Stocks - Insider buying at New Age Beverage (NBEV) |
- Insider buying at New Age Beverage (NBEV)
- T-Mobile & Sprint Merger
- Sprint/T-Mobile merger
- $INTC, $AMD, $TSM: What's the best semiconductor stock?
- Custom Indicator Build
- If you have 20000$, which company stocks will you invest in?
- Alphabet is not Facebook
Insider buying at New Age Beverage (NBEV) Posted: 29 Apr 2018 07:10 AM PDT Independent director Timothy Haas purchased 100,000 NBEV stock for $176,000 on Wednesday. It was his second purchase in 12 months having also bought 85,000 stock last August. Mr Haas has been a director since January 2017 and, having previously served as Group President of Coca-Cola Latin America, is pretty familiar with the drinks business. NBEV was created in 2016 and produces healthy beverages such as Búcha Live Kombucha, XingTea, Coco-Libre, and Marley. In the short time since its inception it has become the 8th largest healthy beverage company. Full year 2017 results saw revenues increase by over 100% while adjusted EBITDA increased to $5.2 million from $0.2 million. Brent Willis, CEO, commented, "2017 results were excellent, but we know we have so much more potential and opportunity." He hasnt taken long to deliver on this with the announcement a week later on April 24th that the company would be rolling out its distribution points across 83,996 points of distribution in 30,060 stores nationally in a move that is expected to boost revenue by $2 million per month or $24 million per year. That move alone would take the revenue to $76 million compared to the stocks valuation of $73 million on Fridays close. For a company that is growing by 100% that looks cheap to me. Mr Haas certainly seems to think so. This post is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security or derivative. Stocks are not suitable for all investors. Please do your own research. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 29 Apr 2018 11:30 AM PDT News just broke in the past hour or so that T-Mobile and Sprint have agreed to merge with one another. The telecommunications sector has been hurting lately and Sprint seemed in pretty rough shape. After years of talks, it looks like to finally happening. Their stated goal is expanding the company and implementing a true 5G network in the near future. Will be interesting to see how this all plays out with the 3rd and 4th largest companies within the sector now combining forces. Thought we could include any discussion within this thread for the meanwhile. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 29 Apr 2018 01:38 PM PDT How does this affect their stock prices and what are y'alls thoughts on the best way to make a buck out of this deal? Throw money at Sprint or T-Mobile stock? Or stay far away? [link] [comments] |
$INTC, $AMD, $TSM: What's the best semiconductor stock? Posted: 29 Apr 2018 09:20 AM PDT I currently have 2k in Intel which is up 20% from when I bought it. Should I hold it or sell and buy $AMD or $TSM [link] [comments] |
Posted: 29 Apr 2018 11:17 AM PDT There's a data set I'm interested in seeing but I don't know how to go about building it out (much less being able to screen with it). Maybe you've seen this equation before? Looking for the intersections of two lines below: Drawn Line One: [( "A" Given Day Range - "B" Days since highest high) / A] x 100 Drawn Line Two: [( "A" Given Day Range - "B" Days since lowest low) / A] x 100 [link] [comments] |
If you have 20000$, which company stocks will you invest in? Posted: 29 Apr 2018 03:41 AM PDT If you have 20000$, which company stocks will you invest in? My interest company are below. Apple Google Amazon Facebook Netflix Nvidia Could you recommend to me about best portfolio? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Apr 2018 02:18 PM PDT There's a lot to like about Alphabet (GOOG) with its dominance of online search and a very reasonable valuation even before you take out the money it blows on moon shots. One worry is that the recent scandal surrounding data privacy could spread from Facebook and engulf it. However Stifel analyst Scott Devitt made the interesting comment that Alphabet is not like Facebook in that its data collection is "private and led by consumer intent." while Facebooks collection is "public and without consumer intent," This post is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security or derivative. Stocks are not suitable for all investors. Please do your own research. [link] [comments] |
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