Stocks - r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Apr 09, 2019 |
- r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Apr 09, 2019
- Bank of America is raising its minimum wage for employees to $20 an hour
- Does taking time to learn about stocks give any significant advantage?
- Warren Buffet on Diversification
- Walmart plans to add thousands of robot helpers to U.S. stores
- US points tariff cannon at EU-Ready! Aim!...and markets yawn; US futures flat this morning
- Uranium Stocks
- Chuck E Cheese to go public
- Any good podcasts?
- High Growth Stock with Low PE
- Getting tired of the ROKU turbulence, any suggestions?
- Like there's a scanner for stock technical's, fundamental's is there a scanner for news and press releases ?
- Long Term vs. Short Term Capital Gains
- Facebook Golden Cross and Double Bottom?
- Could a (basic) Python Bot be useful for this subreddit?
- Best Program to Monitor Stocks ?
- How does your broker deposit the money in the stock exchange ?
- Boeing first-quarter deliveries and orders sink after 737 Max groundings
- Thoughts on this portfolio
- How Wells Fargo ($WFC) regulators and employees drove out its CEO
- Transferring stocks between different accounts question?
- Why do big sell-offs happen right before earnings even though chances are the earnings will be positive
- What's your take on AMZN earnings for someone who wants to get out of the stock?
- Long time investors - advice on getting started?
- I think the Pinterest IPO will flop
r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Apr 09, 2019 Posted: 09 Apr 2019 01:07 AM PDT This is the daily discussion, so anything stocks related is fine, but the theme for today is on technical analysis (TA), but if TA is not your thing then just ignore the theme and/or post your arguments against TA here and not in the current post. Some helpful day to day links, including news:
Technical analysis (TA) uses historical price movements, real time data, indicators based on math and/or statistics, and charts; all of which help measure the trajectory of a security. TA can also be used to interpret the actions of other market participants and predict their actions The main benefit to TA is that everything shows up in the price (commonly known as "priced in"): All news, investor sentiment, and changes to fundamentals are reflected in a security's price. TA can be useful on any timeframe, both short and long term. Intro to technical analysis by Stockcharts chartschool and their article on candlesticks If you have questions, please see the following word cloud and click through for the wiki: See our past daily discussions here. Also links for: Technicals Tuesday, Options Trading Thursday, and Fundamentals Friday. [link] [comments] |
Bank of America is raising its minimum wage for employees to $20 an hour Posted: 09 Apr 2019 04:58 AM PDT "If you get a job at Bank of America, you'll make $41,000," Chairman and CEO Brian Moynihan says. Effective on May 1, the minimum wage will be raised to $17 and will go higher in increments for the next two years, according to the company. [link] [comments] |
Does taking time to learn about stocks give any significant advantage? Posted: 08 Apr 2019 09:12 PM PDT I'm not sure if this is the right place but I was wondering if taking time to learn more about the stock market was worth it. I'm in college and don't plan to have any career in it but was thinking about spending some time learning more. My basic question is it worth it? I'm familiar with the story of Buffet betting against the hedge fund mangers? that investing in the index would outperform them and he won. So does having knowledge in stocks give a significant monetary advantage or is it pretty much guess work. [link] [comments] |
Warren Buffet on Diversification Posted: 09 Apr 2019 06:10 AM PDT I watched an interesting video on Warren Buffet talking about portfolio diversification and he put it In a way that I have never thought of before. He says that diversification is for the ignorant investor (and there is nothing negative about this). It helps people spread their money across different businesses to help avoid losses in one area if the market/business is performing badly. By diversifying, you are reducing your risk of loss because all of your eggs are not in one basket. However, he says its truly due to the lack of understanding of the good businesses. For example, if you are certain that company A will perform well and you have done your research, then why not put your (for example) $20,000 investment in that company. By spreading it out over multiple businesses that you do not fully understand, you are not maximizing your returns. I would put the link to the video but then this post gets considered as spam and gets removed. Just look up "warren buffet diversification" on Youtube. It is 7 minutes long. No it is not my channel and I am not gaining any views from sharing this. Just wanted to start a discussion. What are your thoughts on this? [link] [comments] |
Walmart plans to add thousands of robot helpers to U.S. stores Posted: 09 Apr 2019 05:08 AM PDT https://finance.yahoo.com/news/walmart-adds-robots-to-us-store-fleet-040100670.html The robots are coming to the world's largest big-box retailer. This year, Walmart (WMT) plans an aggressive expansion of technology that will automate a range of low-level tasks within its fleet of U.S. stores, freeing up its associates to do more specialized work. [link] [comments] |
US points tariff cannon at EU-Ready! Aim!...and markets yawn; US futures flat this morning Posted: 09 Apr 2019 05:11 AM PDT US Stocks Preview Ahead of the Open
Stocks Trending in the NewsClick name for Q-Factor breakdown, latest price details, more financial info and sentiment data.
International Stock Markets Recap
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Posted: 09 Apr 2019 10:58 AM PDT A while ago, a user on here started a thread about uranium stocks (particularly UUUU) and made a case on how it's a solid long term investment. I was hoping we could revive that discussion because I am wondering myself if uranium has potential to grown in value over the comming years [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 06:47 AM PDT I just read in the news that Chuck E Cheese is going public on the New York Stock Exchange as CEC. Articles reads, "CEC Entertainment, which owns 750 Chuck E. Cheese and Peter Piper Pizza stores in the U.S. and abroad, expects to begin trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker "CEC" in the second quarter." I've never invested in stocks and am wondering if this is a good start to get into. If so, how would one go about it? Source of article: https://cbsn.ws/2ImVj0U [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 02:11 PM PDT I listen to Marketplace on NPR, but are there any really good weekly podcasts out there for keeping up on the market or finance that you guys listen to? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 01:30 PM PDT EPS growth, LQ V. SQPY, 369%; Revenue growth, LQ V. SQPY, 120%; Projected EPS growth, next year vs. this year, 41.4%; ROE: 104.2%; PE: 6.53 Post a comment if you want to know the ticker [link] [comments] |
Getting tired of the ROKU turbulence, any suggestions? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 09:04 AM PDT Very beginner trader here, playing around with $1,500. Made a dumb decision and put $700 aka half my portfolio into ROKU on 3/11. It tanked, alot, and I lost $130. With that said, is it plausible that it'll make it back to $73 at some point? I'm hesitant to sell everything and just eat the $130 I lost because i've been getting $20 back here and there. Just don't want to lose more.... [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 12:38 PM PDT Let's say I want to get access to news or the press releases tomorrow for stocks at a specific exchange say the NYSE and for stock prices up to 50$ how do I do that ? [link] [comments] |
Long Term vs. Short Term Capital Gains Posted: 09 Apr 2019 12:12 PM PDT Hey all, I'm new to investing, and I'm having a hard time wrapping my small brain around some of the tax aspects of earnings. And my question is so specific, I can't seem to find any answers through research. I understand that long term capital gains are taxed at 15% and short term capital gains are taxed at normal income tax rates. Let's say I have 500 shares in a company stock. Ideally, I want to hold these for 1 year +1 day to avoid paying income tax. But I decide to sell 100 of the shares early and pay the income tax. Then a few days later I buy the shares back (hopefully at a profit). So I'm back to 500 shares. Fast forward a year, I've owned 400 shares for a year and a day, and 100 shares for less than a year. So my question: If I sell 400 of my shares in the company, will they all be considered LTCGs or will I also be paying a portion in STCGs. Thanks for the help, and I'm sorry if there's something extremely obvious I'm not seeing. [link] [comments] |
Facebook Golden Cross and Double Bottom? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 11:23 AM PDT Wish I could upload my screen grab. But if there are any technical guys on here who can verify. Golden cross on 2/27. Double bottom on from 2/21 to 4/9. [link] [comments] |
Could a (basic) Python Bot be useful for this subreddit? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 12:18 AM PDT I recently got into Python and I'm always looking for new projects. Currently I'm teaching myself webscraping and writing bots. I wanted to make a reddit bot for some time now, but I never had an idea. Looking through this sub, I thought that maybe something that gets stock information through a keyword in a comment or something similar could be useful? If there already are bots in this sub that do this, I am not aware of it, but maybe there's still something that's not yet implemented and would be nice to have? I know that bots can be annoying and are prohibited in many communities, so if you (and especially the moderators) think this is a bad idea, I won't do it, of course. Otherwise, tell me your ideas! [link] [comments] |
Best Program to Monitor Stocks ? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 09:51 AM PDT I am new to stock investing, and I wanted to ask the more experienced people in stocks of which program is best to monitor stocks? [link] [comments] |
How does your broker deposit the money in the stock exchange ? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 03:47 AM PDT So one of the benefits of a stock exchange is clearing and settlement. Does a floor trader have to deposit money in the exchange before starting to trade ? Does he wire it to a bank account that is owned by the exchange? how does it work ? as an example in open outcry trading they write down the price, the amount, the traders initials, in a ticket and the exchange employees gather the tickets and clear and settle the trades. My question is were is they're money kept ? [link] [comments] |
Boeing first-quarter deliveries and orders sink after 737 Max groundings Posted: 09 Apr 2019 09:41 AM PDT Boeing announced on Tuesday that deliveries of its 737 jets fell to 89 in the first quarter, a dip from 132 last year. The planemaker halted deliveries of its 737 Max following the global grounding of the jets that were implicated in two fatal crashes in Ethiopia and Indonesia that killed a total of 346 people. Total orders fell to 95 aircraft in the first quarter, a drop from 180 a year earlier. There were no new 737 Max orders in March. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 09:25 AM PDT I will show my position sizes in these names by percentage along with YTD performance and I'd like some feedback. I'm also going to include names I'm interested in getting into and would like feedback. Thanks! GELYF/HKG:0175 (Geely) - 31% of portfolio, up 35% YTD TCEHY (Tencent) - 19% of portfolio, up 25% YTD BABA (Alibaba) - 18% of portfolio, up 36.4% YTD COST (Costco) - 12% of portfolio, up 20.5% YTD HDB (HDFC Bank) - 10% of portfolio, up 10% YTD SNE (Sony) - 9% of portfolio, down 4.3% YTD Names I'm interested in adding potentially, not in any particular order.. PayPal (PYPL), Boston Private Wealth (BPFH), Softbank (SFTBY), Naspers (NPSNY), Dunkin' (DNKN) [link] [comments] |
How Wells Fargo ($WFC) regulators and employees drove out its CEO Posted: 09 Apr 2019 05:26 AM PDT NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The day after former Wells Fargo & Co Chief Executive Tim Sloan told U.S. lawmakers he was transforming the bank's high-pressure culture, Federal Reserve officials met privately with bank employees. At the meeting on March 13, which has not been previously reported, Fed officials were told by four bank employees that little had changed within the bank's culture since the scandal that engulfed Wells Fargo almost three years ago. Among those present at the meeting was Fed Governor Lael Brainard, who is overseeing a decree requiring that Wells Fargo fix its risk management before it can resume growing, two sources with direct knowledge of the matter said. The employees belonged to an advocacy group, Committee For Better Banks, which confirmed the meeting. Brainard told the group she was there to listen and get insight into the mood among Wells Fargo staff but declined to say if or how the Fed would respond, the sources said. While regulators occasionally meet with consumer advocacy or industry groups, it is unusual for a Fed board member to meet with an individual firm's employees. It is not clear who asked for the meeting. Sloan abruptly departed the bank last month, making him the second CEO to leave Wells Fargo in the wake of its sales practice scandal. Sloan, who declined to comment on this story through a representative, has previously said he stepped down because he felt the external attention on him had become a distraction. His departure was at least partly the result of the board's conclusion that Sloan had failed to convince regulators that he could transform the bank and rally a staff that had low confidence in its leadership, according to a source with knowledge of the board's thinking. Wells Fargo spokesman Mark Folk declined to comment on regulatory matters but disputed the employee group's characterization of the bank's culture. Sloan's struggles underscore the challenges faced by the bank's next chief executive. They will not only have to transform the bank and its sales practices, but also persuade regulators and its 260,000 employees that they have done so. Finding a new CEO who can win over the bank's employees is as important as finding someone who can charm regulators and Wall Street, said Russell Raath, president of management consulting firm Kotter. "The whole bank needs to know that this person cares about their contribution to the top and bottom line," he said. STRAINED RELATIONSHIP Wells Fargo's relationship with regulators has been strained since 2016, when employee whistleblowers revealed the bank had opened potentially millions of unauthorized accounts. Internal and regulatory probes have since discovered other issues in the bank's businesses, resulting in billions of dollars in fines and penalties. In February 2018, Wells Fargo signed a Fed consent order that required the bank to fix its risk-management and governance problems before it could grow its balance sheet. Two months later, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Wells Fargo's other key regulator, ordered the bank to make similar fixes and repay customers to whom it had improperly sold mortgages and auto insurance. In December, Reuters reported that the Fed had rejected the bank's initial remediation plan, putting it behind schedule. Days later, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell told Congress the Fed would not lift the asset cap until it was satisfied that Wells Fargo had fixed its risk problems. LOW MORALE An internal company-wide survey around that time also pointed to low morale, according to the Committee For Better Banks and other Wells Fargo employees. The bank internally published a write-up about the survey, saying Wells Fargo found itself at a "challenging and interesting" crossroads. Some employees felt that the description sugar-coated the findings, sources said. That sparked dozens of comments from workers criticizing management for being out of touch, according to the sources and screenshots of the internal site reviewed by Reuters. A consumer loan underwriter complained on the internal site that the concerns about pay and employee benefits were falling on deaf ears. "For years (team members) have been expressing their concerns and frustrations," the employee wrote. "The only response (if any) are canned answers and talking points which we all know is baloney." An analysis of the survey Wells Fargo published publicly showed only 38 percent of employees felt senior management understood obstacles faced by frontline workers. Wells Fargo's Folk said the company seeks and values input from employees, and that the bank has already made a number of improvements based on the feedback. He pointed to other categories in the survey that showed employees believed in the bank's values and were satisfied. For example, 72 percent of employees said they believe Wells Fargo is a good place to work. REGULATORY REBUKE Sloan testified before Congress on March 12 in a hearing about the bank's progress since 2016. As a gesture of goodwill, Wells Fargo took the unusual step of offering the OCC the opportunity to review his testimony in advance, according to a source with direct knowledge of the matter. It is unclear how the OCC responded. In his testimony, Sloan detailed Wells Fargo's extensive transformation efforts, but regulators remained skeptical. Sloan had barely finished speaking when the OCC said it was still "disappointed" by the bank's remediation efforts. The next day, after Wells Fargo disclosed Sloan had gotten a 5 percent pay raise, the Fed responded that it expects boards "to hold management accountable." A week later, Powell told reporters the bank had suffered a "remarkably widespread series of breakdowns" that needed to be addressed in a "fundamental" way. These rebukes undermined Sloan's position at the bank, the source with knowledge of the board's thinking said. On March 26, Sloan told the board he had decided to resign, according to a regulatory filing. Three days later, he publicly stepped down. Reporting by Imani Moise in New York and Pete Schroeder in Washington; additional reporting by Greg Roumeliotis in New York. Writing and additional reporting by Michelle Price; editing by Neal Templin and Paritosh Bansal [link] [comments] |
Transferring stocks between different accounts question? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 08:19 AM PDT My parents gave me some stock that they had planned to use to help pay for college. They opened it with EQ Shareowner Services, and I use Charles Schwab to manage all my investments. I hate the UI of EQ, and I'd rather have all my stocks on one brokerage account anyways. Can I transfer stocks over to Charles Schwab from there, or am I just better of liquidating and/or just rebuying the same stock or a different? It's Allstate so I'm considering just liquidating totally, and reinvesting somewhere else. Thoughts? EDIT: I just found out that I can link my other EQ account with Charles Schwab so I can view it from there so I may hold off on liquidating and moving. Question still stands though, can you transfer stocks over accounts or do you have to liquidate then reinvest? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 09 Apr 2019 07:51 AM PDT Delta for example. Their estimated earnings is a measly 0.88, which they're very likely to hit IMHO. This company has went beyond their earnings the last several times. They were hurt by the Boeing 737 thing, there were no big scandals or anything. So why would there be a huge sell off of stock the day before earnings? [link] [comments] |
What's your take on AMZN earnings for someone who wants to get out of the stock? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 01:49 AM PDT I have one AMZN stock bought at 2k 8 months ago and I want to get out with the least loss and I have no intentions on keeping it for years to come. It's at 1.85k right now and I'm a bit worried how earnings will pan out. Should I wait out the earnings or sell? [link] [comments] |
Long time investors - advice on getting started? Posted: 09 Apr 2019 07:17 AM PDT I'm a 22 year old college student and I have a good bit of money to start with (5 figures), but I know absolutely nothing about the stock market. Does anyone have advice on a good way to educate myself and/or a way to make low risk investments to get my feet wet? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
I think the Pinterest IPO will flop Posted: 08 Apr 2019 10:10 PM PDT
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