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    Saturday, October 24, 2020

    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning October 26th, 2020

    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning October 26th, 2020


    Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning October 26th, 2020

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 03:01 AM PDT

    Looking for some advice

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 05:15 PM PDT

    I am a 19 year old guy that lives in Canada and I want to invest around 6-10k into the stock market. While I know some of the basics to the stock market, I want to learn more before I act. Is there any resources you guys recommend whether it be a books, websites or youtube videos to know what to do in the stock market?

    submitted by /u/Kayvon48
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    CAD/USD Stock Questions

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 12:28 PM PDT

    I live in Canada, and use a Canadian brokerage company, I recently purchased a Tesla stock at $418 USD, the stock is now at $420, but my Canadian stock account says I'm down $15, is this due to the conversion rate? Or why is this happening?

    submitted by /u/J-W-P52
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    If you have more than 250k in the stock market and it gets hacked, what happens to the other money? Is it just gone?

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 11:23 AM PDT

    What happens if your account gets hacked in general and you can't get it back? Is the money just given to you? I wouldn't think it would be that easy but I'm not too sure I'm curious though

    submitted by /u/jslawson0313
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    Oscillators: What do they do?

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 04:02 PM PDT

    What are some start-up EV company longshots and (hopeful) sure bets on the market or about to IPO?

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 02:35 PM PDT

    I'm a novice (probably more noob) stock buyer person (see?) and after screwing around with various companies in various industries, I've settled on EV and outer space. I have some SPCE, SRAC (Momentus SPAC), DRIV, HCAC (Canoo SPAC), SBE (Chargepoint SPAC), and I'm looking to get some XPEV and SOLO come Monday morning. I did get on a SPAC spree for a bit, and I'm not done because some of them are targeting the EV market. I'm not too keen on Fisker, and Nikola turned out to be an actual joke, so those are out.

    As you may or may not can tell, I'm in it for the gamble. I want to make $1 become $100 if possible. I know that's not probable, but you get the gist. Stocks are not how I am going to retire, so making a small sum of money magically become a larger sum is the endgame here.

    All the gibberish said, what are some great start-up, under-the-rader, or otherwise unsung EV companies to gamble on?

    UPDATE: I'll start:

    Kandi (KNDI): Chinese maker of on and off-road EVs.

    Blink (BLNK): EV charging stations. Direct competition with Chargepoint.

    Li Auto (LI): Chinese smart EV SUV maker.

    GreenPower Motor Company Inc. (GP): Canadian EV bus and mass transit. Wondering why their stock has tumbled a bit lately.

    Ayro (AYRO): Texas-based maker of light-duty, emissions-free electric vehicles for personal, public, or government use.

    submitted by /u/onemananswerfactory
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    $ILMN DD

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 11:56 AM PDT

    This Quote From the SEC's Report on Ownership of Securities Might Surprise Activist Investors..(Dec. 3, 1976)

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 10:34 AM PDT

    "Many brokers assert that if a broker disagrees with management, his obligation is to advise customers to sell the issuer's securities rather than to attempt to change management by voting.Dec. 3, 1976, "SEC Report on Ownership of Securities" https://ia801700.us.archive.org/23/items/fsec00unit/fsec00unit.pdf

    Today, this is no longer the case, and companies are frequently the target of coordinated groups of activist investors, or wolf packs as they call them, demanding all kinds of things from management changes to share buybacks, and now even the threat of a potential proxy battle can influence shareholder resolutions.

    Jang-Sup Shin, The Subversion of Shareholder Democracy and the Rise of Hedge-Fund Activism

    "It has now become a "new normal" that many of America's largest corporations routinely distribute more than 100 percent of net income to shareholders, generating the extra cash by reducing cash reserves, selling off assets, taking on debt, or laying off employees. For instance, the 459 companies in the S&P 500 Index in January 2016 that were publicly listed over the ten-year period 2006-2015 expended $3.9 trillion on stock buybacks, representing 53.6 percent of net income, plus another 36.7 percent of net income on dividends. Much of the remaining 9.7 percent of profits was held abroad, sheltered from U.S. taxes".

    https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/graph-landing.php?g=pGEt&

    Net equity issues, 2015 $billions Net equity issues as % of GDP
    1946-1955 143.2 0.56
    1956-1965 110.9 0.30
    1966-1975 316.0 0.58
    1976-1985 -290.9 -0.40
    1986-1995 -1,002.5 -1.00
    1996-2005 -1,524.4 -1.09
    2006-2015 -4,466.6 -2.65
    Source: Lazonick and Shin https://www.ineteconomics.org/uploads/papers/WP_58-Lazonick-Functions-Fallacies.pdf 

    "As Steven Solomon commented, "companies, frankly, are scared" and "[their] mantra … is to settle with hedge funds before it gets to a fight over the control of a company."

    "An impetus for the phenomenal growth of the hedge fund industry and the consequent rise

    of hedge-fund activism was provided by the 1996 National Securities Markets Improvement Act

    (NSMIA), which was part of financial market deregulation during the Clinton administration.

    According to David Dayen who delved into NSMIA's implications for hedge funds, the regulatory

    change, "largely unnoticed at the time" and "advanced with broad Wall Street support and almost no resistance in Congress,"effectively allowed hedge funds to pool unlimited financial

    resources from institutional investors without regulations that would have required disclosure

    of the structure of their firms or prohibited overly speculative investments."

    --The Subversion of Shareholder Democracy and the Rise of Hedge-Fund Activism

    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3226103

    submitted by /u/interestingstuff6
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    Gulfport Energy

    Posted: 24 Oct 2020 09:22 AM PDT

    Can anyone tell me why Gulfport Energy(GPOR) is almost at its all time low but Natural gas prices are at it highest and its rising? Im tempted to buy because i dont see much risk, can someone tell me why i shouldnt.

    submitted by /u/Sate001
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    Free stock lookback website with custom lookback periods

    Posted: 23 Oct 2020 10:59 PM PDT

    I'm trying to find a website that will let you see the performance of stocks in % to 2 decimal places (0.00) and also be able to look at stocks between custom dates,
    ex. march 2008 - april 2008. If it lets you look at multiple stocks at once then its a bonus but not nessecary. Below is a program thats SOOOO close to being there but it doesn't display 2 decimal places even though it looks like it calculates more than just 1 decimal place.

    any help would be appriciated, thank you for your time!

    https://www.etfreplay.com/charts.aspx

    submitted by /u/Shrrg_Wolf
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