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    Friday, July 6, 2018

    Disney's Business Model in One Amazing Picture Investing

    Disney's Business Model in One Amazing Picture Investing


    Disney's Business Model in One Amazing Picture

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 11:32 AM PDT

    Disney's Business Model in One Amazing Picture

    submitted by /u/Wild_Space
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    The US Tarrifs on China officially begins today, How does this movie end?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:43 PM PDT

    CNBC Reports, Trump launches the opening salvo in US trade war with China as tariffs take effect https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/06/trade-war-worries-us-china-tariffs-to-kick-in-on-friday.html

    China is all set to slap tarrifs tarrifs back about the same time. We might see more right away or over sometime.

    China has a trump card, which is the US. Bonds they have worth over a trillion.

    submitted by /u/vikkee57
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    U.S Tariffs and it's effect on Stock Market

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:20 PM PDT

    I am relatively new to investing, and with the recent tariffs going into place... what is going to happen to my investment portfolio (I use Schwab Intelligent Services). Will I see a drastic drop in value? What is the play here?

    submitted by /u/Positive_Ladder
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    Is there a massive flow chart out there that shows what companies own other companies?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 12:47 PM PDT

    As in, at the top are all the massive parent companies, or however else it would be organised.

    Anyone know of anything like this? I feel it would be very useful.

    submitted by /u/unpronounceable
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    MoviePass adds "peak pricing, drives cost of subscription service higher

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 11:25 AM PDT

    Defunct Stock Prices

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:17 PM PDT

    For backtesting purposes, I am looking for the stock prices of now defunct companies such as Allied Signal in 1995. In 1999 they bought Honeywell and adapted their name and ticker symbol and Allied Signal's ticker symbol (ALD) became defunct. I have checked Google Finance, Yahoo Finance, and so on. It seems like ALD is now an ETF that has nothing to do with Allied Signal and the stock prices of ALD before 1999 no longer exist.

    Am I looking in the wrong places? Would Bloomberg terminal have access to this data?

    History of Allied Signal: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AlliedSignal

    submitted by /u/alanctw
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    What does an Inversion mean for normal people?

    Posted: 06 Jul 2018 01:08 AM PDT

    I looked up yield inversions, read up on past instances, about the delay that seems to happen between inversion and market impact. But from someone that has only been active financially since AFTER the last market inversion, I'm not sure what the impact for normal people working a kinda shit job with a 401k. Like sure, I read that lots of people lost their everything, including their jobs, during 2001 and 2008/9, but when I asked a few people I know that lost 'everything' they were basically invested in single stock portfolios (ESPP) or did weird things to their 401k, or just sold everything at the bottom, or in the case of 2001 were either working for or investing in the dotcom bubble companies. Also assuming you aren't a Hedge Fund or work for one.

    TLDR: So what happens to normal people with "balanced" options in their 401k's or IRA's and aren't 100% invested in their own company stock (ESPP) during and after a yield curve inversion?

    submitted by /u/rhel_monk
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    The Importance of Covariance/Correlation Calculations (?)

    Posted: 06 Jul 2018 03:08 AM PDT

    I am a Master 'Finance' student that is heavily interested in investing. During my study, and the upcoming year, I learn(ed) much in detail how the stock market (in theory) works. I therefore created my own spreadsheet that automatically calculates everything I desire regarding my investments.

    I have also added calculations with Covariances/Correlations which we worked with extensively during courses like Intermediate Asset Pricing. I am however curious about the importance of them in 'real world investing'. Obviously they have some importance, investing in stocks that all have perfectly positive correlations with each other is not a wise thing to do (not that such a thing exists, just in theory).

    My question would be if it is worthwile to focus on these statistics to create a portfolio that fits my risk-apetite or if it would be a too short-sighted view of the stocks. In combination with variances, I would like to understand for myself whether certain stock drops is within the calculated variance, and thus no need to 'panic'.

    Thank you in advance.

    submitted by /u/Traditional_Yogurt
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    What are some investments that do well during an inverted or flat yield curve?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 06:07 PM PDT

    I'm thinking short term treasuries because they will eventually do well when the fed lowers rates.

    Sell stocks?

    submitted by /u/crudnick
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    Brace for a lost decade for U.S. stocks, warn Morningstar strategists

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:14 AM PDT

    The title of the article is from this link. I'm interested to hear thoughts on this.

    submitted by /u/tyler611
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    Books/resources about 'operations' side of investment process

    Posted: 06 Jul 2018 02:15 AM PDT

    Hey Guys,

    I would like to work in financial industry, probably in company that manages mutual / index funds, as business analyst. Therefore I would like to learn about operations aspects of investing process / day-to-day activities between front and back office.

    All of the books I have seen are describing investing process on high theoretical level. Is there anything that shows how in works in practice? For example trades life cycle - how they are executed on market (what platforms are used by traders), how they are then confirmed with broker and settled etc.

    Basically Im looking for something that would describe practical landscape of industry.

    Thanks, Dominic.

    submitted by /u/kryshakinho
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    Trailing stop loss Degiro

    Posted: 06 Jul 2018 01:29 AM PDT

    Has anyone found how to set a trailing stop order on Degiro?

    They have it listed in their FAQ but I can't find it anywhere. https://www.degiro.ie/helpcenter/faq/orders/1122

    submitted by /u/BitterProgress
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    What different methods do people use when trying to predict recession or market crashes and why those methods fail?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 07:48 AM PDT

    I recently found out that one method is using 10yr - 2yr Treasury Maturity Spreads , but I am interested to find other methods and preferably find ways to see through those, so I won't fall into thinking that I know how markets work. I know that it is possibly inpossible to predict recession or market crashes because there are so many variables, but that doesn't quench my thirst. When would you increase your weight on Cash?

    submitted by /u/mukavastinumb
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    Best ETF's to invest in with spare change

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 11:27 PM PDT

    I don't usually have a whole lot of money left over at the end of the month but what I do have I would like to invest for long-term growth. Are there any recommendations of ETF's to invest in for say around $20/month that I can just let sit and gain value? Thank you in advance for the guidance. Still learning about ETF's.

    submitted by /u/ATC_av8er
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    Investing in cheap vehicles?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:55 PM PDT

    I've just gotten myself my first job and I live near a poorer part of town. My dad used to buy cars for around $400 and sell them for over $1000 (sometimes without even having to work on them, just cleaning it), I'd like to start off doing the same kind of business. Any tips, Reddit?

    submitted by /u/Athlean_T
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    Trump says China could face more than $500 billion in US tariffs

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 03:17 PM PDT

    Anybody here know about simple iras??

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 06:11 PM PDT

    Having a hard time finding good info on simple iras. I have read 12,500 to be the max and FA is saying 18k I am 27 and have a business. Income is roughly 150-200. Any help would be greatly appreciated!

    submitted by /u/Heretolearn91
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    Trump launches the opening salvo in US trade war with China as tariffs take effect

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:51 PM PDT

    Trump launches the opening salvo in US trade war with China as tariffs take effect - http://cnbc.com/id/105313544

    submitted by /u/BTurnerwasmybitchAMA
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    What did you study? Where do you get all your knowledge about investing?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 09:49 PM PDT

    Broker is going to close my account if I move overseas. Any options?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 03:39 PM PDT

    Hello everyone,

    I am currently with Merrill they informed me they might have to boot me if I travel overseas for the duration I'm looking at.

    I am planning on spending some time in Asia just visiting and will be out of the country for 9-12 months. Are there any brokers that will accommodate me? I've seen previous posts about Schwab, does anyone recommend them or others?

    Thanks!

    submitted by /u/RelativeRow
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    What is the lowest ROI that you choose for an investment?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 01:44 PM PDT

    I have a few options at the 10-15% range and I'm wondering what your lower limit is.

    submitted by /u/snmgl
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    Why would a stock (TTNP) take a 20% nose-dive after getting approval on a drug, but holding off on the study?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 10:26 AM PDT

    https://www.biospace.com/article/titan-pharma-receives-go-ahead-with-parkinson-s-trial-but-chooses-to-hold-off/

    Basically, they got approval to continue studies on a parkinson's drug, but they are putting further studies on hold to focus on an opioid-blocking implant (which is already on the market). Given the state of the opioid crisis, this seems like a logical move for a small pharma company. Are investors just stupid? Or is there something in the bigger picture I'm missing? Also worth noting that the nose-dive is in comparison to the price before they got approval, not the spike during the 1-2 hrs after they received approval.

    submitted by /u/Smash_4dams
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    Is there any Interesting Fund combining dividend investing + options writing?

    Posted: 05 Jul 2018 11:01 AM PDT

    Hey!

    A lot of us know this dividend boosting strategy, when you combine dividend investing and selling options. I've seen some descriptions of short term and long term approach. It seems promising but I have one problem - for this to be really secure, I need much more capital then I have now. Even with my frugal life it's gonna take more than three years with my current income.

    That's why I'm thinking about Investing Fund. Do you know any? I think it should be good way to take advantage of this approach (IF, at least in theory, should be ruled by better and more exp investors than me) and what's more important - good benchmark to see if it works. If you have any experience, especially bad one, with this strategy I'd also be happy to hear it!

    Thanks for help

    Damian

    submitted by /u/DamianoINC
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