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    Tuesday, October 22, 2019

    Stock Market - wealth manager who had a mental breakdown and fled the USA? Not a fraud

    Stock Market - wealth manager who had a mental breakdown and fled the USA? Not a fraud


    wealth manager who had a mental breakdown and fled the USA? Not a fraud

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 02:07 PM PDT

    Awhile back I watched a youtube video about a former US based wealth management company, that collapsed after the lead guy had a mental breakdown and unexpectedly fled the country and job and family. Even though there wasn't any fraud or theft, the publicly traded value of the company immediately collapsed the next day once news spread that he was gone. He said something like "why should I have to be forced to continue to work?" essentially that he's not a slave or otherwise obligated.

    Can anyone please tell me the name of the guy, so I can find that video I watched and other similar ones? Any other stories / videos / examples you can suggest, since I found this so fascinating?

    Thank you!!!

    submitted by /u/bkaspar
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    Stock-market bulls should heed this warning signal from oil prices, economist says

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 01:39 PM PDT

    Trade-related worries about growth are taking a toll on oil, could stocks be next?

    Oil prices might be acting like a warning light when it comes to the stock market, which is trading near all-time highs despite growing concern over the U.S.-China tariff battle and rising global trade tensions.

    "Equity and corporate bonds in the U.S. have so far shrugged off the worrying signs for the global economy coming from lower oil prices. But we suspect that it won't be long before slower global growth, including in the U.S., takes a toll on both," said Simona Gambarini, markets economist at Capital Economics, in a Friday note.

    Oil, meanwhile, retreated, with West Texas Intermediate crude futuresCLX19, -0.61% falling 1.7% over the past week, dragging the U.S. benchmark lower on the month and leaving it more than 23% off its 2019 high and down nearly 30% from its October 2018 high above $76 a barrel.

    https://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-stock-investors-shouldnt-ignore-this-warning-signal-from-the-oil-market-2019-10-19

    submitted by /u/LightningPlus
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    Bond Yields are Dropping Pretty Quickly

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 10:29 AM PDT

    Just noticing that the 4, 13, and 26 week bonds are like, slightly more than half of the yield they were a year ago. That would indicate more people are buying bonds. And by "more people" I mean big investors because us common folk can't move the needle at all.

    I also can't help but notice that gold and oil are kinda way up and manufacturing is way down.

    So when's it gonna hit? And what are you gonna do when it does? I've got money in bonds now waiting for the drop so I can get back into the index. Have you pulled back yet?

    Also, I've got my eye on that sweet sweet Hawaii property.

    submitted by /u/ThaShitPostAccount
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    What does it mean when institutional investors start buying up huge amounts of a stock scheduled to be back door listed?

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 11:53 PM PDT

    So there's this conglomerate in my country that has an energy arm. It's already built alot of plants here and abroad. Recently they acquired a smaller public company from the same sector. A few months ago there were rumors that it's gonna be their energy arm's back door, then a few days ago they've formally announced the name and symbol change on the exchange. Few days later that institutions such as Deutsche Bank and another local institution started to buy HUGE amounts of the stock (like 30 million in value that day) and even more today. What exactly does this mean? For the record I've also bought the stock for way lower than the instis bought. Have I struck gold?

    submitted by /u/Magnicello
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    Let's talk Tim Sykes and Warrior Trading

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 08:39 PM PDT

    A couple of months ago, I was subscribed to tim sykes chatroom and had purchased a few of his DVDs. Well worth it! Unfortunately, I wasn't able to find what I needed, which was a real time strategy. This is when I went on youtube and typed "daytrading strategies." The idea obviously being to find someone more experienced who'd be willing to share their strategies. Tim sykes strategies are great and they appear to work, but they aren't for me. I stumbled on warrior trading. Now spending an extra $200 a month was kind of ridiculous, seeing as I've only made a few trades since following tim. I've been treating it like school where you get educated, get a degree, then work.

    Since joining the warrior room last month, I've made a few successful trades and a few unsuccessful ones. Unfortunately, they didn't pan out like I expected. My emotions got the best of me, and I ended up losing on them. Circling back to warrior, he calls out his positions live, which is useful to see what his though process is and emulate it. I use robinhood as my broker and I'm never quick enough to get my orders in. By the time I hear the call, I'm not able to fill the order fast enough. I usually use a market order, which allows a trader to get a quicker order. I've been reluctant to use stop orders.

    Now, my question to you all is this, since tim and warrior have different trading methods, which is the more profitable one long-term. Meaning which can make me serious cash quicker. I know it sounds silly, but I'm genuinely curious which style is better to learn. Should I go back to tim, or stick with warrior? I'm renewing my subscription soon, so feedback would be great!

    Edit: Can I get a real answer please?

    submitted by /u/21421195211212
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    I made a game to learn about trading stocks. Tell me what you think!

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 07:10 AM PDT

    Over the past 6 months my friend and I have been developing a game to try to help teach better intuition about markets to non-technical audiences.

    It's a free game that uses over 500,000 historicals from over 400 well-known brands that are publicly and is hopefully a fun game. We'd love to know what you think. Thanks!

    http://getwhaled.com

    submitted by /u/kristopolous
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    RMANF New Cannabis Alternative Jumps 21% during Mondays session

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 04:07 PM PDT

    2 High Yield Dividend Stocks To Buy Now?

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 09:15 PM PDT

    Share a stock picking game I created

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 11:08 AM PDT

    Hey guys, first post here on r/StockMarket. I'd like to share a stock picking game I created.

    What I see is a lot of people are talking about Apple, Square or Shopify back when the price was still low. So I think if you can spend a little more time talking to other traders about those companies and deep dive into the financials then you might have a better chance of finding the next big things in the stock market.

    https://www.earningsfly.com/picking-game

    Feel free to ask me anything, also any suggestions would be nice.

    submitted by /u/ssmlee04
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    Lightbridge

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 02:19 PM PDT

    Does anyone know whats going on with the company? How did the stock price shoot up so much?

    submitted by /u/NoPryde
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    [UBER NOOB QUESTION] starting on stock market

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 10:42 AM PDT

    Hi guys, for some time I was just reading what was posted here, since for some time I was thinking about building some passive income. So, my first post here follows. Do you have basic noob advice to somebody who wants to start? Is it better to buy regulary (monthly basis) or buy only when conditions are good (say, few times yearly)? Is stock market really a good idea if you are ready to invest small amounts, say 150€/month (money that I know I can risk losing without it being catastrofic for me)? Whats the best way to start, if I am located in the EU? Do you advice buying from companies that pay shares monthly (are there companies like that)?

    submitted by /u/DzoniValker
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    CapitalVia®| Nifty Trading Tips | Nifty Intraday Calls and Recommendations

    Posted: 21 Oct 2019 03:21 AM PDT

    Get best nifty trading tips and calls from India's best stock market advisory firm CapitalVia, our nifty recommendations include exact entry levels, stop loss and targets. We help traders in planning their nifty trading strategies in Intraday with a proven track record.( https://www.capitalvia.com/nifty-tips)

    #niftyintradayadvice #stockoptionadvice #bestbtstcalls #equitytadvice #intradaytraders #stockmarkettradingadvice #bankniftyfutureadvice #stockadvisorycompanyinindore #stockadvisorycompanyinindore

    submitted by /u/Jeff1234b
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