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    Monday, October 14, 2019

    Stocks - r/Stocks Daily Discussion Monday - Oct 14, 2019

    Stocks - r/Stocks Daily Discussion Monday - Oct 14, 2019


    r/Stocks Daily Discussion Monday - Oct 14, 2019

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 01:08 AM PDT

    These daily discussions run from Monday to Friday including during our themed posts.

    Some helpful links:

    If you have a basic question, for example "what is EPS," then google "investopedia EPS" and click the investopedia article on it; do this for everything until you have a more in depth question or just want to share what you learned.

    Please discuss your portfolios in the Rate My Portfolio sticky..

    See our past daily discussions here. Also links for: Technicals Tuesday, Options Trading Thursday, and Fundamentals Friday.

    submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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    Thoughts on selling some TSLA prior to earnings report?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 11:54 AM PDT

    I invested in TSLA in June, the day of the Q2 earnings report I was up 1K, then of course it bombed. I regret not selling half to secure some profits. But if the report goes well I may not get the chance to buy back in. Obviously no one knows for sure what the best move is, but I was curious what everyone else is planning. For the record I'm long on TSLA, but hindsight being 20/20 I wish I had sold half my shares before Q2 report and used the profit to buy more shares after the dip.

    submitted by /u/questioillustro
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    Southwest Airlines pilots don’t expect Boeing 737 Max back until February

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 02:15 PM PDT

    https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/14/boeing-737-max-not-likely-returning-until-february-southwest-pilots-say.html

    The Boeing 737 Max has been grounded worldwide since mid-March after two crashes.

    Southwest over the summer delayed when it expects the planes to return until Jan. 5.

    Air safety regulators have not said when they plan to certify the planes.

    submitted by /u/coolcomfort123
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    Are you 100% in stocks?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 01:27 PM PDT

    Are you 100% in stocks? Or do you also have bonds, gold, silver...?

    submitted by /u/Eistee-
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    How will IPOA be valued after its merger with Virgin Galactic?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 10:26 AM PDT

    Insofar as I can tell, this methodology for moving into the publicly traded domain is unprecedented. Are there any other famous examples of companies going public the way Virgin Galactic is going public?

    submitted by /u/Neopyrrhu
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    I think I frigged up

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 06:54 PM PDT

    I bought about $3k in HEXO last year thinking they'd explode, and they did. Only they exploded in the dying sense. What should I do? Sell it or hold on? Invest in something else?

    submitted by /u/stinkycheezeit
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    App for Stock community

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 11:43 PM PDT

    I am an app developer and thinking to make an app for stock investors. It is basically going to be like this subreddit plus more stock market features like chart and prices. Do you think it will be useful? Also maybe it can have chatrooms for each stock

    submitted by /u/steadyaction
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    Thoughts on LBRT?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 10:00 AM PDT

    Added to my portfolio in early August as I have very little exposure to energy/oil/gas. Bought at 12.25, thought it seemed to look fairly good based on analyst rating and financials by my own interpretation. However, its performance has been poor, while the 1 year price target from analysts is still 15.60 its down below $9 a share today. I was thinking, should I add to my position or is there something that I am missing. That explains why the stock is performing so poorly.

    Thanks for any insight!

    submitted by /u/dexvd
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    Good time to buy uber?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 02:15 PM PDT

    Stock chart seems to be bottoming out at around 30. Thoughts on if the big drop since the IPO has found a real value for the stock, and to expect growth as they progress? Maybe room for it to drop more?

    submitted by /u/djc8433
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    Should I buy Tailored brands(TLRD)?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 02:12 PM PDT

    There´s this stock, TLRD which i´m thinking on buying. I am currently 8k in cash (everything) after i sold my latest position 2 months ago, my strategy was to wait for the next upcomming recession to buy some wonderfull businesses at a discount, but 2 days ago I came across this stock which is being bought by Michael Burry (the guy who shorted the mortgage derivatives in the big short movie).

    I looked into it and it seems ridiculously cheap(P/E of 3), but not the kind of wonderfull business Buffett would own, it´s more like a Graham cigar butt stock. I thought on buying like 2k of it at 4$/share since Burry was buying it at 5$. If a guy like him is buying at 5$ i don´t think i´d make a mistake buying it at 4$.

    My question is: should i give it a shot or wait for a crash that could happen tomorrow or 2 years from now to buy more consolidated businesses that i´ve already researched more throughoutly?

    *Any of you guys that know/are involved with of this stock please give your opinion

    submitted by /u/LostYasuoInaStorm
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    What do you personally think about Philip Morris International?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 01:52 PM PDT

    Now while I understand PM is a cigarette and tobacco manufacturing company and as so is essentially a "Sin Stock" I feel its a solid company as a whole since the core of its business is addictive demerit goods which no matter what, people will buy.

    True that now there are alot of anti smoking campaigns worldwide and that government themselves have a firm disdain for cigarette companies, I still feel it's a safe haven for investors (Philip Morris) due to there fat dividend yield of 6% and revenues of $79B

    The progress of PMs stock is a bit disappointing, from its peak of $121 per share in 2017 to $79.03 per share in 2019 and yet I feel the stock could rebound.

    Overall I would like to know what you think?

    submitted by /u/theofficialbtg
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    Do any of you use classical charting?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 01:29 PM PDT

    So recently, I have been reading "The New Trading for a Living" and discovered about this method traders used in the past before computerized charts. It doesn't require a whole lot, just a pencil and paper. The only disadvantage of it being that it requires wishful thinking. Do any of you still use this method today? If so, has it been accurate or is it just bull?

    submitted by /u/BlckKnfe
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    Is the dividend discount model meant primarily for dividend stocks

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 10:38 AM PDT

    I see the dividend discount model thrown as a popular tool for valuing a company, but I'm not sure if it's supposed to be used mainly for dividend stocks.

    submitted by /u/focusrunner79
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    Best site or app to use for Canadians?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 09:15 AM PDT

    I know R###nh##d isn't available to my country, so what would he my best option entering the market as a Canadian? I heard good things about Fidelity. Any other recommendations or advice that are specific to my country?

    submitted by /u/BladeRunner2098
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    Buying market vs buying limit order.

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 09:00 AM PDT

    In my very short time of buying stock, I've bought three different ones now. HCP, O, PPL. I've bought them at market all times and they go through at the price it says. Never any higher. I tried to buy a stock in limit order last week and it didn't go through, I guess because it was a few cents above what I chose as a limit. But what is the point of ever using limit when market orders have been so exact for what I want so far?

    Thanks for any help. I've been using 401k money to play around with and trying to find good companies paying decent dividends.

    submitted by /u/sharpobsidian
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    Stock loses question

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 08:24 AM PDT

    So I have some stocks that have bombed pretty bad and I was thinking of just selling them (held on for close to a year once it started dropping). The question I have is if I file the capital loss on my tax returns, what does "By doing so, you may be able to remove some income from your tax return" mean? I've been trying to research it but they keep using these words. Is it saying that I'll get some money back from the losses? If so, should I sell now and then invest into something else after getting my money back? Don't know if this is the right sub for this but any feedback is appreciated! Thanks!

    submitted by /u/LgtWiggles
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    What Dividend Stocks do you guys recommend??

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 11:32 PM PDT

    What Dividend Stocks do you guys recommend?? I'm currently switching up my portfolio and looking at mostly dividend stocks. Thanks

    submitted by /u/Chimmy31
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    Do you think UNH will rise?

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 02:31 AM PDT

    Im just barely getting into stocks and bought a good amount of shares for UNH when the stock was lower earlier this month. Do you think i should sell now or hold on for a higher return?

    submitted by /u/the_wildest_wonder
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    Ghost kitchens - valuation metric

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 05:28 AM PDT

    I was pitched a deal in a private ghost kitchen. Seed round

    Wikipedia - Ghost Kitchens

    It leases commercial space and sub-leases it to 4-8 chefs who get their own kitchen space and sell via delivery apps. No In-store dining.

    It seems like this company, if public, would be valued like a real estate company (net revenue per sq ft) x cap rate.. vs. a software or growth company.

    Unless it's perceived like a we work.. but that too, seems to now be a real estate value vs. a tech stock at $48b.

    What are your thoughts on valuation metrics?

    submitted by /u/rjhtoronto
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    Investing in US stocks as a foreigner

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 04:46 AM PDT

    I currently have an account on a broker based in Hong Kong. I can buy and sell US stocks with a 20 USD fee per buy/sell.

    The issue is that they take a 3 USD commission on dividends and a 30% tax rate in addition to being unable to do any drip.

    Is there any online platform that allows for better passive investing ?

    submitted by /u/BubbleBeats69
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    What do I do

    Posted: 14 Oct 2019 10:10 AM PDT

    Back info: I'm a high school student in Canada. I bought shares of aurora cannabis and it's gone down very much (atleast 25%). I was expecting it to go up since edibles were to be legalized on October 8th but it didn't. I'm a new investor so any help would be appreciated!

    submitted by /u/Kaandro
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    How do you choose what stocks to buy?

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 08:51 PM PDT

    I've commonly been paying attention to stocks such as the common faang, microsoft, mcdonalds, netflix, waste management, and such. But how do you look into stocks?

    submitted by /u/ilikefood00
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    Any resources to help me learn the basics of getting started.

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 08:50 PM PDT

    Hey all, Just curious outside of just combing this reddit and all other stock related forums and learning fragments out of interest, is there any resources that could teach me the basics of the stock market. My knowledge is less than minimal. I would love a video, informative post like a "sticky", web series or book that could teach me the basics. Simple definitions, golden rules etc. Thanks for any help in advance.

    submitted by /u/doindia
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    Calculating value for stock since 1990 (HON)

    Posted: 13 Oct 2019 08:34 PM PDT

    Is there a site where I can input the stock symbol and a number of shares, and it will output the value in a chart over time showing all the splits?

    Details:

    I'm pretty sure I owned 100 shares of Honeywell (HON) as of mid-1990 (I know I owned the stocks, just not sure about the amount). But the earliest record in my Fidelity account online shows a transaction of 175 shares coming into the account in January of 1993. All dividends have been reinvested (and I can see those numbers) so it should be a straight forward method to determine what I should be at or where I actually started. But it's not.

    When I calculate the shares using the splits that occurred (see screenshot), I think I should have 419.5 shares, not including any dividend reinvestment, if I started with 100 shares in 1990. But Fidelity shows me acquiring 192 shares over that 23 years since 1993 from dividend reinvestment, which adds to the 175 shares from 1993 for a total of 367 shares, and that is currently what's in my portfolio. But those numbers don't seem to take into account any of the splits and that is where I'm confused.

    https://imgur.com/a/HJYCSiO

    submitted by /u/wldcat1969
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