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    Saturday, July 4, 2020

    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the trading week beginning July 6th, 2020

    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the trading week beginning July 6th, 2020


    Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the trading week beginning July 6th, 2020

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 06:09 AM PDT

    A $10 Trillion Rally Hinges on Earnings Nobody Has a Clue About

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 12:41 PM PDT

    Banks are set to kick off the second-quarter reporting season in less than two weeks. At first glance, the 44% profit contraction expected for S&P 500 companies -- the worst since 2008 -- seems at odds with with the explosive rally that's restored most of what was lost in the March meltdown.

    https://www.msn.com/en-us/finance/markets/a-2410-trillion-rally-hinges-on-earnings-nobody-has-a-clue-about/ar-BB16kqB8

    submitted by /u/Morgan_steel
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    Want to get started, best place to learn?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 05:47 AM PDT

    Hey guys, I'm 21 years old and I want to learn the basic on how the stock market works and how it functions; also to see if investing my first $1,000 dollars in the stock market is a smart idea or not. Watched a video about a man who said that the US government is printing cash into the stock market, and if it's true, I'd love a slice of that cake. Any YouTubers, websites, podcasts, whatever will give me information on what the right step would be, I'd greatly appreciate it.

    submitted by /u/heylell
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    Is a second crash coming?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 07:38 PM PDT

    Title asks it all. I'm a 19 year who's invested about 3500 right now in stocks. I was a little late and bought everything as it recovered. I'm now prepared if everything hits rock bottom again. What are your guys perspective? Is a second crash coming?

    submitted by /u/buzzout23
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    The Cost of Bad Market Timing Decisions in 2020 Was Annihilation

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 05:42 AM PDT

    https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-07-03/the-cost-of-bad-market-timing-decisions-in-2020-was-annihilation

    From a 2,997-point rout in the Dow to two 9% single-day rallies in the S&P 500, the 2020 stock market has served up a raft of tantalizing sessions for would-be market timers. Hours came and went in which whole years could be made or lost.

    But for all the dizzying turbulence, it's worth noting that the S&P 500 is nearly flat for anyone who sat tight and held through the chaos. Mistakes stand out in an environment like that -- the back-breaking costs of even a few wrong moves in a market as turbulent as this one. Maybe volatility is the time for active managers to shine, but the downside of getting it wrong has rarely been greater.

    submitted by /u/coolcomfort123
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    WKHS Workhorse surges 706%

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 03:46 AM PDT

    Hey Gang

    I have some cash on hand that I'm looking to invest in a single stock. This company is getting some love in the news. Was looking at their 10K. Looks good. Their patents are really one of a kind. A lot of Talk about being purchased by bigger companies. Even if they don't do well in the short term I really think they'll do well in the long term.

    Wanted to get the communities thoughts. Please share!

    submitted by /u/HitchhikeGuardian
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    Tech stocks overpriced?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 04:45 PM PDT

    With the market being as it is, a lot of companies that are relatively unaffected by the outbreak see their stocks rise to levels from before the outbreak and even higher. This is especially the case with tech companies.

    Am I right to think that tech stocks are all overpriced and will go down when covid-19 goes away? Covid has brought uncertainty, volatility and risk for a lot of stocks and their underlying businesses. If the majority of people are tended to buy less risky stocks (I'm making the assumption), it would only make sense for tech stocks to go up. After all, covid is a lot less damaging to their businesses (relative to other businesses and markets). If the amount of people that invests stays the same (another assumption), that would explain why a lot of tech companies are going up, since tech companies are part of the small subset of companies that are currently low-risk. When covid passes, their options will increase and less people will invest in tech companies.

    I'd like to know what you guys think. Does my reasoning make any sense? Please let me know if and why you think otherwise!

    submitted by /u/KingKony1961
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    Is SPCE virgin galactic the real thing?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 01:54 PM PDT

    What do you guys think about SPCE stock? Is it the real thing? Should I start buying stocks asap? They got a deal done with NASA which seems to be a great sign and great things to come. Is this the next Tesla stock? What do you guys think? Should we buy as much as we can? Obviously every stock runs at a risk and this seems to be a risky stock but after the nasa deal it doesnt seem to be as risky as it was.

    submitted by /u/smuck25
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    Me and my friend are debating how calls work.

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 01:06 PM PDT

    Don't worry I don't trade (yet) but me and my friend are debating on how a call works, if you expect a stock to go up and it goes down your call obviously depreciates, but if you wait until it expires you only lose the cost of the contract itself. So am i right ?

    submitted by /u/shdjsk
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    How do companies establish 'analyst coverage'?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 12:04 PM PDT

    Hey guys! Quick quesiton: How do newly IPO'ed companies find analyst coverage?

    1. Do they go to equity research companies and then get hooked up with analysts? Or, do the companies individually approch and try to get analysts' attention?
    2. Also, I would assume there shouldn't be any kind of payments/ benefits from the company to the analyst, right? I would think it would be illegal. Am I wrong?

    Sorry for such a trivial question, but I am new to all this and trying to settle some stuff in my mind. Thanks a lot!!

    submitted by /u/kanbera
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    Emerging Markets

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 11:20 AM PDT

    Hey there, /r/StockMarket!

    How do you guys and gals invest in emerging markets?

    I read recently (I think on here) where emerging markets usually (always?) beat the US over all for returns. However I don't honestly know how/where. I say this because when I look at funds like VWO, or IEMG their performance looks to be somewhere around 3%.

    So I'm curious if anyone here invests in emerging markets and how you do so?

    submitted by /u/DemosthenesXXX
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    Predictions for the market for 2nd half of the year

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 10:25 AM PDT

    Some people say s&p 500 will hit 4000 pts by end of the year. Market seems frothy right now given where the economy is. Coronavirus surges is another uncertainty to economic reopening.

    submitted by /u/Tenesmus83
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    AMZN Earnings play

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 05:59 AM PDT

    Amazon earnings 7/23 I researched amazons movement for the last 2 years 2018 2019 earnings on the July 23 is their Q2, seems to be a hard pump for the expiration date 7/10 then a small consolidation upwards towards 7/17

    then for the 7/23 week, it could dump but amazons performance over COVID should make their earnings appealing I have positions for 7/10 expiration 3200 3170 & 3020 calls it's possible we missed the pump since end June to beginning July they had a 200$ move

    any criticism is acknowledged, I started trading in late may

    submitted by /u/IllidanLegato
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    Thoughts on Dada Nexus?

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 06:55 AM PDT

    It's a grocery delivery service in China with millions of subscribers. It recently went public a couple weeks ago and has been rising ever since.

    Walmart bought a 10% stake at 2 billion dollars, which makes me think they obviously know what they're doing.

    The main thing that frightens me is that the us government may delist a bunch of Chinese companies, which would plummet the price. The thing that gives me comfort is the fact the corporate lobbyists are so power and politicians are corrupt, it seems hard to believe they would snub one of their favorites and let this happen.

    submitted by /u/moscow___mitch
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    Scalping Strategy

    Posted: 04 Jul 2020 06:49 AM PDT

    Can I use scalping strategy on stocks like apple/Microsoft/Facebook/amd ( in general big companies )? Do you believe I'll be making a decent amount? Basically I'm trying to play it safe by buying big brands and selling them once I make profit ( even if it's not much ) . I don't want to risk much that's why I'm playing it safe, at least it looks safe for me. I understand there will always be risks

    submitted by /u/Crazy_Gam3r
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