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    Thursday, January 9, 2020

    JPMorgan's "Guide to the Markets" is an absolute goldmine Investing

    JPMorgan's "Guide to the Markets" is an absolute goldmine Investing


    JPMorgan's "Guide to the Markets" is an absolute goldmine

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 04:46 AM PST

    I found this buried in the comments of another post, but I think everyone should see it. It's an infographic/guide for recent and long term market trends. LOTS of juicy statistics. The quarterly version is available to the public without a subscription.

    Link Here

    submitted by /u/Miniwa
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    Is the price of an ETF driven by the demand of the ETF product itself or the demand of it's underlying stocks?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 01:46 PM PST

    Seasoned investors, what mistakes did you make early on that you learned from?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 05:37 PM PST

    I am a younger investor (26) and constantly come to this subreddit for advice and general info about investing. I constantly see investors talking about "make your mistakes early". What exactly were those mistakes and how are you investing now because of it?

    submitted by /u/hossmanTK
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    With all the talk on /r/investing about TSLA’s market cap, I’m amazed that Damardoran’s valuation write up and backup excel DCF aren’t referred to on this sub more.

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 03:24 PM PST

    Noob investor (aka me) - always looking for some little dip, always buying all time highs

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 03:40 AM PST

    Hi, this is me, be better: 1. Accumulate little money for DCA 2. Waiting before invest to find at least 1-2% little dip 3. Dip never happens 4. Seeing new gains, new all time hights, regret not investing 5. Finally investing at ATH hoping bull will continue, but market falls with 1-2% dip 6. After few weeks, stocks have new ATH, happy feeling for being invested and nice gains 7. Repeat after 1-2 months

    1. Accumulate little money for DCA
    2. Waiting for little dip....

    I will be better.

    submitted by /u/hepepnyt
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    Thoughts on REIT's?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 08:30 PM PST

    I'm getting my annual bonus in a few months, and I'm thinking about diversifying and getting some dividend paying REIT's.

    Anyone on this board have any experience with them? Are they worth it? Or should I stick with ETF's?

    submitted by /u/Doogra223
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    what's you're use of stop limit orders and trailing stop orders?

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 03:01 AM PST

    I'm new to buying and selling stocks. does anybody use a trailing stop order on any higher volatility stocks like $tsla even if you plan to hold long term? what about stop limit orders just above you're purchase price? are these in place across you're entire portfolio?

    submitted by /u/queefer__m4dness
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    How do zero cost mutual funds make money?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 08:22 PM PST

    I'm looking at Fidelity ZERO Total Market Index Fund (FZROX). It doesn't charge any fees and the expense ratios are zero. What's the catch? I understand they are managing this less actively than some of their other funds, but they still must be making money off this. How do they do it?

    submitted by /u/deadguys
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    Tanger Factory Outlet was up 10% yesterday.

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 11:10 PM PST

    Why was SKT up 10% yesterday? I couldn't find any news on the move.

    submitted by /u/CrushingInvesting
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    What was your biggest loss on an investment?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 01:42 PM PST

    25 years old, ~$115K net worth

    I've gotten absolutely crushed by pot stocks... needed to learn a lesson on investments I guess :(

    Down ~$20K on this position and livid and sad.... any tips on how to cope with this and rebound?

    Please share your experiences and #'s

    submitted by /u/mb31252
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    Why do you think your largest individual holdings will beat the market this year?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 07:09 PM PST

    Just an exercise I've been engaging in that I thought others might enjoy. Most of us invest in companies for the long-run but a full year is a significant holding period.

    AMT - Hard to find this combination of a stable, well-run, largely recession-proof business that still has solid top-line growth. Highly valued company but I think they stack up quite well compared to current market valuations. Smart money will continue to buy/accumulate on any dips.

    BDX - I can't confidently say this will beat the market in an election year just because it's healthcare. But another largely recession-proof business with top line growth. Also a Dividend Aristocrat. Any political impact would just be noise and a possible buying opportunity.

    GOOG - My thought is that whatever tech innovation happens, they will find a way to capitalize. Either through acquisition, partnership, or a competing offering. I bought them in 2015 so at this point I'm also not selling to avoid a tax hit. Admittedly a Tech Index would probably accomplish my goal with less company-specific risk.

    So I learned BDX is a rocky pick for this year but may have opportunities to add to my position, and GOOG could probably be replaced by a market-weighted tech index for my investment goals. And that I feel quite confident about AMT being my largest holding.

    submitted by /u/GromGrommeta
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    Patent infringement suit against $GOOGL may not end well for $SONO

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 07:40 PM PST

    $SONO's lawsuit against $GOOGL for patent infringement filed earlier this week is unlikely to end well for Sonos. Court documents indicate that Google gained "deep access to Sonos' proprietary technology" in 2013 when Sonos integrated Google Play Music. The documents also provided several examples of Google using similar technology that increasingly infringed upon Sonos' patents, including Google Home. Given the integration of Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant are key functionalities to Sonos' platform, Google could pull its partnership at the expense of Sonos users. Interestingly, Sonos did not name $AMZN it the lawsuit. This is likely because Amazon does not yet group its products together to play music simultaneously like Google does, which is an important part of Sonos' technology. Amazon is more important to Sonos' business model than Google (e.g. it sells on Amazon, speakers are integrated with Alexa, an AWS customer).

    submitted by /u/street-guru
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    TSLA discussion

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 03:41 AM PST

    I think TSLA's value has grown for real with all these developments it has had(Cybertruck announced,Model Y announced,China Gigafactory built and started producing and will sell a good number of cars in China, bought land in Germany where it will build a Gigafactory and then start selling more vehicles in Europe as the brand name grows), but I also think that the actual price (492$ at the time I'm writing) is too high, unless you consider it like it already has a big part of future growth priced in, wich i think it has, but a big part is also hype, my guess is that the price will go down in the future month and stabilize at a higher number than before the growth started, cutting out of the price the hype and current speculation and also a part of future growth, that will be added again in the future as the company grows as expected.

    TSLA also develops and sells solar panels/roofs and batteries(not sure it sells batteries), idk much about that actually.

    I have difficulty guessing when and why the stock will have this adjustment.

    Right now I'm owning TSLA for speculation and plan to hold it until next Friday, and the buy it again after the adjustment as an actual investment and profit form the company's growth.

    What do you think about the current TSLA speculation?

    How do you think it will perform in the future?

    When do you think the hype train will stop and how?

    What do you think about my analysis? Do you think Elon Musk's CEO prize has an impact on the stock? (Sauce 1) (Sauce 2)

    How do you think TSLA's battery and solar roofs section will perform in the future?

    submitted by /u/CIARRAPUNGI
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    S&P 500 futures turn positive, making back overnight drop as Iran retaliation less than feared

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 04:43 AM PST

    Jefferies "20 Stocks for 2020" Note

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 03:15 AM PST

    Does anyone have a link to this note or have a brief overview on what was included?

    Thanks

    submitted by /u/red_r0b0
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    Tesla's market value eclipses GM and Ford - combined!

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 01:43 PM PST

    https://mobile.reuters.com/article/amp/idUSKBN1Z72MU

    The Silicon Valley electric car maker's stock rose about 4%at midday on Wednesday, hitting a record high and elevating its market capitalization to $88 billion. That is $2 billion larger than General Motors' and Ford's respective stock market values of $49 billion and $37 billion, combined.

    What specifically has changed since Q4 that has made the stock double?

    submitted by /u/Polymatheia
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    If the current stock of a price is a prediction of the future price

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 03:00 AM PST

    then what a calculated intrinsic value says, is that more than half of all market participants are wrong about the future implied price and that in an undefined time frame, more than half of all market participant will eventually make a new price prediction that is equal or above that specific intrinsic value.

    In all optimal conditions (i.e: no macro changes, no fundamental changes and expected growth rates etc.), then an investment strategy based on intrinsic value would have at best a 50% change of being correct. The slightness decline in either variables decreases the chances of that bet being correct.

    If this is true and correct then value investors are gamblers and deep value investors are simply nuts.

    Please challenge this. I am sure I got this wrong.

    submitted by /u/crosmaxal
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    How to diversify portfolio of equities

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 02:45 AM PST

    Hi,

    After selecting individual stocks, how do i ensure my portfolio of equities is diversified enough? Is there any way to check? And if it isnt, how do i know what kind/sector/type of equities should i be looking for to diversify effectively.

    submitted by /u/6610221
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    ETF Bubble -Freaking Out a Bit

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 05:57 PM PST

    Last year, a close family member passed away and left me with a sizeable inheritance. Upon the advice of many and after doing my own research, I ended up investing in some ETFs. Well, last night I watched the Big Short and after doing some reading found that there is an ETF bubble brewing, according to Michael Burry. Needless to say, I am freaking out. I am worried about losing everything. I understand this may seem silly to bring up here, but I was wondering what the opinions were on this forum and any advice. I kinda feel blind sided as I thought that for once I was doing something correct. Now I am terrified.

    submitted by /u/Kookie_Kay
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    What keeps driving the market up right now?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 07:02 AM PST

    How does this thing keep going up non-stop? No news has derailed this recent boom. How is this possible?

    submitted by /u/alltime_pf_guru
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    Investing as a minor

    Posted: 09 Jan 2020 02:11 AM PST

    I'm a 17 year old who's interested in investing but I'm not of age yet. I have some starting capital ( about 2k?) and am wondering if my parents can open an account for me and I make the decisions. Are there some steps or legal procedures that need to be carried out by them or me?

    submitted by /u/twilightgales
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    Great Macro Content from the Dallas Fed. Get the Pulse of the global economy

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 11:33 AM PST

    They cover all the major sectors of the market and economy. Good for a one stop study session. The LINK: https://www.dallasfed.org/-/media/Documents/institute/global.pdf

    read what Joey Powell is reading too :)

    submitted by /u/IamFinanceED
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    Where to learn about in-depth and advance stuff that are beyond the levels of Investopedia?

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 10:01 PM PST

    What are some textbooks (hard-copy) and other websites (soft-copy) I can purchase to cover the entire topics? Extensive coverage of the chapters and stuff is what I want, and preferably on a textbook form.

    submitted by /u/ToughAssHole
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    S&P 500 Investment Vehicles

    Posted: 08 Jan 2020 09:58 PM PST

    I have been looking for a good investment vehicle for the S&P 500. I have researched the 6 listed below but was hoping someone might know of other more interesting versions. The first 3 below track the S&P 500 with only slight variations in how they handle dividends. The last 3 are more interesting with IVW having the best long term performance.

    Does anyone know of some other good S&P 500 vehicles? Thanks in advance

    SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) Basic S&P 500

    iShares Core S&P 500 ETF (IVV) Basic S&P 500

    Vanguard S&P 500 ETF (VOO) Basic S&P 500

    Portfolio Plus S&P 500 (PPLC) 1.35 leverage

    Schwab U.S. Large Cap (SCHX) S&P 500 plus 280 more companies

    iShares S&P 500 Growth (IVW) Lean to growth stocks, best growth of this group

    submitted by /u/Riker626
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