Stocks - What’s a good alternative to Google Finance? |
- What’s a good alternative to Google Finance?
- What's the best blog/blog about stocks market?
- Buy tech on the dip or move to the financial sector?
- Nvidia and Micron are on sale
- Good financial sector stocks?
- Exhibit EA: Don't buy the dip when the stock is trading right on top of a gap
- MU come back?
- Intel Stock and tech bubble in general
- $KRO $APTS Should I keep holding?
- Delphi
- CREDIT SUISSE: Tax reform has sent tech stocks plummeting, and now it's time to buy
- Any hope for Under Armor to recover?
- Good Stock API?
- $DPW?
- When should I sell the stock of a company that's been bought out?
- Thoughts on Adidas
- What should I pick? Appreciated
- Help me diversify my holdings!
- Stocks or Options? apx. 3 year Investment (Small Capital)
- Thoughts on Netflix long term?
- Is this a sign of a partial deflation of a bubble?
- Thoughts on WWE?
- What's a good US banking ETF?
- Question about Disney Fox Deal
What’s a good alternative to Google Finance? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 04:56 AM PST The new google finance is horrible. The main things I miss are the fact that a stock's dividend payment dates aren't labeled on its chart, that you can't maneuver the date range on a stock's chart to whatever you want, and the fact that you aren't told what a stock's percentage increase is in the date range you're looking at. The new portfolio feature is also inferior to what it was – it doesn't seem that you can sort the order of the stocks in your portfolio. I've tried yahoo finance but don't like it – its charts seem as bad or even worse than google finance's. Any good alternatives out there? If there are any finance sites out there that have stocks' earnings dates labeled on their charts that'd be a HUGE plus. Thanks. [link] [comments] |
What's the best blog/blog about stocks market? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 04:05 AM PST I'm looking around for some good and informed opinion but all I find it's really low level analysis or "give me a lot of cash for tips". Please, suggest me a good blog or a value youtube channel to pass my days :) [link] [comments] |
Buy tech on the dip or move to the financial sector? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 06:02 AM PST What do you guys think? My portfolio is 90% tech with 10% overall market ETF. I don't want to sell tech either, rather, I'd like to add more to my portfolio in either tech dip or financial etf Learning what diversification means in real life now. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 05:07 AM PST Both trading significantly below recent highs, with 0 changes to fundamentals. MU reports earnings in 2 weeks and expecting a blowout quarter, Nvidia continues to lead the industry in AI. Just do your DD and see both at support levels right now. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 09:37 AM PST Any good stocks recommendation in the financial sector that's under $30 with potential growth? [link] [comments] |
Exhibit EA: Don't buy the dip when the stock is trading right on top of a gap Posted: 04 Dec 2017 11:03 PM PST With all the things going on lately, EA was just one of the different stocks going through pullbacks. Not too many were considering buying it, but nonetheless I thought it's a good tip or reminder of when not to buy the dip. The trades you don't take impact your ROI just as much as the trades you go for. At the end of last week it was hanging around in the 105-106 area and the idea would've been to go long and hit 115-116. Someone made a thread asking if it was a good idea to buy. At the time it was at the 200MA. So let's say the profit target is 115-116. The second part of this is that you have to look at the risk, and to do that, you have to look at the downside potential. It was sitting on top of a gap from 105-96. The intuition is that there was no trading in this area, there's no existing support or resistance zone for the price to grind through. So the action will be very fast. They can drop 5%+ in a few minutes or an hour when normally it'd take more than a week, just like any microcap stock. The drop in this case is not too bad, only a <5% loss from 105. But the risk/reward could easily have been 1:1 in this case. If you're risking the same amount as money as you hope to win, in the long run you'll only be breakeven. This concept is also important when you're in a stock that closes a gap upward. Put yourself into the heads of the bagholders who've been trapped at that level for months or even years. Think of how long they've been underwater seeing red week after week. They are desperate to unload into you as the stock trades higher into the gap. So have this as part of your exit plan. This is a big trait of biotechs because they go through failed trials, offerings, private placements, and get knocked down to lower price ranges. They create resistance levels right above gaps that prevent them from being multi-day runners. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 08:21 AM PST MU is up almost 5% could this be the start of a great comeback? [link] [comments] |
Intel Stock and tech bubble in general Posted: 05 Dec 2017 09:41 AM PST I recently bought Intel at about $44.50 a share because I guessed it had bottomed out too soon. I am 99% sure that technology will continue to be the future and that there is money to be made in it but I am not sure if I should hold Intel. This tax reform looks like it is going to hurt big time. Can any other Intel people tell me what they plan on doing? [link] [comments] |
$KRO $APTS Should I keep holding? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 08:59 AM PST Who else owns shares? Hold or sell? Tired of it just slowly declining. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 07:04 AM PST Can anyone please explain to me why delphi dropped from $100ish to $50? [link] [comments] |
CREDIT SUISSE: Tax reform has sent tech stocks plummeting, and now it's time to buy Posted: 05 Dec 2017 02:09 PM PST The article: http://markets.businessinsider.com/news/stocks/tax-reform-its-time-to-buy-tech-stocks-cedit-suisse-2017-12-1010367008 What dips have you guys been buying? [link] [comments] |
Any hope for Under Armor to recover? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 07:37 AM PST They have taken a plunge but can they realistically make a come back and stay around long term without being squashed by larger competitors like Nike? What can Under Armor do that they cant? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 12:55 PM PST Hey r/Stocks! I am developing an Android application for a course that polls users on whether the following five tech stocks will go bullish or bearish each day compared to the day before: AMZN AAPL FB GOOGL MSFT I am wondering if anybody knows a good current stock price pulling api that I can utilize to display the current stock price in as real time as possible. I want to display the five stocks in something called a recyclerview following one another with the company name, company logo, stock stymbol, and current price. At the moment, I am thinking about using Alpha Vantage, but if there is any API that can let me just select those five stocks and give me the data I need in JSON format, I would probably rather use that. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 06:57 AM PST |
When should I sell the stock of a company that's been bought out? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 12:19 PM PST Specifically, I have stock in Regal Entertainment Group (RGL) and they are being bought by Cineworld for $23 a share. It's trading at about $22.60. I'm relatively new to the market, so what usually happens in a situation like this? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 11:37 AM PST What are people's thoughts on Adidas currently? Have the world cup upcoming, however, Adidas tanked massively prior to/ during the last world cup in 2014. Any correlation between the two? [link] [comments] |
What should I pick? Appreciated Posted: 05 Dec 2017 02:52 AM PST I'm living in eastern Europe. Should I try with US pennystocks or stick to my local FOREX brokerage. I'm beginner. The bureaucracy for a non-US citizen with U.S brokerages is what I'm afraid of. [link] [comments] |
Help me diversify my holdings! Posted: 04 Dec 2017 09:21 PM PST Hey r/stocks, The recent tech correction has been a wake-up call that I'm too heavy in tech/fintech. I recently transferred over an extra 5k into RH to diversify and invest more of my savings. I'm currently a university student and my timeline is around 1-3 years depending on how much money I need to take out at a time to pay off some small loans during school/after I graduate. Current holdings:(Total w/ 5k transferring by Friday is ~14k)
I really want to get more exposure to different sectors and also an additional ETF or two for safety and better diversification. I'm thinking of dumping around 2-2.5k into either $VTI/$VOO and then the rest into a mix of $BRK.B/something else. Do you guys have any stock recommendations? Maybe retail like $COST/$HD? [link] [comments] |
Stocks or Options? apx. 3 year Investment (Small Capital) Posted: 05 Dec 2017 05:13 AM PST I was wondering, if you thought a stock would go very high in price, withing the next 2 - 3 years and you wanted to invest, how would you go about it? Specially if you dont have much money to invest Would you buy the stock every month? Or buy options expiring at the end of those years? which is better and why? [link] [comments] |
Thoughts on Netflix long term? Posted: 05 Dec 2017 07:09 AM PST I'm planning on holding for over a year and looking for a few things stocks to buy. When I started a year ago I was debating on buying into Netflix but ended up going with Activision and Amazon instead. Both ended up doing really well so by no means am I regretful that I didn't get into Netflix at the time, but now that I have more money to start investing with I'm beginning to think I may be too late on Netflix now. [link] [comments] |
Is this a sign of a partial deflation of a bubble? Posted: 04 Dec 2017 08:27 PM PST It is a given that the market has been pumped up by an era of easy money with low interest rates and exceptional monetary accommodation by the Fed and Treasury. Based on valuation, it looks like the entire market has been blown up like a bunch of balloons. The tech balloon is now deflating like a whoopie cushion under a dump truck. That money won't stay on the sidelines. It will move into another segment that is already inflated but perhaps not as distended as tech. Please post your thoughts on whether this scenario is probable and if so, what sector(s) will benefit the most. Rational posts with logic and numbers are preferred over "I believe". My thought is that more money will flow into "safe harbor" investments that have solid earnings and long term growth potential. Few companies fit this profile. Retail has a few such as Lowes, Dollar Tree, and Costco. Financials appear to be the overwhelming favorites at this time with C, BB&T, AXP, etc as examples. Disclosure: I am long Costco. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 09:45 AM PST From the outside looking in, it would seem that WWE is a dying brand. However, with the introduction of the WWE Network (9.99 monthly service) two years ago and their willingness to expand into other countries (India and UK), it seems they are on a good path to be profitable for the next few years? Their growth the past two years has seemed to reflect that, but I'm no expert and just wanted to get opinions on if this is a good long-term investment. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 05 Dec 2017 05:21 AM PST The tech blood bath is really pushing me to diversify. Given the tax break is helping the financial sector the most. What are some good ETFs to consider? I could just do individual stocks but ETF is probably safer. [link] [comments] |
Question about Disney Fox Deal Posted: 05 Dec 2017 08:42 AM PST I'm not too familiar with trading and was curious about what happens to Fox shares with the Disney deal in place. What if someone owns 100 shares of Fox right now and they announced a sale for $60bn next week? Do the stocks get converted to cash automatically in your portfolio? Disney stock? How would the final price be calculated for the shareholders? This may sound like a really dumb question but I'm honestly confused about the whole thing. Thank you for any help. [link] [comments] |
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