Ford: Cutting unknown number of salaried positions, credit rating downgraded Investing |
- Ford: Cutting unknown number of salaried positions, credit rating downgraded
- If billions of dollars moved from equities to bonds the past few days, why haven't the bond market etf's gone up?
- Favorite ETFs?
- Book recommendations to actually understand investing, not "get rich quick" type books?
- If you're part of a companies purchasing team and another company is in dire need of investment. Is it insider trading?
- Do you think Amazon has a reputation similar to Walmart in that people will always shop there?
- FZROX versus VTI
- ETF recommendations for investor in mid 20s
- Stright from WSB comments
- Common stocks and uncommon profits (Fisher) in 2018
- BABA, IQ, and YY
- Websites to find lists of slightly new stocks for learning? (1 to 2 years since IPO)
- Vanguard is popular in USA, what's the equivalent in China?
- How is tesla structurally unprofitable?
- Is there a simple way (i.e. Gmail calendar integration) to integrate company/stock earnings calendar dates into my personal calendar automatically?
- anyone doing anything fun for the weekend
- Question about how bonds work from the issuer's perspective (esp municipal debt)
- October 8th is shaping up to be an interesting day: Bond Market Closed, Equities Market Open, Kavanaugh Confirmed, inflation preasures appearing, VIX was up 50% last week, and what else?
- Analyzing Quarterly Reports (10-Qs)
- Robinhood Web App
- Passive investor here, will I be missing anything by switching from TD Ameritrade to a roboadvisor? Thoughts on various options?
- How are stocks taxed when you sell?
- Daily advice thread. All questions about your personal situation should be asked here
Ford: Cutting unknown number of salaried positions, credit rating downgraded Posted: 06 Oct 2018 10:27 PM PDT |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 08:14 AM PDT I understand that as interest rates go up then bond price goes down. However, I keep hearing of huge outflows to bonds in reaction to the job report, shouldn't that be driving bond prices up? Yet most total bond market etf's are down for the day. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 01:50 PM PDT Are there any ETFs that you just can't buy enough of? What makes those funds awesome to you? [link] [comments] |
Book recommendations to actually understand investing, not "get rich quick" type books? Posted: 06 Oct 2018 05:54 AM PDT I want some recommendations on books that give a good overview on investing in general. I don't want a book that tries to teach you to make money, but rather understand how it works and hopefully the mechanisms behind it. If you could recommend one that gives a general overview on economics as well that'd be great. Thanks! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 05:03 PM PDT If you're part of a big company's purchasing team on the precipice of making a contract with a smaller company on the verge of bankruptcy. But the company on the verge of bankruptcy is in dire need of investment for new machinery the bigger company refuses to make. If they buy these new machines the bigger company will sign a purchasing agreement with them causing their profits to soar. Would it be insider trading if you make a personal investment in the smaller company for the purchase of new machinery? You do know if the contract with a bigger company will be successful if the new machinery is purchased, but also all other avenues of investment is blocked off for the smaller company. Also you control how much the bigger company purchases parts for from the smaller company. [link] [comments] |
Do you think Amazon has a reputation similar to Walmart in that people will always shop there? Posted: 06 Oct 2018 09:42 AM PDT Let's say in the next recession, do you believe people will keep on buying things from amazon based off of convenience? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 06:42 PM PDT Two solid index funds, the former is a 0% expense-ratio mutual fund, the latter is a .04% expense-ratio exchange traded fund. FZROX is traded exclusively through Fidelity. I'm curious how this community values these two funds side by side. [link] [comments] |
ETF recommendations for investor in mid 20s Posted: 07 Oct 2018 03:53 AM PDT Hello r/investing, I'm in my late 20s, only discovered ETFs recently as I'm new to investing. I have around $20,000 to invest and recently payed off debt. I understand general advice is to look for higher growth/risk options at earlier ages. I aim to split up my money into some ETFs and leave around $2,000 (10%) for stocks. I am thinking: 30% VTI, then split VGIAX, BOTZ/ROBO, VGT, QQQ, VTS. Would like any recommendations if possible/feedback, am I putting too many eggs in one basket? Or am I doing this completely wrong? Thanks. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 06:30 PM PDT This was proposed as a way to secure a loan. "Save up your money or sell your car or something, buy a CD through the bank at like 1.5%, borrow against that with a secured loan around 3% interest, take that money and invest it in something that nets 7% or better with dividends and roll over the difference, keep snowballing it every couple of years until you don't have to work anymore. Be sure that your investment beats your loan interest rate by at least twice the inflation rate or you're wasting your time." I'm Just curious why you wouldn't just use the original money from selling the car, why go through the trouble of a cd and borrowing against it. when you could just use the original cash. what's the advantage the cd being protected in bankruptcy? seriously just want to know why you'd do that. [link] [comments] |
Common stocks and uncommon profits (Fisher) in 2018 Posted: 07 Oct 2018 02:48 AM PDT How does one, in our times, investigate a company with the thoroughness described in this book? It seems easier given modern communication and the internet but at the same time where do you start from after reading earnings reports, sec filings and other documents found online? Thanks [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 12:05 PM PDT I'm down about 15% 35% and 30% on these stocks. I'm sure many people are in the same boat and unsure what to do with any of their Chinese stocks. With that being said I truly believe that these stocks will rise again. Even if china goes into a recession the top stocks will be fine. I will hold these for the long term. Minimum 5 years... I hope I will get significant gains in the long run. My favorite out of these are still BABA without a doubt. Who else is holding on to these stocks and what are your thoughts on them? [link] [comments] |
Websites to find lists of slightly new stocks for learning? (1 to 2 years since IPO) Posted: 07 Oct 2018 02:22 AM PDT Hello. So I wanna get into the world of investing. Right now I'm a truck driver, saving my money to buy my own truck and make more money, and grow from there, so I dont have a lot of money to play around with. With that being said, I'm trying to take this time to learn all I can and experiment with trading and investing. I'm currently taking a free online course on investing and I'm learning right now about financial statements and financial ratios and stuff to interpret a good investment or not. I'm looking for a good website resource to find stocks that may look interesting to me so I can practice doing financial analysis of them. I just can't seem to find what I'm looking for. Everything I'm seeing is geared to the more well known stocks. And yes I could very well practice on well known stocks but it just seems more interesting to me to find a company on the come up of sorts to analize. Any good resources I can use to accomplish this? [link] [comments] |
Vanguard is popular in USA, what's the equivalent in China? Posted: 06 Oct 2018 02:30 PM PDT I have quite a bit of RMB in Alipay and would like two things:
Please let me know, thanks! [link] [comments] |
How is tesla structurally unprofitable? Posted: 06 Oct 2018 12:47 PM PDT Jim never went into details,I am an idiot can someone tell me why they lose money on the cars they sell? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 11:47 AM PDT |
anyone doing anything fun for the weekend Posted: 07 Oct 2018 12:47 AM PDT |
Question about how bonds work from the issuer's perspective (esp municipal debt) Posted: 07 Oct 2018 12:28 AM PDT This question isn't about investing in bonds per se. If there's a better sub in which to ask this question, point me to it. My question is about how bond issuers, specifically municipalities, use bonds to "smooth" out the big changes in cash required to fund big projects. Let's say I'm a municipality, and I want to build a bridge that will cost $1 billion, and will last 30 years (just go along with this). So I issue $1B in bonds, maturing over 30 years, let's say with a 4% coupon. So twice a year, I'm paying $20 million in interest payments. This is fine, I can get this from taxpayers or whatever. All the while, I'm getting this nice new bridge in my city. Now at the end of 30 years, after paying $20 mil every 6 months, I'm now on the hook to repay the full $1B in principal! That's a huge shock to city finances. So why would the city issue debt for that kind of thing at all? Or, during the 30 year period, does the city put aside tax money for both interest AND principal? If this is the case, is it public info how much money is in city coffers, accruing as deferred principal repayment? How can I find out about this? Or, do cities that issue debt typically issue the same amount of debt every year, and so a $1B shock at the end of 30 years isn't a big deal, because they're constantly repaying the principal from debt issued 30 years ago, every year? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 02:50 PM PDT It seems volatility is rearing it's ugly head again. Do what do you think Monday will bring? October is a spooky month. Black Monday is in October of 1987. October marked the beginning of the panic of 1929. Although the 2008 crisis began in September, October was another bad time for investors. Edit: I am still very bullish short term. The market commentary has been cautious but positive and the economy is still roaring with seemingly strong news weekly if not daily. Even if Q4 is down, I would be surprised if 2019 didn't still shine. Not investment advice. DYOR. [link] [comments] |
Analyzing Quarterly Reports (10-Qs) Posted: 06 Oct 2018 07:58 PM PDT So, I find a company trading very cheaply, seems to be great in terms of fundamentals. But, I always have problems analyzing quarterly reports. I have this habit of multiplying the net income by 4 and dividing it with the market cap to get a projected P/E. Usually that ends up being way to high (very stupid idea) but I end up wondering why this company is delivering very low profit (business returns) relative to the current market cap even though earnings fluctuate. How do you truly analyze a 10-Q and what do you look for? Any indicators? How do you know how much profit is satisfactory? How would Buffett analyze a 10-Q? What would you look for in the income statement, balance sheet, and cash flow statement? What notes will you make? Note : please keep the discussion civil! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 07:47 PM PDT Any body know why Robinhood Web App is blank for more then a day now? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Oct 2018 03:22 PM PDT Passive investor here, and at the same time want to maximize my rate of return. My current stock portfolio is self-managed on TD Ameritrade with 90% VT and 10% BND, with DRIP enabled for both. I also have a traditional IRA + roth IRA on Vanguard with similar holdings. Recently, I've noticed that my portfolio hasn't been doing great relative to the S&P 500, and at the same time I don't want to have to re-balance it myself whenever this sort of thing happens. That said, a robo advisor is starting to sound enticing. I've looked into a few robo advisors:
M1 seems interesting because there are zero management fees involved. The only thing giving me pause is that they don't support tax-loss harvesting while the first 2 options do, and they seem to be relatively new to the game/unsure how they're making money. Can anyone comment on which option is the best overall for a passive investor like myself, and whether the missing tax-loss harvesting feature will likely be negated by the zero management fees? Thank you! [link] [comments] |
How are stocks taxed when you sell? Posted: 06 Oct 2018 06:12 PM PDT Let's say I invest 100 dollars of my income, and it eventually grows to 110. When I sell my stock, do I pay tax on the entire 110? Or just the 10 since my 100 is already "taxed"? How are taxes calculated when selling? [link] [comments] |
Daily advice thread. All questions about your personal situation should be asked here Posted: 06 Oct 2018 05:05 AM PDT If your question is "I have $10,000, what do I do?" or anything similar. There is no single answer to this question, but we will also need A LOT MORE information if we are to give some sort of answer
Be aware that these answers are just opinions of Redditors and should be used as a starting point for your research. You should strongly consider seeing a registered financial rep before making any financial decisions! [link] [comments] |
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