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    Saturday, January 6, 2018

    Stock Market - It's almost that time again! Most anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning January 8th, 2018

    Stock Market - It's almost that time again! Most anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning January 8th, 2018


    It's almost that time again! Most anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning January 8th, 2018

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 08:07 AM PST

    Dow 30,000 in 2018 anyone?

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 09:18 AM PST

    JD is the best performing stock in the Nasdaq 100 to start the year. Any thoughts?

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 09:56 AM PST

    Tech was really strong the 1st week of 2018 and JD was the best performing stock in Nasdaq.
    https://share.koyfin.com/share/d2ed9d27

    It's the AMZN of China with its own distribution network (unlike BABA). Also one of the few tech charts that's not trading at a high and has been consolidating for the past 6 months.

    submitted by /u/shishkarob3
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    Hypothetical, what are your plans if Trump were to be removed from office (i.e. impeached, mentally unable to continue, etc)

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 11:13 AM PST

    I personally plan to sell everything the moment it appears there is no coming back for Trump as past such changes in leadership have all lead to massive market downturns thanks to the added instability. I will then be buying back in hopefully around 15-20% lower. I think this is the right strategy as the worst that happens is I lose $60-$70 in commissions whereas if it goes down even 10%, I'll be getting huge bargains. Let me know what you guys think, what will you do if Trump goes down?

    submitted by /u/_Ubuntu_
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    $1000 to invest what would you do?

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 02:42 PM PST

    You have $1000 to invest in the stock market. How would you go about in doubling the $1000 within a week?

    submitted by /u/twintowersrubble
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    Important Survey for a research project

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 09:53 AM PST

    Hello Redditors, please help me out to collect some data for a research project that needs to be submitted soon.

    https://goo.gl/forms/xWmqgqCCIxTeUy2o1

    submitted by /u/sauravkoli
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    Looking to diversify. Currently own mostly BABA with the rest of my money in vanguard funds. What industries should I look to to diversify. Healthcare? Possibly artificial intelligence?

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 07:17 AM PST

    Volume By Time indicators

    Posted: 05 Jan 2018 11:31 PM PST

    Hi All,

    I was wondering if anyone has used the Hawkeye Volume indicator or the Better Volume Indicator on there charts?

    What benefits do you see compared to using the standard Volume by time indicator ?

    Thanks

    submitted by /u/Ssasus
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    Question about how a company’s stock is valued on the balance sheet

    Posted: 06 Jan 2018 06:37 AM PST

    When a company's stock is listed in the shareholder's equity section of the balance sheet, how is the stock valued? I know that there may be more than one line item listing the company's stock value (par value / additional paid in capital / surplus capital), but it seems like mathematically the value couldn't possibly be recorded as (par value + additional paid in capital) * # of shares outstanding because the result would equal a company's market capitalization meaning that the value of a company's shareholder's equity would be greater than its market cap which is basically never the case. Say a company's market cap was $100 billion (the price of its stock was $100 and the company has 1 billion shares outstanding), why wouldn't $100 billion be listed on the par value + APIC portion of the balance sheet. I mean, I understand why it isn't – I understand why it wouldn't make sense (see above) but I don't understand how the stock would actually be recorded. Thanks.

    EDIT: According to Apple's balance sheet, Apple has $35.867 billion common stock (and $0 APIC which means that the company just lumps every stock valuation together into one line item?) and $5.252 billion shares outstanding giving each share a value of less that $7 - does anyone know how this number is calculated?

    submitted by /u/traderlmd
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