Bed Bath & Beyond, the store for seemingly everything in your home during the 1990s and 2000s, filed for bankruptcy on Sunday.
"Thank you to all of our loyal customers. We have made the difficult decision to begin winding down our operations," a statement at the top of the company's website said Sunday morning.
The author has no position in USLM. This is meant to spur discussion of an underdiscussed company.
What do they do?
US Lime is a limestone producer. They quarry and process lime for use in building roads and buildings. They also have a small natural gas royalty business, but it is a negligible part of the business.
Business
US Lme has customers throughout the Southwest and great plains. LImestone, being very heavy, is expensive to shi
I've been looking into a few companies that might present interesting value: covid overachievers.
Not the ZM and PTON of the world. Really good companies that had huge surges during covid, but have now overcorrected because of reverting to the mean. Here's a few ideas:
POOL
Everyone wanted a pool during covid. Apparently, not so much now. However, this has been a massive compounder over time, and it seems prudent to assume it will c
The article below says Tesla stock could soar to $2000, it’s been split 15 times and each share is now 165, resulting in each stock being around $2500 already. Are they saying split down stocks will soar to $2000 from $160
https://www.fool.com/investing/2023/04/21/1-unstoppable-stock-1127-upside-cathie-wood-ark/
Does anyone have enough financial knowledge to explain why Apple didn't acquired Globalstar?
There must be some reasons for Apple to team up with Globalstar and it looks like that it is a long lasting partnership (e.g. new satellites scheduled for 2025).
So why Apple didn't acquired Globalstar in the first place, it would have been a good deal (in 2020 Gsat had a marketcap of about 400-500 Mio $) or do you think that Apple wants to keep it
I’m 28 and I’ve been maxing out my IRA for the last 3 years or so. I’m investing pretty aggressively in this portfolio to maximize potential long term growth and given my circumstances I don’t intend to rebalance it to a more conservative spread until a bit later. Honestly I’m like 95% in the S&P500 and given how the market’s been over that time I continue to buy into it to level out my cost basis since I feel like while it could easily fall more, it’s still
So 4% of my portfolio is in CVS and now I’m down 16% on my investment. I’m at a point where I need to make a decision and perhaps cut losses.
What do people think about the long term prospects of the company?
I’m a big believer in the growth prospects for healthcare, CVS balance sheet looks good enough, and their moves into primary care sound great.
Why does it keep going down in value? What am I missing?
wow the amount of power that moody and the likes have...just when you think banks make money they just downgrade all of them, the banking crisis is either not over, or they're basically making it a self-fulfilling prophecy if they keep doing this.
im putting a list here,
- USB
- ZION
- BOH
- WAL
- FRB
- ASB Associated Banc-Corp
- CMA Comerica
- FHB First Hawaiian Inc
- Intrust Fi
The meme stock scheduled posts will now run weekly and post Saturday afternoon and won't be a sticky; you're probably seeing this because automod sent you here!
Full list of meme stocks here. This will be updated every once in a while.
Welcome traders who just can't help them selves discuss the same exact stock that's been discussed 100s of times a day. I get it, y
I'm probably too paranoid but...
Looking back to 2011 when we faced a similar crisis, stocks sold off more than 17% and the market was very volatile. Our credit rating was downgraded, things were a mess.
And turning back to today, we have a different Congress with very different politics at play, setting up a much larger potential problem. After looking at Mccarthy's election process, where it took 15 votes to elect as speaker because his p