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    Wednesday, March 25, 2020

    Stock Market - CAKE Cheesecake Factory Tells Landlords It Won’t Be Able to Pay April 1 Rent

    Stock Market - CAKE Cheesecake Factory Tells Landlords It Won’t Be Able to Pay April 1 Rent


    CAKE Cheesecake Factory Tells Landlords It Won’t Be Able to Pay April 1 Rent

    Posted: 25 Mar 2020 07:54 PM PDT

    https://la.eater.com/2020/3/25/21194144/cheesecake-factory-rent-strike-chain-restaurant

    Its not a franchise, all locations are corporate owned. They are screwed

    submitted by /u/stonksmarket
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    Where can I find this Dow Jones live feed?

    Posted: 25 Mar 2020 07:47 PM PDT

    It looks like this chart comes from the NYSE and I've seen it before but I can't find anywhere online. Anyone have a link?

    https://ibb.co/BLf3sYW

    submitted by /u/jordanearth
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    Global Elite on the Oil Exchange

    Posted: 25 Mar 2020 09:08 PM PDT

    This is what happens when freedom of assembly vanishes and crazy open mic'rs are forced to shout at electronics. Worse than '08? Worse than the Great Depression?

    YT: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uC8SmTapAbA

    submitted by /u/Niche96
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    Companies listed in more than 1 stock exchange, question

    Posted: 25 Mar 2020 10:00 PM PDT

    Assume a company listed in more than 1 stock exchange. Let's take an example at Alibaba, which is listed in US ($BABA) and HK (9988.HK). Or assume any similar company.

    Does the price in the two stock exchange move approximately the same as it is the same company with the same underlying ratings/values or does each stock perform differently in each stock exchange based on economic situation in such country (additional country risk to be priced in)?

    Asking, because as a Hong Kong resident I can trade both in US markets and HK markets. The latter is more convenient for me due to no exchange rates plus no taxes (yay HK no capital gain taxes).There are several investment products which are quoted both in Hong Kong and US, but the same applies to other countries as well. Assume i feel that the US market is more reliable due to overall political situation and economic conditions. But we can keep it broad, it is not only a personal question.

    Should i expect the same stock to perform similarly (i'm not expecting 1:1) between two or more stock exchanges or I should expect the same stock to perform different based on the stock exchange it is listed? At sense, I would say it depends on the stock exchange it is listed as different investors perform in different stock exchanges, plus country/currency risk, as well as arbitrage opportunities (if i expect the same stock to perform the same in different stock exchanges but they are open at different time zone i would have a potential arbitrage opportunity) but I wonder if i'm considering the whole picture.

    Thanks and sorry the noob question, but it is interesting i hope also for other redditors.

    submitted by /u/Aiasieth93
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    Why Lululemon and Shopify in this Crisis

    Posted: 25 Mar 2020 08:42 PM PDT

    Lululemon has the most valuable retail real estate portfolio in the US by square feet, but the best thing about them is how their core products address the lack of square footage in one's house. At home yoga is exploding in popularity and nobody makes better WFH+yoga apparel than Lululemon. Expect them to weather the stay-at-home era very well because they have especially small stores, and people are still ripping yoga pants at home that need to be replaced.

    The case for Shopify hinges on their core business model of e-commerce, but the purchase of a robot fulfillment company last September has catapulted the growth of their fulfillment services. The company can keep most of their core business running without a ton of risk to merchants or consumers.

    I like these companies. What do you think?

    submitted by /u/marcusae313
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