Stock Market - r/StockMarket January 2019 Stock Picking Contest [Brand New Format!] |
- r/StockMarket January 2019 Stock Picking Contest [Brand New Format!]
- Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the month beginning January 2019
- What books helped you understand the markets better?
- r/StockMarket December 2018 Stock Picking Contest Update as of week ending December 28th, 2018
- The reason the market will crash is because the Treasury Department is converting bonds into stocks.
- Looking to get started
- Looking for advice on reallocating
- Best stock plays in the increase of the super-rich people?
- Tax on loss
- Anybody got suggestions for a portfolio monitor if I’m using 2 brokerages?
- How would a president "engineer" a recession?
- Pre-market Update: Bulls Continue Battle for Control of Stocks
- Bear market: can i dollar-cost-average my way in?
- why market gonna tank, we just don't know when
- Buying stocks
- What was the bubble that just burst?
- Is this a Recession, Depression, or Something Else? What's Next?
r/StockMarket January 2019 Stock Picking Contest [Brand New Format!] Posted: 28 Dec 2018 07:50 AM PST
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Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the month beginning January 2019 Posted: 28 Dec 2018 05:15 AM PST
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What books helped you understand the markets better? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 07:52 AM PST Just wondering which books made a good contribution to your knowledge of the markets. [link] [comments] | ||
r/StockMarket December 2018 Stock Picking Contest Update as of week ending December 28th, 2018 Posted: 28 Dec 2018 01:48 PM PST
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The reason the market will crash is because the Treasury Department is converting bonds into stocks. Posted: 28 Dec 2018 08:20 PM PST Imagine a crash where even the government is unable to pay you back your bonds because that money went into stocks to artificially inflate the stock market. Checkmate. [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 28 Dec 2018 10:15 AM PST Hi, I'm currently a 19 year old college student looking to start learning how to trade. I'm not really looking to invest long term, I already have a small 401k through work, and my parents probably wouldn't like me locking any money into any retirement accounts right now as I'm supposed to pay them back for college. I'm more so looking to learn and possibly make a little money. I was planning on paper trading for a couple months before hopping in, and I still might, but this is still really not the same as real trading with real money (no emotion, different dollar amounts and rules). I have paper traded in the past a few times in middle school and high school and done fairly well. My plan is to deposit $500 or so into either robinhood or webull. First question, what is the general consensus on which of these 2 brokers is better? Also when I open an account with either, how will this affect my credit? I believe it will do a soft pull or something just to verify my idenitity right? Will this affect my credit little or not at all? I'm going to have to trade under the pdt rule right? Even if I don't use margin and just use a cash account? This is fine as I probably won't have much time in the middle of the day anyway. Can anyone point me in the right direction to learn strategies trading this way? I've been reading tutorials on investopedia to get a good baseline of investing knowledge, but I think I need to get a little bit more advanced now and learn how to actually make picks and such. Sorry if any questions are stupid or redundant. Thanks! [link] [comments] | ||
Looking for advice on reallocating Posted: 28 Dec 2018 01:24 PM PST I am 24 years old, investing long term for wealth growth and eventually retirement. I currently make ~$60,000 Gross Annually with 7% matched in 401K (TRPLX). I have ~$7,500 in cash. Seeking advice for my Investment portfolio. Looking to reduce from 22 down to 12-15 holdings. Thanks in advance! $23,678 Current Market Value VOO (17%) BND (13.5%) BRK.B (13.5%) MSFT (7.5%) V (7.5%) AMZN (6.5%) AAPL (6.5%) SPLV (3.5%) COST (3.5%) LULU (3.5%) DIS (2.5%) ALK (2%) AMGN (2%) SBUX (2%) WMT (1.5%) BA (1.5%) JPM (1.5%) TVIX (1%) NDAQ (1%) ADBE (1%) XLF (1%) PG (1%) [link] [comments] | ||
Best stock plays in the increase of the super-rich people? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 05:42 PM PST Hello guys, I am pretty confident that we are going to continue to see an increase to the numbers of super-rich people. So which companies do you think will benefit the most from this trend ? [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 28 Dec 2018 10:49 AM PST My portfolio is down by whopping 8%. Should i sell them all for tax benefit and buy again next year? I heard people talk about this but is it worth doing? [link] [comments] | ||
Anybody got suggestions for a portfolio monitor if I’m using 2 brokerages? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 08:22 AM PST Hey guys! I had done a quick search on the sub but didn't seem too much info about this. Currently using Robinhood but finding myself limited by their resources and I already have a webull account up and running. I would like to start swing trading on webull and keep RH for options and such but would like all of this to be easily viewed somewhere to check P&L Any suggestions? I trade on mobile with a 9-5 but a desktop app would work fine. [link] [comments] | ||
How would a president "engineer" a recession? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 02:17 PM PST | ||
Pre-market Update: Bulls Continue Battle for Control of Stocks Posted: 28 Dec 2018 05:18 AM PST Markets are looking to start the day in the green. I wonder what sort of wild swing will happen today. Below are some of my thoughts ... [link] [comments] | ||
Bear market: can i dollar-cost-average my way in? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 12:47 AM PST I am talking about long holding S&P for retirement...should i enter now or wait for the bear market to end? This will be my future retirement money (my savings)...can i go in now (assuming the bear market will go down another 20-30%) and *not* suffer a loss if i dollar-cost-average an amount each month? [link] [comments] | ||
why market gonna tank, we just don't know when Posted: 28 Dec 2018 05:02 PM PST You have a stock that is propped up by hype, and we even have a certain date where it will certainly tank beyond that date, and yet it's still 3-4 times more than IPO price. That's TLRY. Still mind boggling its $70+, it's only about 2 weeks away from IPO lockup expiry, and recently it got pumped 10% and 16% daily by management. You have to wonder what these retail trader idiots are thinking holding it to still $70. Another thing reminding me was HMNY. That stock, everyone with triple digit IQ would know it's heading to approach 0, and yet it took a year for it from Oct 2017 run to $34 to go to $1, then reverse split and end up $0.1. It was always amazing some bulls kept holding on to that total garbage, even though it was overvalued by a ton. Now im not saying current market is any similar to TLRY or HMNY, but the underlying psychology is the same. The current stock market is overvalued but as long as there enough delusional fools out there, it wouldn't tank. PPT already pumped the general market and stabilized it, true legal market manipulation. But will it last next week? This is still a long term bear market/recession with some short term relief. And the danger is you never know when Oct and Dec rout gonna strike again but the real danger is there. This is no longer the bull market. [link] [comments] | ||
Posted: 28 Dec 2018 12:11 AM PST What's the best (application) to buy stocks in like Charles Schwab, Robin Hood ? [link] [comments] | ||
What was the bubble that just burst? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 07:10 AM PST
Both of these were massively overvalued and the market is now correcting them. [link] [comments] | ||
Is this a Recession, Depression, or Something Else? What's Next? Posted: 28 Dec 2018 09:01 AM PST What goes up has to come down at some point. Sometimes, markets go down because they went up - a lot. We were really spoiled by the "Trump bump" of 2017. Did you know that 2017 was the only year ever that the S&P 500 went up each and every month? That's great and mutual funds made a lot of money. But remember, people have very short memories. Investors, in their 2017 exuberance, forgot that market volatility is normal. Now, it goes without saying, that the volatility we've seen in 2018 has been a lot more severe than anything we've seen in recent years. Why is that? One main reason, above all others, is fear of... Read More... [link] [comments] |
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