I understand that the idea is to buy low and sell high. What if I own some stocks that are low, lower than I bought them for over a year ago. If I call my broker and tell him to sell, then he clicks his sell button. Here’s my question: will there always be a buyer or bot somewhere that will ALWAYS buy this stock, automatically and instantaneously, no matter how low it’s selling for? And, in this case, basis cost - sell price = capital loss? (Not including any co

I received an invite to use Bard and I started asking it questions about the EV stocks and what he thinks of them. At first he did not want to give out any numbers or price predictions but then it just went for it! Looks like Bard is a big fan of Lucid and Tesla, not so much of Rivian! When asked what data he used to predict these prices, he mentioned things like "financial statements, stock analysis reports, market research, and industry trends", what
2022 has been a roller coaster of a year for equities. What lessons have you guys learned during this downturn, and how has it changed the way you analyze the market, if at all?
For me, I've seen that cash can have a place in a portfolio during QT and rising interest rates, where as before this year, it was hard to justify. I was also always trying to lump sum over DCA. Due to if I didnt in late 2020-2021 the stock would often be up 20-100% in a month
There seem to be a lot of people holding cash/t-bills/money market funds expecting lower prices on the stock market where they can deploy their cash. How will this work out?
Some possible scenarios:
'1. The market does find lower levels, inflation comes down, the economy is doing okay, fed are being move doveish. People buy in and new bull market begins.
2 (a). The market finds lower levels, inflation comes down, the economy is doing oka
I see redditors call out one or the other fairly often. So I’m wondering VTI or VOO for long term hold? ~30-40 years in roth. I’ve also heard of VTI coupled with VXUS.
All these pretty much all the same thing? Or is there a better index fund I should be looking at?

(https://www.financebycwt.com/articles/analysis-of-bjs-wholesale-club-holdings-inc-stock)
"BJ's currently has a market cap of $10.067 billion. The company currently has a price/earnings ratio of 19.94. The company is growing. For the 12 months ending January 31, 2023, BJ's posted $19.31 billion which is a 15.89% increase year-over-year. BJ
since we're seeing risk free rates such as CD, short to mid t bills, savings and other risk free investments yielding anywhere from 4 to 5%+, then it really doesn't make much sense to be in equities unless if they yield at least 4-5% say in the next 1-2 yrs, based on the maturity rates of these short and mid term investments. The risk premium shifts, but considering possibly more volatility, it seem that we should expect more from equity returns in excha
If I have a long term capital loss will dividend income from a money market account offset this loss?
E.g. $10k long term capital lost
Makes $1k off "dividends" from a money market account.
So at the end of the year would I have 3k in capital losses recuperated (Standard yearly recouperation) + $1k in dividend income non taxed?

Apple sees its first insider sale in over 4 months with the Chief Operating Officer dumping $30M in stock this week.
https://twitter.com/TrendSpider/status/1639741445975445505?t=Clqu4jZS-zSdI1FoTFaF0w&s=19
Apple double miss and goes up. No guide. MSFT guide down and goes up.
Clear exit. Apple might hit 168 before dumping, be sure th

The Bank of Spain warns about the impact of the deterioration of health after Covid on the economy
A prolongation of the health problem would harm productivity and could have an impact on the stock of productive capital.
When in these days the third anniversary of the state of alarm is commemorated back in 2020, which set the starting point to deal with the health pandemic generated by Covid-19, some of its side effects such as the inc