Stock Market - This rally is a mirage, we are only in the beginning stages of this recession |
- This rally is a mirage, we are only in the beginning stages of this recession
- S&P 1700 within 6 Months
- I made a super realistic none rigged Investment Simulator...definitely not rigged.
- What is happening?!
- Coronavirus recession now expected to be deeper and longer
- FEDs Money Pump Schedule
- Investors are simply being nothing but speculators in this market now. Here’s why ;
- Help with understanding buying naked puts. I want to bet against the market but I'm not sure how with options.
- If you really believe we are going to hell, then today is your big chance to sell
- Thoughts on investing in UCO? A couple of thousands down?
- I’m thinking this is just a bull trap. What should I do?
- Long term hold
- Luckin Coffee Stock Confusion
- This Market Cannot Go Up Much From Here.
- How long do you guys think this rally would last?
- Newcomer to the stock market
- How can I proceed with stock market Today.
- Today's Pre-Market Movers & News [Tuesday, April 7th, 2020]
- I need some clarification help
- Mnuchin vs. The Airline Industry; Handling the Bailout of American Airlines
This rally is a mirage, we are only in the beginning stages of this recession Posted: 07 Apr 2020 09:26 AM PDT TL;DR at the bottom Hi guys, with the market rallying 20% from its "bottom", many people are expressing the sentiment that we should buy back into the market again because the "fed" or the "government" won't allow stocks to crash. We will for sure see unprecedented actions taken by the fed and the government because they have both the motive and the political capital to enact such policies. However, I think this is a misguided reason to believe the market is currently making its "real" rally. I am not not a permabear nor am I a permabull. I just try to objectively analyze the facts, apply a healthy dose of margin of safety, and then see if my conclusions are actionable. For example, I posted my thesis on why we will enter a serious global economic downturn on Feb 9th 10 days before it happened. At the time we were at the height of the biggest bull market in our history, and I had gotten a lot of attacks on my thesis leading up to me consolidating my thoughts: https://www.reddit.com/r/China_Flu/comments/f1fm6y/the_world_economy_will_enter_a_serious_downturn/ I continued adding more thoughts on things like the potential efficacy of Chloroquine 2 weeks before Trump announced it in a press conference and the media picked up on it, the potential collapse of American oil producers before the price war happened, casinos going under, helicopter money, bailouts, etc all before they were announced or the markets priced them in here: https://www.reddit.com/r/China_Flu/comments/fede69/continued_thoughts_on_the_global_economic_impact/ And finally I talked about an upcoming inflection point coincidentally moments before Trump first announced Chloroquine/Hydroxychloroquine and 2 trading days before the "bottom" of the market: https://www.reddit.com/r/stocks/comments/fleh7e/incoming_inflection_point_for_general_market/ So I'm perfectly happy to make bearish calls or bullish calls, they are dependent variables of independent and unbiased analysis. I hope I made a reasonable case for why I am not personally biased (although, for the sake of humanity, I do wish for progress and prosperity of course). I think the market rally is largely a mirage, and we are not getting correct pricings. The rally is probably driven by two main sources:
So the capital displacement is relatively simple: If you're seeking shelter in "risk free" investments that has some yields, you're now competing with a buyer (federal reserve) that prints hundreds of billions up to whatever it wants. They're literally squeezing out capital from the finite treasuries. If you want riskier high quality corporate bonds, the fed will be there. If you want even equities, you're going to face competition for them in the future. At least that's what former chairwoman Jenet Yellen recently said about the possibility of expanding their powers to buy equities. So money is getting squeezed into a smaller and smaller relative portion of the financial markets, and the artificial demand is driving yields down and prices up. I could write a whole thread about this, but let's stick with the explanation of price movement. The second main reason for the recent rally is from institutional investors who are incorrectly modeling earnings/yield of equities. So the logic here is: trillions are injected into the economy (fiscal injections), those trillions will become earnings for companies at some multiplier of the original stimulus over x amount of time, and if we add this number to the unstimulated estimated earnings, we can model future earnings. My issue with this model, is on two main assumptions: The first assumption is the length of disruption caused by the threat of this virus. This virus is not going to stop its serious disruption of behavior from economic actors. Especially not in a country like the US where the majority of people have a massive financial disincentive to seek out healthcare. Here's my logic: For months I've been praising the governments and response of South Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan. With Taiwan being the absolute best at handling the virus. However, I have also been using them as my leading indicators for how the virus will progress and affect economic actors. What I have seen developing lately is not good. Singapore is now calling for a shutdown, after they initially did a herculean job of containing their outbreak. I had hoped that they would develop procedures (that we can copy) needed to run an open economy while the threat of the virus looms in the background. But that is not what has happened. Instead, we are seeing growing numbers of new clusters forming, and quickly getting out of control. They are tightening and shutting down their economy rather than opening up more. This is our leading indicator. A government far more responsible and effective than us is resorting to shutting down. Taiwan is faring better, but only because of their prohibitive ban on almost all foreign travelers (this is obviously devastating to their tourism sector and broader economy). Their economy and society remains open, with many if not most people having hardly any interruptions to their lives (aside from mask wearing). They are one of only 3 countries where all children are still going to school. However, even their economy is faltering as they try to balance the prohibitive actions needed to contain the virus and the economic need to keep things open. They are proposing an unprecedented stimulus/rescue package to bolster their economy. And I think it's a safe assumption that if they ever do open up to foreign travelers again, especially with covid19 having proliferated as it already has, then they will have to deal with massive outbreak clusters all over their island. South Korea, which has probably the relatable and relevant model for us to copy, has recently extended its social distance campaign. South Korea is a far larger nation than Singapore or Taiwan. They have a climate similar to Seattle/New York. They had a major outbreak in Deagu but didn't shut their country down. They never even banned Chinese travelers, yes, they had Chinese tourists in their country while the outbreak was happening. They were among the first to widely use Hydroxychloroquine/chloroquine as a treatment for Covid19. They had among the lowest fatality rates. They contained their outbreak without shutting the whole country down. Even South Korea can't truly return to normal and open their economy up. So why, in our incredible American exceptionalism hubris, and far less competent leaders, do we believe we're going to come anywhere close to normalcy in the near future? Let's look at the next assumption, that fiscal stimulus would end up as earnings for companies. There's no doubt some will end up as earnings, but only a small fraction of what is being modeled by those on Wall Street. The average American don't even have $1000 in emergency funds, do we expect them to return to their normal consumption habits when they risk having hospital bills multiples of $1000 just from walking past the wrong person? Do you think Americans, as much as they love to spend, aren't going to put some of that stimulus check in their emergency funds rather than contribute it to the earning of some companies? Sure, there will be some "forced" spending of the money (food and necessities), but if anyone is modeling the multiplier effect from previous data, then they really don't appreciate how different this virus makes things. Even in the GFC, laid off people didn't really worry about the heightened threat of being hospitalized. Finally, some investors believe the Fed and the government literally will do anything to keep the numbers up. If this is true, you should be buying silver (or gold), not stocks. Monetary actions can be reversed relatively easily. They are far more dynamic tools. Fiscal actions are not. You put money in the hands of spenders, that money is gonna circulate. And you really don't have an easy way of reversing that. If we think the government is going to keep handing out stimulus checks, grants to businesses, and other fiscal stimulus, then the inflation predicted from the GFC will come true for this crisis. The fall out of inflation will be difficult to truly understand. But I do think inflation will be disruptive enough to the economy that inflation hedge assets will outperform other assets at least in the short term. For example, if inflation goes to 5%, who's going to lend to companies for less than inflation? With costlier debt, equity yield goes down, and again, what investor wants yields less than inflation? Inflation is going to cause all kinds of disruptions. I think the disruptions will come down to less liquidity (credit will vanish with uncertain inflation) and higher economic friction (less efficiency). So if the response to why the market has to go up is continuous fiscal (and some monetary) actions to prop up spending and earnings, then the question is how will fiscal actions be reversed? How do we get that money out after things go back to "normal"? I think if we see equities rise from here, it'll be reflective of inflation rather than inflation-adjusted earnings. Silver would be the play here. I have a lot more thoughts on this, especially on the time it takes to turn the gears of the financial system and why the inertia is moving us deeper into global recession, not out of it, but I'm running out of time and must end here. TL;DR this is a fake rally, and if anyone really expects prices to continue rallying, buy silver instead [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 05:04 PM PDT This is a new post after some interest in a comment why I believed the S&P is going to 1700. The original thread can be found here: https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/fwdruw/what_is_happening/fmo9w39?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x Disclaimer: This is based on historical precedence and we are in unprecedented times but, with history as our guide a strong argument can be made for the S&P to decline to a level that is currently inconceivable. Slightly long; happy to be challenged in the comments, it is late so may tidy it up and add more references and charts tomorrow. Are we in a recession?If you believe so, or that we are heading into a recession then there are four things needed to support a genuine rally out of a recession
We are missing 2 out of those 4 criteria; the overwhelming monetary and fiscal policy (world-records) are compensating for lack of positive indicators and volatile and bullish pricing. What do you mean by pricing?It can be argued that the current price of stocks is not discounting for the acute and likely chronic harm to consumer sentiment and spending power. For example; the UK clothing retailer Next Group closed their bricks and mortar stores (share price increased 4%) then they cancelled all online shopping (share price increased 3%) and finally they cancelled all orders with their supply chain (shares leapt 12.8% during the rally.) There is the massive amount of second, third and fourth order effects that this one company does to the UK economy (and Turkish factories). Suppliers, shipping, design, marketing etc all cancelled and the staff furloughed. This is one example but the indexes are currently full of similar examples and some analysts are ringing the alarm bells.
Reddit is quick to mention that stonks only go up but there is some truth to that sentiment at present since any negative factors are dismissed as being priced in and all positive factors are heralded as a cause for stocks to rally. If priced in was accurate then we would not see record-beating market rallies back to back. 10% volatility swings over 48 hours is the very definition of not priced in. There is evidence to suggest that, well, the bullish sentiment is wrong and mainly because it is retail investors being taken for a ride whilst funds re-balance and offload. Retail traders "buying the dips" is normally a contrarian signal, meaning that it's time to sell. What does this have to do with the trailing 10 year dividend? Major indexes are comprised of stocks that pay handsome dividends; normally 2% yield a year. The companies have reached their limit of growth (HSBC haven't discovered 5 million new customers and Shell are not finding new fossil fuels) so investors hold the stock for income-seeking reasons. The FTSE 100 was priced in to generate £89 billion in dividends for 2019 and £90 billion+ in 2020. That has largely collapsed. The only companies that pay dividends are those taking on debt to do so like Shell. And they have; a 10Bn credit line to maintain dividends. The Bank of Englandhad to slap 5 UK banks from issuing dividends at this time. That means that their primary valuations as income-generating stocks are questionable... ...especially since the dividends are not expected to return to the 2020 levels for another 10 years now. Onto the S&PIn 2021 the market expects the dividends per share for the S&P to be reduced to $38 per share. That is priced in and common knowledge. That is a 41% drop from the recent highs of $63 a share and seems alarming for income seeking investors since we are not expected to recover to those prices for 8-10 years. But DataTrek have noted that we are still currently trading at 21X the trailing 10 year earnings of $122 a share. Dividends per share normally don't fall as far as earnings per share. But they are inverted at present. For the S&P to be trading at 2,650 level (or even higher) it means the market does not believe the pandemic or recession will have any long-term damage. That puts us squarely at odds with items 3 and 4 in our list of factors needed to exit a bear market. In other recessions, including 2008, the S&P traditionally pulled back to 10X a share for trailing 10 year average. That would mean halving the current value of the S&P. In actual fact, during the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis and subsequent bear market; the dividends per share dropped by a lower percentage amount than the total index value drop. The market drop was approximately 1.5X what the dividend per share drop was. Right now, we have the reverse. Dividend share drop is 41% and market drop was approximately 30% and rallying heavily back to 18% only. That makes no financial sense unless the assets were being propped by buyers... If the S&P truly does pull back to the equilibrium price of 10X, as has happened in previous recessions, then we would expect to see levels of around $1200 at the bottom but that seems extremely bearish. If previous indications hold true, then we would expect the S&P to drop by approximately 50-60%ish at the true bottom to reflect the 41% decrease in expected shares plus additional discounts and negative market sentiment. In reality, we are probably likely to pull back to between 13X and 15X trailing average which puts the S&P between 1600 and 1800. TL:DR
New market indicatorsSince I wrote this post, the DJIA was up over 4% and closed down on the day. Thank you to theTwitter feed of Jim Bianco for this: Since 1925 (95 yrs!), up more than 4% and closing down on the day has happened only one other time ... Oct 14, 2008 (Tsy Sec Hank Paulson forced the banks to take TARP money). The S&P 500 was up 3.5% at the high and closed down on the day. Since April 1982 (daily H,L,C began) has happened three other times...Oct 3, 08, Oct 14, 08, and Oct 17, 08. This mkt continues to trade like Oct 08. It was six months and another 25% down before the low. Bezinga are also playing up the 2008 similarities. Why is bullish sentiment so wrong?The negative reports are so wildly negative that the almost defy belief. We are dealing with insane numbers way beyond our traditional frame of reasoning. This is topped only by the insanity of the scale of quantitative easing. Less than a year ago, a small movement in the non-farm payrolls would lead to a 2-3% move in the markets; now we are hitting 700K jobs lost, a truly ugly number and the market rallies hugely. Future economic students will study this to try and understand what was happening. In the space of weeks the majority of the Western economies have swung to being effectively state-sponsored, centralised economies and no one really knows how to unwind these positions. It is impossible to reconcile being a bull with a centralised state economy and blue-chip stocks that refuse to pay dividends but the share price remains at the same levels as when they paid a 2% yield. Disclosure
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I made a super realistic none rigged Investment Simulator...definitely not rigged. Posted: 07 Apr 2020 04:20 PM PDT So I used my coding skills to create something useless, its a trading simulator where the stock always is against you if you're buy it will go down if you're short it will go up. Try it out yourself : https://swompygames.com/en/bestinvest.html And yes I have to much time [link] [comments] |
Posted: 06 Apr 2020 09:10 PM PDT After officials tell the public this week will be as bad as 9/11 and Pearl Harbor, the market shoots up 7%. What is happening behind the scenes for this to happen??? [link] [comments] |
Coronavirus recession now expected to be deeper and longer Posted: 07 Apr 2020 06:05 PM PDT read the article and discuss: https://www.latimes.com/politics/story/2020-04-01/coronavirus-recession-now-expected-to-be-deeper-and-longer "Where only days ago, economists were following President Trump's lead in saying the U.S. economy would be back on track relatively quickly, a growing number now say the downturn will probably exceed the Great Recession of 2008-09. U.S. economic output, which has grown without interruption for a record 10½ years, could fall as much as 9% in 2020 — more than three times the sharpest drop during the Great Recession, according to some predictions. At the height of the Great Depression in 1932, the economy shrank a record 12.9%." [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 06:30 AM PDT |
Investors are simply being nothing but speculators in this market now. Here’s why ; Posted: 07 Apr 2020 07:19 PM PDT The US stock market is simply rising dramatically at the moment despite a lot of uncertainties because the short term news which came out that experts are saying that trend of death from Covid-19 seems to be slowing. Now this is good news short term, however another article will probably come out and the markets will tumble. And oh yeah did i forget the federal reserve's contribution. All I am saying is trading in this market is very risky. Be aware ! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 06:49 PM PDT So I think that the market will continue to go down, and I am tired of riding SDOW because of the rebalancing and the costs. I would like to bet against the market by buying a put. I've done lots of research, but I'm not sure I understand it. I'll say what I do understand, and hopefully someone can help me out. So let's say hypothetical stock ABC is trading today for $100. I believe that sometime in the next 30 days the stock will be trading at $80. Let's also assume that I don't own any stock of ABC. If I buy an option to sell ABC for $90 in 30 days, and I pay $5.00 for that option, and the stock goes down to $80, I know I have made money, but exactly how? Since I don't own the stock itself, would I have to buy it at the $80.00 and then sell it at the $90.00 simultaneously for the profit? Or perhaps I could sell the option itself and make money before the expiration? The thing is that the options I want to trade I don't have the capital for to afford 100 shares to buy and resell even if I know I'll make money on the trade. Is there a way to buy a put and lose the money if the stock goes up and make the profit if it goes down without having enough money to trade through all the hundreds shares that each contract represents? [link] [comments] |
If you really believe we are going to hell, then today is your big chance to sell Posted: 07 Apr 2020 03:52 AM PDT My own view is that our medium term destination is somewhere between hell and glory, and since my horizons are long and I enjoy the dividends, I'm not selling. But recognizing my fallibility and the uncertainties of the world I am marking this date and my account balance that goes with it, for future reference. [link] [comments] |
Thoughts on investing in UCO? A couple of thousands down? Posted: 07 Apr 2020 08:56 PM PDT I am also planning to buy UAL stocks. I bought Disney, Appl, AMZN and delta stocks. I have invested $2,500 already in UOC and I am thinking about putting another $2,500 down. [link] [comments] |
I’m thinking this is just a bull trap. What should I do? Posted: 07 Apr 2020 08:24 AM PDT So I just think these past two days have been bull traps. I feel like I can make a quick profit with the shares I have today and then wait for the market to fall again and buy at a cheaper price. Does this sound reasonable or not? I am a long term investor (+5 years) but with just how manipulated this market is, I feel like I can make some profits and put that back into some shares. Please share some of your opinions, as this is just mine. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 03:39 PM PDT Need opinions / advice. I've got about 850$ to pop into a stock and let it sit. What's out there format options? Buy a few stocks of BA? Buy a stock of Tesla and then something else? Maybe invest in Marriott or another hotel? There's so many things I can't decide! I could also buy more stakes in XOM.... [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 01:59 PM PDT I bought a couple of options of Luckin Coffee on April 1st and April 2nd for January 2022 on robinhood and recently the company halted trading of shares. On robinhood it now says the stock is not supported anymore. Does this mean my options are completely worthless now and it will not come back on robinhood? Will I be reimbursed in some sort of way when it expires or did I just lose all my money? [link] [comments] |
This Market Cannot Go Up Much From Here. Posted: 06 Apr 2020 09:36 PM PDT I am never one to tell people my predictions of great big hulking mystery that is the stock market. But logically I cannot fathom how this continues to rise. It dropped over fears of economic lockdown and its risen as case numbers have decelerated. Lockdown or a partial version is still on the cards for much of the world for a long time. There are two ways it ends. With a vaccine in 18 months, time or herd immunity and 200,000,000 people infected across America. Goldman Sachs & Morgan Stanely originally predicted that Q3 growth will be 19%¹² and 29%¹³ respectively. The idea that we are going to get over the bump and then everything can be turbocharged back is insane. Either the coronavirus is far less deadly than the estimations of every expert and study or we have a long time yet under the economic restrictions of partial lockdowns and uncertainty. Sources: [link] [comments] |
How long do you guys think this rally would last? Posted: 07 Apr 2020 07:45 AM PDT Dow looking good along with SPY for the past 3 days. Now rallies don't really last longer than 4 days. Do you guys think we'll see S&P would hit around 2,800 and Dow at 28,000? Edit: Dow at 24,000 I mean [link] [comments] |
Posted: 07 Apr 2020 04:26 PM PDT Hello! I am a total newcomer to the stock market, and it only started becoming de-mystified to me a few weeks ago. I have around 30k in cash due to a settlement that until now has just been sitting in a bank, but with the stock prices going down so low, I figured it might be a good time to invest that money instead of having it just sit around. This is not money that I depend on to live or anything and I am willing to accept a moderate level or risk for the possibility higher returns, thus why I'm focusing on individual stocks. However, as I said - I'm a total newbie! I have been reading books/blogs/financial news as much as I can and am looking at stocks in the hospitality/travel sector (mostly things like Delta, Marriott) and "safer" choices that are down such as Disney, and Square. I was just wondering to receive thoughts on this, recommendations/etc. Since I'm coming from zero knowledge, any input or advice is appreciated! I understand that these stocks might not recover for quite some time and I am comfortable waiting and having this be a long-term investment. Thanks so much [link] [comments] |
How can I proceed with stock market Today. Posted: 07 Apr 2020 03:34 PM PDT
Have reasons why you want to start investing The best reason to start investing is to change your role in life. Living pay check to paycheck means you are always renting from the owners of wealth. Investing in stocks, bonds, real estate and other assets means you're an owner rather than a debtor. Its only through being an owner of assets that you will be able to achieve the financial freedom that many take for granted. Have a financial plan drawn and approved by you. Number one reason investors lose money is because they start investing without a plan. Know your financial goals? Know your risk tolerance Include the risk tolerance in your initial plan so you know how much risk you willing to take with your investments. You can either choose to be a moderate investor or aggressive one. More risks, higher probability in making more money. Open you investment account Check with E*trade and TDAmeritrade. I personally use these two. Link your bank account with investment account (Optional) This gives you an advantage to always have money in your investment account, because normal transfer from bank to investment account can take 2-3 days. That's when you might lose an opportunity to buy a stock or share that is a big deal now. Understand the graph chart before buying your first stock/share Previous close, last price yesterday when the market closed Open, today's starting price soon when the market opens, usually 9:30a.m The Bid is how much someone if offering for a stock. Ask price is the price at which someone is offering to sell their stock. The beta is the general riskiness of the stock compared to the overall market The 52-week range is the highest and lowest price at which the stock has traded over the last year Volume is the amount of shares that are trading so far that day and the average amount of shares traded each day over the last three months. If they are not many people buying and selling the stock, the bid and ask price may be far apart. Market capitalization is the total worth of shares issued by the company P/E or price to earnings ratio is the stock price divided by how much in net income per share the company has booked over the last year The dividend and yield are important point for many investors. Stocks that pay dividends usually pay them out in four installments throughout the year. The Yield is the percentage of the dividend divided by the stock price, a return you will get just for the regular cash payments. Dividend paying stocks, you get paid for holding them. Give yourself time and understand the graph Buy your first stock, build you portfolio and diversify. Ensure your portfolio is diversified. Simply means DO not put all the eggs in one Basket.
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Today's Pre-Market Movers & News [Tuesday, April 7th, 2020] Posted: 07 Apr 2020 05:33 AM PDT Good morning traders and investors of the r/StockMarket sub! Welcome to Tuesday. Here are your pre-market movers & news this AM-(CLICK HERE TO VIEW THE FULL SOURCE!)Today's Top Headlines for Tuesday, April 7th, 2020
STOCK FUTURES CURRENTLY:(CLICK HERE FOR STOCK FUTURES CHARTS!)YESTERDAY'S MARKET MAP:(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S MARKET MAP!)TODAY'S MARKET MAP:(CLICK HERE FOR TODAY'S MARKET MAP!)YESTERDAY'S S&P SECTORS:(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S S&P SECTORS CHART!)TODAY'S S&P SECTORS:(CLICK HERE FOR TODAY'S S&P SECTORS CHART!)TODAY'S ECONOMIC CALENDAR:(CLICK HERE FOR TODAY'S ECONOMIC CALENDAR!)THIS WEEK'S ECONOMIC CALENDAR:(CLICK HERE FOR THIS WEEK'S ECONOMIC CALENDAR!)THIS WEEK'S UPCOMING IPO'S:(CLICK HERE FOR THIS WEEK'S UPCOMING IPO'S!)THIS WEEK'S EARNINGS CALENDAR:($SMPL $CONN $GBX $LEVI $ANGO $RPM $SGH $LNN $MSM $SJR $WDFC $NTIC $EXFO $CAAP $SLP $TLGT) (CLICK HERE FOR THIS WEEK'S EARNINGS CALENDAR!)THIS MORNING'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS CALENDAR:() ([CLICK HERE FOR THIS MORNING'S EARNINGS CALENDAR!]())N/A. EARNINGS RELEASES BEFORE THE OPEN TODAY:(CLICK HERE FOR THIS MORNING'S EARNINGS RELEASES!)EARNINGS RELEASES AFTER THE CLOSE TODAY:(CLICK HERE FOR THIS AFTERNOON'S EARNINGS RELEASES!)YESTERDAY'S ANALYST UPGRADES/DOWNGRADES:(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S ANALYST UPGRADES/DOWNGRADES LINK #1!)(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S ANALYST UPGRADES/DOWNGRADES LINK #2!)(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S ANALYST UPGRADES/DOWNGRADES LINK #3!)YESTERDAY'S INSIDER TRADING FILINGS:(CLICK HERE FOR YESTERDAY'S INSIDER TRADING FILINGS!)TODAY'S DIVIDEND CALENDAR:(CLICK HERE FOR TODAY'S DIVIDEND CALENDAR!)THIS MORNING'S MOST ACTIVE TRENDING TICKERS:
THIS MORNING'S STOCK NEWS MOVERS:(source: cnbc.com)
FULL DISCLOSURE:
DISCUSS!What's on everyone's radar for today's trading day ahead here at r/StockMarket? I hope you all have an excellent trading day ahead today on this Tuesday, April 7th, 2020! :)[link] [comments] |
I need some clarification help Posted: 07 Apr 2020 08:09 AM PDT So I had options of Luckin Coffee and recently the ceo or what not haulted trading any shares therefore rendering my options useless it is completely worthless now and the contract expires in 2 days and the stock won't start trading again till like a month from now will I be reimbursed in some sort of way when it expires or did I get royally fucked [link] [comments] |
Mnuchin vs. The Airline Industry; Handling the Bailout of American Airlines Posted: 07 Apr 2020 01:55 PM PDT https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tm9Eubk6ZRY&feature=youtu.be The recently passed two trillion dollar spending bill allocates fifty billion dollars to the airline industry, half in grants and half in loans. Here's what those loans might look like, and the debate between Republicans and Democrats over how to proceed. [link] [comments] |
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