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    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning November 9th, 2020

    Stock Market - Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning November 9th, 2020


    Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for the week beginning November 9th, 2020

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 03:35 AM PST

    How I get the financial data I need for investing

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 10:55 AM PST

    Here is a quick video showing how I get companies' financial data onto my spreadsheet for my investment analysis process. I wanted to share this because I have found that it saves me and my investors friends so much time from copy-pasting across multiple sources.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lK1qWT0BtVc&feature=youtu.be

    I'd love to hear how you go about it and your thoughts.

    submitted by /u/gvalles8
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    Sell price for sell order filled by muliple buy orders with different bid prices

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 05:46 PM PST

    Let's take for example I am trying to sell 1000 shares in a single sell order.

    I see that there are 2 bids of 500 shares each at $1.00 and $0.99.

    Scenario 1: If I set my sell price at $1.00, only 500 shares will be sold. And I get $500, before paying off the fees, commissions and taxes. I will have 500 shares left unsold.

    Scenario 2: If I set my sell price at $0.99, I suppose all 1000 shares would be sold, 500 to each bidder?

    Bidder B at $0.99 would get 500 shares at his bid price. So that's simple.

    Now for Bidder A who bidded at $1, would he be charged for $1.00/share (as per his bid in buy order) or $0.99/share (as per sell order)?

    • If he's charged for $1.00/share as he bidded, the extra $0.01/share would go the seller (me)?
    • If he's charged $0.99/share -- $0.01 lower than he bidded -- then he would simply not be billed for the extra $0.01 when settling his trade?

    So ideally, should I break my sell order into 2 orders instead, into 500 shares at $1.00/share and 500 shares at $0.99/share instead?

    submitted by /u/2048b
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    Found stock with projected 540% growth by analyst

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 07:46 PM PST

    I was skeptical, so I looked at company structure, drug pipeline (small Covid play), leadership, chart, and analyst recommendation. A few strong buys. I explain my thinking here, and why I decided to add a small stake to my own portfolio.

    TL;DR: Synlogic SYBX

    https://youtu.be/VfuzybUvGNc

    submitted by /u/dadadam67
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    Stock Market now that Biden won?

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 09:01 AM PST

    What will happen? As we all know stocks have been green ever since around November 2nd.

    I personally expect a lot of renewable energy stocks up but I'm not sure what else will happen, as I just started investing and this is the first time an election has happened while I've been in the market.

    submitted by /u/Arfish33
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    Because of the recent election will Chinese stocks such as $NIO $XPEV go up ? �� ��

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 07:19 PM PST

    Will these Chinese EV companies go up due to Joe Biden winning the election. With Biden having Chinese relations, promoting climate change and environmental justice.

    submitted by /u/myphonetapped
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    Which website is good for history volume, price ETC

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 03:06 PM PST

    Hello

    i am looking for a site which would have more data on a specific stock like average volume, or last 15/30 days %up and down, something along that line, if you can suggest it that be great

    Thank you

    submitted by /u/snreddit
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    Swish (Venmo/Cashapp/Ewallet) of Sweden Surpasses Cash in Transaction Volume!

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 05:46 AM PST

    I am a known massive proponent for the transaction fintechs, and have written a multitude of posts on them in the last 3 years. Apart from diligent financial analysis and modeling, the largest reason for these massive long positions is Sweden.

    Sweden is a world leader of digital payments, spawning multiple large fintechs platforms, such as Swish (Sweden domestic only), Klarna (Global payments), and iZettle (PayPal acquisition). As one of the world leaders of fintech, I use what works in Sweden to project into the US.

    In the latest Central Bank (Riksbanken) report, Swish (Swedish Venmo/Cashapp) has surpassed total cash usage. It's used eveywhere, by everyone. Combine this potential future with Cashapp and Venmo (both of which show profitable margins), the potential for Square & PayPal is much larger than is currently priced in. These stocks may look very over valued as of now, if you draw a line between where their e wallets are now to where swish is in Sweden, they have very very far to go.

    SQ is especially hot as of this week after a smash earnings, but I have a massive conviction that this isn't the last smash quarter they will have. Over the next 5 years I am extremely confident they will both outperform the market in raw e-wallet growth. For the first time, cash will be monitized by private corporations. You don't want to miss it.

    I mostly made this post for people who doesn't know how far e wallets have come in frontiers. In 5 years, cash will be very very close to dead in sweden. In 20, it'll be gone. Someone will profit and perhaps become the visa / Mastercard of the new age.

    Rapport (Swedish) https://www.riksbank.se/sv/betalningar--kontanter/sa-betalar-svenskarna/sa-betalar-svenskarna-2020/1.-betalningsmarknaden-digitaliseras/

    Ps: "hur durr bitcoin & crypto will deseat fiat currencies". PayPal and Square are the two largest corporations currently investing heavily into crypto. If the stable cryptocurrencies is part of our fintech future, no large company will profit as much as they. Get in.

    Disclosure: Gargantuan Square position and large PayPal.

    submitted by /u/lykosen11
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    Is CFA only for those who are interested in investment banking?

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 06:51 AM PST

    Hi, I am very much interested in stock market (investing/trading) but i don't know much about it. I am learning on my own but I was doing research on job postings of companies and many companies required CFA or other finance degree. Going through CFA curriculum it looks like everything in finance is covered in it. But do you really need that in stock market or it's for people who considering investment banking. Main reason why i am talking about CFA is because it can be done by anyone, you don't need to go to a College. Is their any other course which i can do or CFA would be a like all in one.

    submitted by /u/_Endeavour
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    S&P 500 Long Term outlook- Hussman.

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 01:38 AM PST

    You don't have to tell me Hussman's returns are awful over last few years...I know. He has expected a downturn for 5 years now, but underestimated the Fed's recklessness, partly due to Trump's pressure. But he is the most qualified economist (PhD Stanford) of the fund managers, and this is not a timing opinion:

    "But what if valuations literally never ever visit historical norms again? Fine, let's examine that possibility. Suppose we assume that market valuations maintain the "permanently high plateau" that Irving Fisher famously projected at the 1929 market peak. What then?

    Well, let's do the arithmetic. We know that real "structural" GDP growth over the past decade has averaged only about 1.6% annually. That's the rate at which real GDP has grown in recent years, excluding the impact of changes in the rate of unemployment. It's essentially the underlying economic growth that's driven by the sum of demographic labor force growth and trend productivity growth (output = workers x output/worker). Even a 3% structural growth rate would require a near-doubling of trend productivity. Let's be optimistic and bump expected structural growth up to 2%. Adding 2% inflation then gives us 4% nominal growth.

    It's worth noting that at the very peak of the recent economic expansion, the actual nominal growth rate of S&P 500 revenues over the recent 20 years had averaged just 3.6% annually, which reflects the full benefit of stock buybacks and share reductions over that period. Likewise, the growth rate of U.S. nominal GDP averaged just 4% in the 20 years measured up to the peak of the recent expansion.

    Now, suppose we also assume that the profit margins observed at the peak of the recent economic expansion will never, ever normalize. We can then expect earnings to match the growth rate of revenues, and we'll assume that dividends do the same, leaving us with expected long-term growth of 4% all around.

    Finally, let's assume that market valuations never, ever retreat. In that case, prices would grow at the same rate as fundamentals, which gives us 4% annual capital gains for a passive investment in the S&P 500. Add the current S&P 500 dividend yield of 1.6% (which would also remain constant forever), and if all of these assumptions were to work out for investors, they would imply long-term investment returns for the S&P 500 of 5.6% annually. Emphatically, that figure relies on the S&P 500 maintaining the most extreme valuations in U.S. financial history forever."

    submitted by /u/thinkofanamefast
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    With Over 100% YTD Gain Bitcoin Is Massively Outperforming Gold, Stocks, and Dollar

    Posted: 06 Nov 2020 09:05 PM PST

    Where to find historical market prices?

    Posted: 07 Nov 2020 03:57 AM PST

    Hello Everyone,

    I am writing a dissertation about the 2008 financial crash. I cannot find any website that allows me to look at market prices dating back to the 70s. Can anyone help?

    Thanks,

    James

    submitted by /u/DXTJam
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