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    Tuesday, February 5, 2019

    Chuck Schumer and Bernie Sanders call for restricting corporate share buybacks Investing

    Chuck Schumer and Bernie Sanders call for restricting corporate share buybacks Investing


    Chuck Schumer and Bernie Sanders call for restricting corporate share buybacks

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 08:27 AM PST

    Proposal would restrict companies from buying back shares unless they pay their workers $15 an hour as well as some other requirements. What are your thoughts about this? Seems unconstitutional to me.

    Link

    submitted by /u/ancap17
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    A ‘baby bear’ market scared the Fed into pausing and history shows that can lead to big comebacks

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 07:15 AM PST

    Alphabet beats on earnings and revenue, but stock drops after hours

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 01:22 PM PST

    https://www.cnbc.com/2019/02/04/alphabet-earnings-q4-2018.html

    Earnings: $12.77 per share vs. $10.82 according to Refinitiv consensus estimates

    Revenue: $39.28 billion vs. $38.93 billion according to Refinitiv consensus estimates

    Traffic acquisition costs: $7.44 billion vs. $7.62 billion according to StreetAccount

    submitted by /u/coolcomfort123
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    Fed Chairman Powell met with Trump for an 'informal dinner' to discuss the economy

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 06:01 PM PST

    How China Pressured MSCI to Add Its Market to Major Benchmark

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 11:19 PM PST

    What is the WORST stock pick you ever made?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 11:10 PM PST

    Mine has to be long PBR @ $50. (I still hold it to this day as a reminder). Going long PCG in 2017 after the first fire is also up there

    submitted by /u/kingkang80
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    Slack Files IPO

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 10:43 AM PST

    3 months return of investment on this crypto miner, is it a good buy?

    Posted: 05 Feb 2019 02:36 AM PST

    Canopy growth, or continue on plan?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 09:13 PM PST

    Hello everyone, me and my sweetheart are saving for a duplex currently. We are over half way there with a cash buy. A morgage is a no go, because we will be living in it and I don't know how to manage a property yet I believe strongly against debt when it is attached to personal expenses.

    I've made money on cgc I bought at 14 and sold at the first 50 bump. Made a few grand and threw it in a index. But now I actually believe with relitive certainty that the company has a good future. I have been really following them daily, and I really believe these guys will be the continue to be the market leader when the time comes and it's all legalized.

    Should I start pouring cash in them now? Or wait the 10 months get the duplex, and get out of my car so I have a place to bath and shower and shit? How should I approach this? Alot can happen in 10 months to 14 months. I just don't want to regret it when they start to really boom and I am not apart of it. But they may not boom in 10 months it still may be a few years. I am ok with living in my car for a bit untill the duplex is purchased. I am happy with very little in life for the most part. And that duplex really provides me and my fiance a great foundation for future wealth building(the rock) And a shield from plenty of catastrophe like job loss or not finding a job after school or worse. It will stabilize the amount we can save and invest for the future, allow a remarkably low cost of living so her w2 money can go into her start up, and allow me to manage our wealth and property managment business I plan on starting with little pain when it comes to it financially. I see that as massive plusses. Regardless if money may make a better return elseware the piece of mind will be worth it. But canopy could really blow up , but I feel that they are a really long term play like 10 years with a extremely volatile short term. So it makes me edge more towards the duplex. What do you think? I know it kindof sounds like i am allready sold on the duplex, and I kind of am. But it does not stop the lingering thoughts I have.

    submitted by /u/Usnavy91893
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    666k subscriber reached

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 07:13 PM PST

    just saying

    submitted by /u/whatsw0rdisthis
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    S&P 500 : Traders Net-Short Decreased from Last Week

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 10:45 PM PST

    Daily advice thread. All questions about your personal situation should be asked here

    Posted: 05 Feb 2019 04:04 AM PST

    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

    • How old are you?
    • Are you employed/making income? How much?
    • What are your objectives with this money? (buy a house? Retirement savings?)
    • What is your risk tolerance? (Do you mind risking it at blackjack or do you need to know its 100% safe?)
    • What are you current holdings? (Do you already have exposure to specific funds and sectors?)
    • Any other assets? House paid off? Cars? Expensive girlfriend? (not really an asset)
    • What is your time horizon? Do you need this money next month? Next 20yrs?
    • Any big debts?
    • Any other relevant financial information will be useful to give you a proper 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!

    submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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    "Bond King" Bill Gross retires from Professional Money Management

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 08:20 AM PST

    About four years after leaving PIMCO, Gross, 74, has announced his retirement from the Janus Henderson Global Unconstrained Bond Fund.

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-02-04/bill-gross-retires-after-storied-four-decade-career-in-bonds

    submitted by /u/CopticDuck
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    Treasury removed the yield curve chart?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 06:39 PM PST

    Treasury.gov used to show the current and historical yield curve chart. Now they only have a historical yield chart: https://www.treasury.gov/resource-center/data-chart-center/interest-rates/Pages/Historic-LongTerm-Rate-Data-Visualization.aspx

    Did this change happen recently?

    submitted by /u/bvanmidd
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    Newbie - how to find company codes?

    Posted: 05 Feb 2019 02:11 AM PST

    So I've been reading up about trading stocks and shares and stuff, and while I educate myself I want to practice on a paper trading account. The thing im having trouble with though, is when i think of a comapny i want to invest in, it seems they never end up being publicly traded companies or i can never find them on my broker. Am i doing something wrong?

    submitted by /u/Thelittlefungi
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    What are some long term investments that you would purchase on a 10% dip in the market?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 04:32 PM PST

    What stocks do you have your eye on that is worth holding for the long run, but is a little overpriced to you at the moment?

    submitted by /u/durklshirt
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    How do NAV swings affect REIT dividends?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 09:24 PM PST

    If the share price of a REIT dips, will that REIT's dividend also decline by a proportionate amount? Or is the dividend set apart from the share price?

    I'm trying to compare the value of public, traded REITs (e.g. VSIX, NVQ) and Public non-traded REITs (e.g. Fundrise's eREITs). If dividends run somewhat independently of a REIT's NAV, i'm not too concerned about the volatility of publicly traded REITs, but if a dip of, say, 20% also leads directly to a dividend payout 20% lower, then I'd actually value the lack of liquidity in non-traded REITs.

    submitted by /u/dapacau
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    How can shrinking population growth not 100% fuck us over? Not to mention if climate change is as bad as scientists say it could be

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 05:18 PM PST

    At least in the U.S. (the world's biggest economy) a big portion of the system (Medicare, social security) is built on population growth. A larger number of young people pay for the withering old bastards. How is this not a major concern?

    submitted by /u/dopamineaddict12
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    REITs and debt

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 09:35 AM PST

    So I've been looking at financials of REITs lately such as DLR, O, EQIX, and WY and all of them have a fairly large amount of debt and their cash flow doesn't seem like they will be able to pay that off in the long term. Is this a red flag for REITs for the long term investor?

    submitted by /u/lmfin
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    Buying and collecting viking era artifacts as an investment strategy?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 11:57 PM PST

    I was just wondering if anyone had any expertise in this area. Could collecting viking era artifacts (swords, jewelry, etc.) be a viable investment strategy? Would they increase in value over time? Do museums and other collectors seek out and purchase artifacts from private collections? Thank you.

    submitted by /u/neckbeardenthusiast
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    Valuation Methods of Buffett and others

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 06:07 AM PST

    I remember reading once that Buffett doesn't use a DCF and most of his calculation just take place on the back of an envelope; yet what everyone else gets told to use DCF to come to an intrinsic value.

    Is there a resource somewhere that outlines what the great investors like Buffett, Lynch and co use to valuate how cheap a company is.

    As of me, so far I have used DCF, P/E Valuation and ROE and I just average. I know it is not great but that's how far I got. Would love to hear how you guys approach determining when a stock is cheap.

    submitted by /u/gymaliz
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    BRK.B diversity enough?

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 02:10 PM PST

    Is investing in a stock like BRK.B in a sense diversified?

    submitted by /u/Wa1s0n
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    Charlotte Russe Files for Bankruptcy

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 07:24 AM PST

    Big Tech Is No Longer Carrying the Stock Market

    Posted: 04 Feb 2019 01:09 PM PST

    https://www.nytimes.com/2019/02/03/business/dealbook/stock-market-technology.html

    For much of the past decade, the fate of the stock market has been tied to the performance of a handful of the largest tech companies: Amazon, Apple, Alphabet, Facebook, Microsoft and Netflix led the market from one record to the next.

    By the end of August, their sway over the direction of the S&P 500 exceeded all but two of the index's 11 sector groupings. As the index pushed to a record high last summer, the rise in those six companies' shares accounted for half of its gain. They led on the way down too, dragging the broader market lower over the final three months of 2018 and nearly ending the longest bull market on record.

    So it's notable, then, that as the S&P 500 rallied nearly 8 percent in January, the big technology stocks accounted for just 17 percent of the benchmark's rise, according to data from Howard Silverblatt, senior index analyst for S&P Dow Jones Indices.

    "This is the first quarter in my memory that technology has on the whole had worse metrics than the S&P 500," said Sameer Samana, senior global market strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute, referring to the earnings and revenue growth rate of big technology companies.

    submitted by /u/VersalEszett
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