Stocks - What’s the most complex Financial Instrument? |
- What’s the most complex Financial Instrument?
- BYND reports on monday. Will it be good or bad for the stock?
- Getting started, starting small and building for the future
- What do stocks actually mean to a company?
- Does which S&P Index fund matter?
- The next apple
- Beyond Meat is now bigger as the worlds biggest airline.
- Value of stock trading?
- Time to go vegan
- Blackstone Group Inc. (NYSE: BX) Question
- Vegetarian & environment fanatics being pumping this bubble!!!
- How to learn fundamental and technical analysis?
- $PTAM was uncovered that they are entering Cannabis sector with a merger or acquisition (Report this morning).
- Beauty gurus investing in beauty brands
- Professional vs. Non-professional Market Data
- When does each quarter's (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4) earnings reporting season begin/end?
- What are some of the best possible long-term stock investments?
- How Does The S&P 500 Work?
- International Market ETF
- Theory: Using Paper Trading as a valuation tool to test stocks performance before putting real money on the line to greatly reduce the risks associated with personal investing and trading?
- Can I buy more shares of the same company throughout different times?
- FACEBOOK $FB
What’s the most complex Financial Instrument? Posted: 28 Jul 2019 07:13 AM PDT Title pretty self explanatory, I was curious about what's the most complex financial instrument (so probably a synthetic/derivative) that man has come up with? [link] [comments] |
BYND reports on monday. Will it be good or bad for the stock? Posted: 28 Jul 2019 07:50 AM PDT Will BYND go up again like it when they reported in q1? They got a lot of attention since then which could help boost thier sales even more. The earnings could also make people realize that the stock is very overvalued and could trigger massive selling what are your thoughts? [link] [comments] |
Getting started, starting small and building for the future Posted: 28 Jul 2019 07:29 AM PDT Hi I'm fairly new. I've been reading general articles and blogs etc. Regarding investing. I hold a steady job, with a monthly income. I'm not making a killing, but enough to have spare money. I'm currently saving up cash for unexpected things(car repair, dentist bill, etc) and at the same time i have about 150-250 dollars a month to invest. I researched and decided on primarily index funds. I invested my 175 dollars in an index fund a month ago, and so far so good. I'm keeping track of the fund daily, but it havent reached a point where I was scared or considered getting out, despite ups and downs. So far, so good. Now in the coming week, i'll invest more. I've considered getting into Disney, Microsoft and AMD as stand alone stocks. My question is for a long term strategy, with a monthly investment do I get in deeper with the same fund? Spread out into other funds, or go for one stock? And in the long run, with a total of 12 yearly investments, what is the natural plan forward? I'm going for low maintenance, buy and hold for 10-15 years and long term 30 years. Any advice is appriciated. Also english is my secondary language, i'm trading from Denmark. Thanks [link] [comments] |
What do stocks actually mean to a company? Posted: 27 Jul 2019 03:06 PM PDT Ok, I'm a beginner that's trying to wrap my head around investing before starting out, but I feel unsure about the whole concept of what stocks mean to a company and what I'm actually purchasing. I keep hearing the analogy that a stock is a "piece" of a company, but what does that actually mean? I would assume that it meant stockholders would be entitled to a percentage of the company's profits relative to the volume of stocks they own in the company, paid out in dividends. For instance, owning 500 out of the 1000 total stock volume in a company gets you 50% of the profit. However, some companies (e.g Amazon), do not pay dividends. If the company does not pay dividends, then what am I actually purchasing? Are these stocks simply thought of as trading instruments that are used by investors to buy low and sell high? [link] [comments] |
Does which S&P Index fund matter? Posted: 28 Jul 2019 06:53 AM PDT Hopefully this is the right place to post this, but I'm looking to invest $1000 into a S&P Index fund and just forget about it for a couple years. I've never invested before, but im fairly familiar with the market. What I dont know is what's the difference between all of the S&P Index funds? Is one better than the other? Or are they essentially the same and doesn't matter where I put it? Figured you guys would be the best place for guidance [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 01:34 PM PDT I'm gona buy this 2maro HSDEF was wondering what you guys think I've been to there Oakland dispensary and it was an impressive operation [link] [comments] |
Beyond Meat is now bigger as the worlds biggest airline. Posted: 28 Jul 2019 01:09 PM PDT |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 12:49 PM PDT I know that when a company goes public, buying the stock helps the company get funds but when trading stocks after the ipo, where does the money come from and does it help the economy in any way? Also, why are stocks valueable? You are unable to sell assets owned by the company based on your fractional ownership, right? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 06:37 AM PDT Many people are riding the vegantrain, the vegan industry is worth way more than before and is going to grow a lot more in the future. I am thinking to invest in beyond meat, let me hear your thoughts, other choices, and your opinions [link] [comments] |
Blackstone Group Inc. (NYSE: BX) Question Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:11 AM PDT This is a company that I own the most shares in. From my initial investment the stock has gone up 50%. My question is hold or sell I'm 32. They pay good dividends. This is my first company in invested with that has performed so well. [link] [comments] |
Vegetarian & environment fanatics being pumping this bubble!!! Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:10 AM PDT https://m.nasdaq.com/symbol/bynd/ownership-summary 00.15 % Beyond Meat, Inc. Ownership Summary [link] [comments] |
How to learn fundamental and technical analysis? Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:09 AM PDT What are the best books or resources on fundamental and/or technical analysis? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:08 AM PDT In the Aurora Discord room someone figured out that a green energy company - Potash America Corp (OTC:PTAM) - is entering the cannabis sector with some type of acquisition of merger. The CEO literally just released a filing that shows he now owns over 80% of the outstanding common shares of the company, and they just added a new section to their website that talks about Cannabis, and actively pursuing companies to invest in. This could be very big if it pans out. Here is the report from this morning. I found this most interesting actually...
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Beauty gurus investing in beauty brands Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:07 AM PDT Are there any beauty gurus that have admitted to owning stocks in cosmetic companies (not their own brands)? Legally, would they need to disclose if they or a family member invests in some? What's stopping them from just purchasing and then praising said company in all their videos? would they need to classify it as an ad?! [link] [comments] |
Professional vs. Non-professional Market Data Posted: 28 Jul 2019 11:06 AM PDT Is anyone familiar with NYSE's classification into professional/non-professional market data subscribers? My broker (Interactive Brokers) classified me as a professional because I work for a bank, but my job doesn't involve trading and I'm neither an analyst nor a financial adviser or portfolio manager. They want me to pay more than $200 per month for market data, which is beyond ridiculous given that I trade this account as a hobby, in my free time, and exclusively for myself. [link] [comments] |
When does each quarter's (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4) earnings reporting season begin/end? Posted: 27 Jul 2019 08:28 PM PDT I read somewhere that the day of reporting is sometimes correlated to the company's performance for the previous quarter. So I'm wondering: What is the earliest date companies are able to report their earnings for every quarter (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4)? And, what is the latest date companies are able to report their earnings for every quarter (Q1, Q2, Q3, Q4)? [link] [comments] |
What are some of the best possible long-term stock investments? Posted: 27 Jul 2019 11:08 PM PDT I've seen a few interesting things of this nature, like dividend ETFs that are focused on the best combination of growth and yield. What else is good out there? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 07:04 AM PDT S&P 500 is the top 500 most valuable companies in america right? Say I invest in it through Vanguard or something like that. Say company X is in the top 500 when i buy into the fund. Say it gets overtaken by company Y on may 3rd 2020. Does Vanguard or whoever, sell all their stock in that fund of company X and buy an equal share in company Y? Also does the value of the S&P relative to GDP correlate with income inequality? (It's basically the concentration in most of the countries capital in the top 500 companies, right?) [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 08:14 AM PDT Howdy, all! I'm looking for an ETF in international markets for a longterm position. Preferably the bulk of country diversification would be Europe (30-40%) and PacAsia (20-35%). Everything I'm looking at though seems to be priced pretty flat over 3-5 years historical, but offers 2-3.5% dividends. Whereas individual stocks tend to seek steady growth over longterm, international market ETFs don't appear to do the same (or at least some of the top funds). Have I been looking at these the wrong way? Are these ETFs more of a 'hold and reinvest dividends' strategy rather than a '6-8% yearly over the next decade or two' strategy? Or am I misunderstanding all together? Currently looking at: VXUS IEFA IDEV SCHF [link] [comments] |
Posted: 28 Jul 2019 02:38 AM PDT If Paper Trading apps like "Investopedia" trade like that on the real life stock market with the exemption of having to take on risk, would it be a good risk management and valuation tool to instead use these apps as a tool to test and track a stocks performance before putting real money on the line? Simply put, using the stock trading simulator app as a rough draft to test the validity of your analysis on the company and then only investing real money on the line once you've tracked the stocks performance, showed positive results and know your analysis was correct? What do you guys think about this investment theory? What other ways could you use these apps for to help with investing? Any advice, suggestions or opinions would be greatly appreciated! Thanks! :) [link] [comments] |
Can I buy more shares of the same company throughout different times? Posted: 28 Jul 2019 04:54 AM PDT For example I buy 10 shares of one company, and I see it's doing really well can I buy 10+ more shares in the next month or so to add to the first 10 shares? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 27 Jul 2019 03:54 PM PDT How much more upside can you guys see to Facebook stock? Do you think stock could ever hit $500 or more? Can you see it going down hill like all other old social media platforms such as Myspace etc. (EDIT) I'd love to see this stock start paying dividends as well, do you guys think this is coming soon? Or will they hold off on that for a while longer? [link] [comments] |
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