Stock Market - Whole Foods shoppers blast Amazon's Prime member discounts as the company announces it's slashing |
- Whole Foods shoppers blast Amazon's Prime member discounts as the company announces it's slashing
- Weed CFO: The IRS tax code is 'crippling' and 'devastating' for us
- CannTrust Holdings and SusGlobal Energy Pegged as the Highest Growth Stocks in their Respective Industries.
- Is there a term for the amount you could theoretically invest in something?
- Kraft Heinz KHC
- Do people who write covered calls, and they own 100 shares, I think? Get to keep their shares and premium if it expires worthless?
- Are option contracts for the public outstanding shares until exercised?
Whole Foods shoppers blast Amazon's Prime member discounts as the company announces it's slashing Posted: 06 Apr 2019 05:57 AM PDT https://www.businessinsider.com/whole-foods-shoppers-blast-amazons-prime-member-discounts-2019-4 Some Whole Foods shoppers say they aren't saving any money with Amazon's Prime member discounts. "There is no benefit whatsoever," said Claudia Cukrov, an Amazon Prime member who shops at a Whole Foods in Brooklyn, New York, on a near daily basis. Spencer Somers said he has stopped scanning his Amazon Prime member code at Whole Foods. "I was scanning it every time, but it wasn't worth the under $1 savings," he told Business Insider. Amazon said response to the Prime member discounts has been positive, and that members have saved $100 million at Whole Foods since last summer. Amazon announced this week that it would slash prices by 20% on hundreds of items and double the number of Prime-member deals available to Whole Foods shoppers. [link] [comments] |
Weed CFO: The IRS tax code is 'crippling' and 'devastating' for us Posted: 06 Apr 2019 05:56 PM PDT https://finance.yahoo.com/news/marijuana-weed-taxes-irs-105226112.html Cannabis companies are facing another tax year bogged down by IRS limitations that designate them as drug traffickers and single them out for special treatment. "It's crippling to businesses," Michael Raisch, CFO of Colorado-based LivWell Enlightened Health, told Yahoo Finance. "It really doesn't allow for the sustainability of these businesses. It's really that onerous. It's just devastating." [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Apr 2019 05:44 PM PDT |
Is there a term for the amount you could theoretically invest in something? Posted: 06 Apr 2019 02:32 PM PDT I've noticed that there are some investments that could make very high returns, but you couldn't invest a large amount of money in them. Like if you're investing $1000, it's very likely you could find an investment that will return 30% in a month (like buying a car for 1k and selling for 1.3k), but if you're investing $1b, there's pretty much no way you could do those kind of returns. So, is there a term for investments that have high return potential, but you can only invest small amounts in them? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Apr 2019 05:47 AM PDT |
Posted: 05 Apr 2019 11:29 PM PDT So if someone has 50,000 shares of Apple and writes calls or sells a call decided to sell 500 contracts a year. Let's say every single one of them expired worthless on somebody else, does this mean the owner would still have 50,000 shares plus all the premium throughout the year. [link] [comments] |
Are option contracts for the public outstanding shares until exercised? Posted: 05 Apr 2019 11:07 PM PDT Basically what I'm asking is when us, the public. Decide to exercise a contract. Is that furthering dilution of the company? Meaning they're now issued shares? [link] [comments] |
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