Is it because of valuation or he thinks it will be bought by a bigger company? He dodged the question in a recent CNBC interview. Paramount doesn’t seem to have great content, other than dividend what’s enticing for retail investors?
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Fundamental, quant, technical, or algo (sorry if i Missed one.) what makes that strategy so much more efficient than the others, or what makes one of those worse than the others? All opinions are open!
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E.g.
Sector > Industry
Industrials > Aerospace & Defense
(there are also sub-industries in some, such as within Media: Advertising, Broadcasting, Cable & Satellite, and Publishing.)
Can't find in TradingView from why I can tell and Fidelity's site is broken for this (e.g. Industry Details - U.
Hi,
Admittedly a rough couple of years with the market. Sitting down doing 2022 taxes and am confused about loss carryover. Say I had a 20k loss in 2021 and another 10k loss in 2022, would I need to use 3k from both years on the 2022 in order to carryover the losses to future years? Do the two carryover amounts then pool together at that point?
I already need to go back and refile 21 as I forgot to include the loss already, just want to make sure
Is there a solid way to see how much of a company is owned by institutional investors? I'm doing a bit of research in my field. News articles mention 70% or 80% owned by institutional investors. Does it even matter? Articles vary on date of publication and details provided. Is there a resource to see this figure for any listed stock, so I could compare them in the same year? Lastly, aren't most stocks held in some kind of fund?
I call my sector &q
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 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 April 17th, 2023.
Dow sheds more than 100 points Friday, but notches fourth straight positive week: Live updates -
I am curious what everyone’s opinion is on ticket RBA? Seems like they have been able to increase there profit over the last few years. Definitely seems like they have the auction market tied up in my area at least. Also seems like a good business also because during recessions people are selling and during the busy years people are also selling and buying equipment
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/14/wells-fargo-wfc-earnings-q1-2023.html
Wells Fargo reported growing profits Friday as the bank benefited from higher interest rates, despite building up loan loss reserves.
Here’s how the bank did compared with Refinitiv estimates:
Earnings per share: $1.23 per share GAAP versus 90 cents a year ago and $1.13 expected.
Rev
If I need to have $50-100k as a down payment available in 2 years, am I better off accumulating those savings in VTI and then selling (which is what I'm currently doing)? Or keeping it in a HYS with an APY of 3.5%?
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https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/14/citigroup-c-earnings-q1-2023.html
Citigroup reported rising net income and better-than-expected revenue for the first quarter, boosting its stock in premarket trading Friday.
Here is how Citigroup’s key metrics compared to expectations.
$4.6 billion in net income versus $4.3 billion in the same period last year
$21.45 billio