Stocks - Terrible 340k portfolio from one of the biggest YouTube stock channels - financial education |
- Terrible 340k portfolio from one of the biggest YouTube stock channels - financial education
- Do companies know who their shareholders are?
- How do you handle your gains and losses so taxes won't impact your strategy?
- Best brokerage for cash and free trades
- Choosing/screening stocks to swing trade
- Now that there's no commission fees couldn't I just buy a bunch of stock and use stops?
- What is a good stocks/investment app outside of US / for Taiwan or Indonesian user? And what is a good robo-advisor investment app also outside of US?
- Besides actually not owning the stocks themselves, what are the disadvantages of using CFDs?
- How do you lose money ?
- Starting in the stock market
- China Deal
- 2020 Foresight: How to Protect and Profit in a Bear Market (Part 5)
- With AAPL so high and most likely to dip, should I sell now and buy some energy stocks on the cheap next week?
Terrible 340k portfolio from one of the biggest YouTube stock channels - financial education Posted: 12 Oct 2019 11:39 PM PDT Jeremy's 340k portfolio from financial education - seems pretty risky to me, thoughts? Hey guys, they Jeremy guy from financial education has a recent video on his 340k portfolio. It's pretty bad! First of all, he only has 11 holdings. His biggest position is FB - at 68,000 which is 20% of his portfolio. 38,000 in TESLA His three smallest positions are 11, 12 and 13,000 which are IRBT, JWN and TPR. Around 3.5% each. 20,000 in UBER! This guy has to be one of the biggest financial channels on YouTube and I have to say I'm pretty appalled at his portfolio. If I could recommend someone who has a great portfolio of similar size, dividend Derek has a website and writes articles for seeking alpha - now this guy knows what he's doing! Sam [link] [comments] |
Do companies know who their shareholders are? Posted: 13 Oct 2019 09:20 AM PDT Does a company know who their shareholders are? Let's use Disney as an example. Do they know each individual shareholder? Address and whatnot? Some way to contact them. Is there a certain threshold where they start to care about someone as a shareholder enough to track them? [link] [comments] |
How do you handle your gains and losses so taxes won't impact your strategy? Posted: 13 Oct 2019 11:10 AM PDT How do you exit positions with large gains without having the tax liabilities during tax season mess up your trading strategy? Especially if you have losses but don't want to be forced out of those positions because of wash sale rules. Is it best to just set aside some of the gains every time you realize them for taxes? [link] [comments] |
Best brokerage for cash and free trades Posted: 13 Oct 2019 02:46 PM PDT Just as the title says, I'm about to switch brokers and was wondering what firm pays the best for cash that is sitting....in particular, the brokers who are offering free cash. [link] [comments] |
Choosing/screening stocks to swing trade Posted: 13 Oct 2019 02:38 PM PDT Do you swing trade? If you do, could you share the methods and thought process that go into choosing which stocks you pick. Thank you! [link] [comments] |
Now that there's no commission fees couldn't I just buy a bunch of stock and use stops? Posted: 12 Oct 2019 03:26 PM PDT Now that there's no commission fees couldn't I just buy a bunch of stock and put stops in place for say cents rather then dollars? If they go up great if not then I get stopped out at a small loss. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Oct 2019 11:55 PM PDT I want to start investing but after checking most credible ones are based in the US (ameritrade, betterment, M1 finance) and I checked further into others such as Olymptrade and IQ option but people have been saying how they will have problem withdrawing money if they made profits, so now Im confused what is a good place to enter the stock market, can u guys give suggestions? Another one is regarding roboadvisor investment, similarly most credible ones are region specific so are there any that supports worldwide or just Taiwan? [link] [comments] |
Besides actually not owning the stocks themselves, what are the disadvantages of using CFDs? Posted: 13 Oct 2019 04:07 AM PDT I'm from the Philippines so my only option is pretty much eToro(Schwab requires $25,000 min deposit). Unfortunately, eToro offers CFDs. What are the risks and disadvantages of this if I'm not going to use leverage anyway? I'm pretty much just planning on holding long term. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 13 Oct 2019 01:47 PM PDT Dumb question, idk much (nothing lol) about stocks but, how do "90%" of people don't make money of it , you buy it "cheap" and you sell when it's "expenvive", right... ?? (I'm talking about day trading) Do people just sell it to soon ? Sorry for the dumb question [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Oct 2019 08:59 PM PDT I'm not sure if this is allowed but Im 18 and want to start investing in stocks, but cheap (I want to go for about $100 a month). But I'm not exactly sure how, or anything. When to buy/sell. Anyone have recommended youtubers, sites, tips, or really anything to help me start? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Oct 2019 06:03 PM PDT I honestly haven't had a chance to dive into the particulars but this should be a positive 1-2 day move right? [link] [comments] |
2020 Foresight: How to Protect and Profit in a Bear Market (Part 5) Posted: 12 Oct 2019 02:50 PM PDT See Original to read with pictures embedded. It is the weekend heading into the third month of October. S&P500 has rallied strongly in the final days of the week upon optimism over fundamentals. At one point, we'd made record weekly gains for the year, but price dropped in the last hour of trading to close 2969 down from a high of 2992. Unfortunately part four was wasted with having to post brokerage statements, which is not a very productive. Hopefully it stops people who do not have experience using these forms of analysis saying I am lying - there is no longer time for debating empty points that do not respect the model of hypothesis, evidence and probability. If the markets are going to crash in the coming year, things are going to start happening very soon. Critical Warning Sign: S&P500 opens and starts to drop, the speed of the drop picks up through the week. The low is made around 2650, but there is not a lot of upwards movement. In part three, I said our early warning signal was a 10% drop in week two of October. However, the precursor move of markets moving up and down and closing on 2960 area did not happen in week one. This criteria failing to meet meant the larger move was less likely to happen, and updates on this were posted going into week two. The move we had last week does fit with the precursor move we'd usually see foreshadowing a big move like this. The action last week tells us we are getting extremely close to the decision point whether the markets go higher or lower, and if they're going lower, they never do that slowly. In the coming week we may see the failure of the bull trend, and price dropping several percent a day with a sustain run of days doing this. If we see this, 2600 becomes a vital level. This is the level where the daily trend would either continue or break. A big warning sign we should look for that it may break is price stopping just before this level and making a couple bullish moves upwards (but not getting too high). Usually when a strong trend continuation level will hold the market rushes into it. When the fast move starts, it stops there. However, a tendency we have when a market is going to break a strong level is for it to fake a reversal a little bit before that level. Then after a short period of moving up and ranging it comes down hard and goes through the level. You can think of it like the seller taking a little break and getting ready to reload to take out the strong area. If we see this sort of action coming from around 2640 - 2660 we should be aware there can be a big move down coming. The failure of 2600 will be an important one. If it fails, we should see the market falling fast through it and hitting 2500 area. If we see this, we should be aware that this level has failed. This is where the big bulls would have come in if they were coming. If we crash through there, it's took big bears. The market will not instantly crash from this break, but it tells us it is setting up to. If and when this happens, there can be a bounce upwards. This bounce upward will probably end somewhere around the 2700 level. This is when it is likely to become very apparent there is strong sellers in the market. The move from 2700 can take us very quickly down to 2320. After this, there will be a series of shallow pull backs and pushes lower, and these will lead up to fatal slice move described in part 1. The week ahead is the most dangerous one in the S&P500 for 10 yeas. If the bulls lose in spectacular fashion next week, they've quit. We will see bear markets. The only way we will not if this time happens to be different from every other time, ever. Which does not seem to be a smart way to bet. I really do want to stress, the build up of different things we're seeing here does not happen often. You'd not be able to find the specific conditions we have currently outside of the penultimate part of previous bull runs. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 12 Oct 2019 07:52 PM PDT Very new to this, I apologize ahead of time for not knowing basic stuff. I usually just invest in index ETFs. But, I wanted to try a little bit of an exercise so I bought a few shares of AAPL a week ago. It's been doing nicely. But, to my understanding with earnings coming out this week it might be wise to sell my shares in that and maybe buy some energy stock on the cheap, with that sector possibly taking a hit. What do you think? What am I missing to understand? Please teach me. [link] [comments] |
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