Hello everone, I got a position in a company called Shaw communications ticker SJR-B.TO. They are merging with Rogers Communications. Im trying to find out what will happen to my stocks, been searching but to no avail. Any information is appriciated.
Hey Everyone, I’m a graduate of May 22’ and just saved up enough to max out my Roth. It’s my first time with this much cash and I want it locked up for awhile at least till I buy a home 8-10 years. Looking to put 50% into 5 different ETF’s, 25% into 8-12 high dividend stocks, and the last 25% into 8-10 high growth stocks. Very new to this so any help is greatly appreciated!!

The biggest Bank short is now TD Bank with $3.7 Billion on the line. $TD is Canada's 2nd largest Bank.
Short sellers have concerns about:
• TD's exposure to Canada's housing slowdown, where variable-rate mortgages are common and consumer insolvencies are on the rise
• TD's 10% stake in Charles Schwab, which recently lost $47 billion in market value as it came under scrutiny over its unrealized bond losses
Insane revenue growth last year, in emerging markets (solar/batteries)
What am I missing here? why are the both prices so cheaply in comparison to its peers. Im mostly interest in $SPWR as they make their own batteries, but the more I research the company, the better it looks. Close to portability, lots of cash, and cheap market cap?
Can someone tell me why $SPWR is down so low? it feels to good to be true.
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On a technical-level, $NVDA is absolutely ridiculous. It's valuation is on-par with it's 2021 peak when the GPU shortage was at it's peak, and it's up almost 100% YTD with its inventories ballooning. Of course, trying to short a company just because it's over-valued or overbought is a fool's errand. You'll quickly find out that great stocks can simply keep going up for months on end. That's why you need a spark, or a narrative shi
Apologies for the low level question. If for example I had stocks over the course of 30 years, and the value put me in the green and in the red over time, is it ultimately the realized gains at the moment of selling the only number that really "matters"? In other words, if my portfolio was negative/red for 29 years and then for some unrealistic reason it spiked and it was up/green by x dollars when I sold, does the 29 years of red matter at that point?
Bloomberg Article:
A risk-on mood fueling this year’s equities rally is likely to falter, with headwinds from bank turbulence, an oil shock and slowing growth poised to send stocks back toward their 2022 lows, according to JPMorgan strategist Marko Kolanovic.
“The Fed indicated no intention to cut interest rates this year, yet risk assets are exhibiting an unprecedented rally, with European stocks trading near all-time highs and US stocks recoverin
I read a comment here that Apple makes more money from AirPods than Nvidia makes in total.
I couldn’t find the wearables revenue broken down by product but you can compare the total from this category as a whole.
What’s your reaction to this comparison?
History is repeating itself. In 1975, Kodak invented the digital camera. Kodak was scared that the digital camera would kill its business and so management shelved it hoping it would be a passing fad. Here comes Google's cannibalization problem. If Google releases and focuses on developing Bard, what happens to its search engine business (cash cow)? These challenges give rise to the innovator's dilemma. OpenAI has nothing to lose (at first it was a non-p
Hello everyone. I need advice :)
I'm 19y old from Bosnia. Currently, I'm not earning money, I recently started learning web development.
I'll be working as a server next three summers in Lake Placid, NY.
First summer, I'll be more bussing than serving and I plan to travel a bit after the summer, so, I'll have about 12000$ left for investing.
After next two summers, I will have about 25000$ after each summer for