).
So why DataDog for example is not included? It has 20B market cap, which is much higher than some other companies in the S&P 500 (some are only 3B).
What are the rules?