• Breaking News

    Friday, September 3, 2021

    Stock Market - Can someone explain to me what +infinity gains over one month means, from a practical standpoint? Did anyone catch this? Why is this happening? $BLIBQ is BlockBuster Liquidating Inc.

    Stock Market - Can someone explain to me what +infinity gains over one month means, from a practical standpoint? Did anyone catch this? Why is this happening? $BLIBQ is BlockBuster Liquidating Inc.


    Can someone explain to me what +infinity gains over one month means, from a practical standpoint? Did anyone catch this? Why is this happening? $BLIBQ is BlockBuster Liquidating Inc.

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 05:53 AM PDT

    17 years old and I am tryna pay My college tuition in 3-4 years. How’s it looking? Any tips?

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 01:41 PM PDT

    GM shutting down production at most of its plants in North America

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 10:43 AM PDT

    Senate Democrats Eye Taxes on Stock Buybacks, Excess CEO Pay

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 10:41 AM PDT

    My fellow investors would understand this meme

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 07:15 AM PDT

    CLNE over next few months

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 07:19 PM PDT

    Man, buying 22k worth of Dec $12 calls was the biggest mistake I've ever made. I'm down like 75% and this stock refuses to go back to double digits. Really holding out hope there might be an infrastructure bill bump or something to give it a run like it had in June so I can dump these calls. My worry is theta is going to really start taking its toll soon, so I need something sooner rather than later…

    Think there might be another run before years end? The stock is pinned under $8 and any time it inches over, it gets shot back down for some reason. Incredibly frustrating.

    Post some opinions!

    submitted by /u/intern_throwaway5
    [link] [comments]

    Should i sell my stocks to buy a car?

    Posted: 02 Sep 2021 09:45 PM PDT

    I'm 17 years old and I don't own a car. My gf and all my friends always have to drive me around and I feel bad. My gf is kind of sick of it, because obviously it's annoying to have to pick up your bf all the time and I can't really take her out on a real date she basically does 💀. I'm still in high school too so my friend has to pick me up everyday and then drive me home. I have a job but i've been saving about 70-90% of my paycheck and putting it into stocks. I have about $1300 right now but with the current used market you can't really find anything half decent for less than $2500-3000. Would it be smart to sell my stocks for a car? Or should I just suck it up and keep mooching rides off people?

    submitted by /u/fakeyeeziez
    [link] [comments]

    Id like to learn about the Order Book from actual investors. Any tips on what I can learn about stocks by looking at the Order Charts? How useful is an Order Book when investing? Thanks!

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 09:20 AM PDT

    Saved this pic a while ago and finally got around to looking at it. After some spot checks I would say we are right about... here! Pls discuss.

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 08:54 PM PDT

    Did anyone else catch this? Even after this last run up of 85% in August the ratings went from 87% buy to 100%. Is the run just beginning? ���� I’m up 45% since mid July.

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 12:59 PM PDT

    How do we do better investments and make better profits?

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 08:02 AM PDT

    During my 8 years of investment, I learned some life lessons: We all want to find THE stock that pops up the day after we entered.

    --- Chilling Friday. ---

    I've also had a dream where I bought some AMC when it's only 5$, retired at 30 and got high all day with my pet tiger. However, this is actually a dangerous mindset when it comes to trading/investing. Trust me, I learned them the hard way.

    -

    NEVER make decisions based on instinct

    Buying a stock that seemed promising but ended up ditching it cause it's getting worse and worse everyday, is like dealing with your ex. What came after was even worse, the stock went +20% right after you sold it. In this case, what you need is a fully covered strategy to execute the toxic and move on to the next relationship.

    I know there'll be times when FOMO kicks in and you decide you HAVE to take a long shot.
    You won't take no for the answer - I just know. Well, at least do a checklist to see if it's still worth holding from time to time.

    -

    The Market don't always behave the way you think

    Just look at meme stocks like AMC and GME. Shit doesn't make sense at all, but hey, it worked out pretty well. So who are you to decide what's right or wrong?

    Stocks with great fundamentals and outlook sometimes drop for no reason, which is why I suggest never go all in or too big into any stock even if you think it's the chosen.

    -

    How do you actually profit?

    It's not difficult to profit in the stock market. Buying the right stock only takes you halfway. 80% of the investors end up losing back all their profit at some point of time.

    There are no good and bad stocks, only good and bad timing and decisions. Discipline is the key for you to survive in this long trip of investment.

    Happy Friday guys! Stay safe and have fun!

    submitted by /u/PositiveKarmaaa
    [link] [comments]

    BBIG - Price Target is $40 ?

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 11:33 AM PDT

    A Bit of Fun- the top 12 market caps right now… In 10 years time who drops out of this list and who moves in? Any big movers inside the top 12?

    Posted: 02 Sep 2021 09:19 PM PDT

    A lil TA on $CLSK

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 11:06 AM PDT

    Speqta (speqt) prepares for growth

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 01:02 PM PDT

    Speqta, drives traffic and generate sales online. Speqta Offer performance based lead generating platforms using data and AI, to grow. Speqta is a deal maker. Our people, platform, sites and services work hard day and night to deliver the most relevant customers to all our clients and partners, at scale. We help small businesses grow and large businesses excel and exceed their targets. We operate worldwide with a focus on the European market.

    Business model Speqta own and develop products and services that increase traffic and sales online. The company's goal is to become a market leader in lead generation and performance-based marketing within the verticals and in the markets in which the company operates. Speqta develops and operates platforms to generate leads and performance-based online marketing. Using our unique tool Speqta Big Data Engine, we reduce the cost of customer acquisition, while sales and margins will increase for our online business partners. The platforms contain information and inspiration for consumers across a wide range of areas like fashion, financial services and food.

    A majority of our revenue comes from performance-based marketing, so-called affiliate marketing. Simply put, an affiliate is a site or an app that publish and aggregates marketing materials, such as discount codes from an e-commerce store, and then receives compensation for the traffic that is the forwarded to the stores. The company's goal is to become the market leader in generating leads and performance-based marketing within the verticals and in markets where the company operates.

    Financial targets

    • Growth and earnings: Speqta has a target to reach revenues in excess of SEK 600 million in 2022 with a minimum of 20 % EBITDA margin, driven by organic growth (above 20 % CAGR) and acquisitions.

    • Leverage: Speqta´s goal is to operate with Net Debt / EBITDA in the range 1.5-2.5 x.

    New technology Speqta launches Bidbrain as a SaaS

    Speqta is now ( june21)launching the first version of its groundbreaking AI offering - Software as a Service (SaaS). By using Bidbrain, e-retailers can grow by buying more of the traffic that actually leads to purchases.

    https://basinreboot.com/the-secret-to-improving-google-shopping-results-fredrik-lindros-presents-bidbrain-at-the-redeye-saas-seminar/ https://speqta.com/

    Ticker SPEQT.ST

    Market cap 250 MSEK Assets 500MSEK Liabilities 200MSEK AI marketing growth >50%/ year CAGR 2017-2020 69% Margin 50-55% PE ratio 13.5 P/s ratio 1.45 P/BOOK ratio 0.9

    Valuation of companies in similar area Schibsted, p/E 90 Better collective p/E 40 Scout24 p/E 67 Industry p/E 45

    submitted by /u/ActivityAgitated
    [link] [comments]

    Wall Street Week Ahead for the trading week beginning September 6th, 2021

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 04:39 PM PDT

    Good Friday evening to all of you here on r/StockMarket. I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and is ready for the new trading week ahead.

    Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning September 6th, 2021.

    Stocks could look right past the weak jobs report and focus on strong profits - (Source)


    After a weak jobs report, strategists say investor focus may stay on strong profit growth rather than other potential negatives.


    Stocks were mixed in the past week ahead of the long Labor Day weekend, with the Nasdaq outperforming, the S&P 500 rising slightly and the Dow flat. The best-performing sectors were on the defensive side, led by real estate investment trusts, utilities, consumer staples and health care.


    "You've got this Labor Day effect. People are back from vacation" in the coming week, National Securities chief market strategist Art Hogan said.


    Hogan said investors expect the trading activity to pick up as a result, but it typically remains slow in the holiday shortened-week. Investors may assess their summer performance and move to lock in gains or add hedges.


    "If you look back at the last five post-Labor Day weeks that have happened with the market near all-time highs, the post Labor Day week is the worst for September," Hogan said.


    Year-to-date returns


    https://i.imgur.com/I2dgbkQ.png


    Friday's disappointing August jobs report — with just 235,000 jobs added — was a dampener for sentiment, but stocks were mixed.


    "My outlook for the last several weeks is sideways to moderately higher, and that seems where they're headed. There isn't a lot of bearish data accumulating. At worst we go sideways," said Randy Frederick, Charles Schwab managing director of trading and derivatives.


    Frederick said even with worries about the weaker jobs and Covid,-19 investors may continue to focus on profits. Economists blamed the spread of the Covid delta variant for the weaker than expected jobs report.


    Strategists say other issues for stocks in September could include the efforts in Congress to pass infrastructure legislation and possible new taxes.


    Ignoring jobs report


    Frederick said he expects the market to look beyond the August employment report, which was about 500,000 lower than expected.


    "I don't think there's spillover much into next week for the most part," he added. "The markets are down a little bit, but I think they've taken it in stride better than might be expected."


    Weekly jobless claims data Thursday could be even more important than usual because of the big miss in August's employment report. Jobs data is important because that is one area where Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said he would like to see more improvement before the central bank can decide to slow its bond purchases.


    The market has been fixated on the Fed's move to end its $120 billion a month bond-buying program because it is viewed as a precursor to interest rate hikes. However, Powell has stressed the two are not linked.


    "If feels like [the jobs report] pushes the announcement of a taper to the November meeting, rather than the September meeting, and for the most part that was consensus," Hogan said.


    Hogan said the market will also be watching any inflation-related data, so that makes Fridays' producer price index important after it surged last month. The consumer price index, released the following week, will be even more important for the market.


    NatWest Markets head of macro strategy John Briggs said the markets will be watching for any Fed-related headlines after the disappointing employment report.


    "Next week, you have [New York Fed President John] Williams speaking. His take will be important. He's viewed as being close to Powell," Briggs said. Williams is set to speak Wednesday at a briefing on the economy.


    What's next for stocks


    Besides the Fed, the next big event for stocks will be the third-quarter earnings season, which gets underway in early October. Before that, investors will be watching for any company comments on results.


    Frederick said the strength of earnings has been propelling stocks and could keep doing so. ″The market was so overvalued for awhile until earnings caught up, but earnings were spectacular and now the valuations aren't as high as they were a few months ago, so we can do this," he said.


    Earnings are expected to increase by 29.8% for the third quarter after the second quarter's stunning 95.6% increase, according to Refinitiv.


    "There's a vacuum of earnings related news," Frederick said, noting the market could be influenced by geopolitical events in the meantime.


    But even if the market loses steam, he doesn't expect a major sell-off because for now, dip buyers continue to come in whenever the market has a setback.


    The S&P 500 ended the week up 0.6% at 4,535, versus a 1.5% move higher by the Nasdaq to 15,363, a new high. The Dow was flattish, off 0.2%, at 35,369.


    The closely watched 10-year Treasury yield was at 1.32% late Friday, just above where it was a week ago.


    https://i.imgur.com/K44V7RZ.png


    This past week saw the following moves in the S&P:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL S&P TREE MAP FOR THE PAST WEEK!)

    S&P Sectors for this past week:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE S&P SECTORS FOR THE PAST WEEK!)

    Major Indices for this past week:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE MAJOR INDICES FOR THE PAST WEEK!)

    Major Futures Markets as of Friday's close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE MAJOR FUTURES INDICES AS OF FRIDAY!)

    Economic Calendar for the Week Ahead:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE FULL ECONOMIC CALENDAR FOR THE WEEK AHEAD!)

    Percentage Changes for the Major Indices, WTD, MTD, QTD, YTD as of Friday's close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    S&P Sectors for the Past Week:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Major Indices Pullback/Correction Levels as of Friday's close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Major Indices Rally Levels as of Friday's close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Most Anticipated Earnings Releases for this week:

    ([CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!]())

    (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.)

    Here are the upcoming IPO's for this week:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Friday's Stock Analyst Upgrades & Downgrades:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART LINK #1!)
    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART LINK #2!)
    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART LINK #3!)

    Weakness Day After Labor Day & Sell Rosh Hashanah

    In the last 21 years, only Russell 2000 has registered an average gain of 0.04% on the Tuesday after the long Labor Day weekend. DJIA, S&P 500 and NASDAQ have struggled with negative average performance. NASDAQ and Russell 2000 have been up five of the last nine years, but DJIA, S&P 500, NASDAQ and Russell 2000 all have fallen for the last four years on Tuesday. On Wednesday the market's performance has been varied. DJIA has performed the best, up 76.2% of the time with an average gain of 0.33%. S&P 500 is worst, up only 47.6% of the time with an average gain of 0.25%. NASDAQ has a better record up 52.4% of the time on Wednesday, but a smaller average gain of 0.14%.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Sell Rosh Hashanah, Buy Yom Kippur

    As the High Holidays approach you may remember the old saying on the Street, "Sell Rosh Hashanah, Buy Yom Kippur." It gets tossed around every autumn when the "high holidays" are on the minds of traders as many of their Jewish colleagues take off to observe the Jewish New Year and Day of Atonement.

    The basis for this, "Sell Rosh Hashanah, Buy Yom Kippur," pattern is that with many traders and investors busy with religious observance and family, positions are closed out and volume fades creating a buying vacuum. Even in the age of algorithmic, computer, and high frequency trading these seasonal patterns persist as humans still need to turn the machines on and off and feed them money or take it away – and these algorithms and trading programs are written by people so the human influence is still there.

    Holiday seasonality around official market holidays is something we pay close attention to (page 98 Stock Trader's Almanac 2021). Actual stats on the most observed Hebrew holidays have been compiled in the table here. We present the data back to 1971 and when the holiday falls on a weekend the prior market close is used. It's no coincidence that Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur fall in September and/or October, two dangerous and sometimes opportune months.

    Perhaps it's Talmudic wisdom but, selling stocks before the eight-day span of the high holidays has avoided many declines, especially during uncertain times. While being long Yom Kippur to Passover has produced 64% more advances, half as many losses and average gains of 7.0%. This past year DJIA gained 19.9% from Yom Kippur 2020 to Passover 2021.

    This year the high holidays arrive early on Labor Day eve, September 6, and end Thursday September 16 with Yom Kippur at mid-month one of the strongest days September. But with the market in full rally mode on easy Federal Reserve money and free Federal Government fiscal stimulus month selling ahead of the Jewish High Holidays could trigger a mild correction of 5% or so. The end of September after Triple Witching is notoriously the weakest part of the month, so it may be more prudent to "buy" later in the month.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Here Comes the Worst Month of the Year

    The incredible bull market continues, with the S&P 500 Index up to a record 53 new all-time highs before August is over, topping the previous record from 1964.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    "Although this bull market has laughed at nearly all the worry signs in 2021, let's not forget that September is historically the worst month of the year for stocks," explained LPL Financial Chief Market Strategist Ryan Detrick. "Even last year, in the face of a huge rally off the March 2020 lows, we saw a nearly 10% correction in the middle of September.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    The S&P 500 hasn't had so much as a 5% correction since last October and with stocks up more than 100% since March 2020, investors should be open to some potential seasonal weakness. The good news is we remain in the camp that stocks will continue to go higher and investors should use any weakness as an opportunity to add to core equity holdings.

    Let's be honest, stocks can't go up forever. In fact, the S&P 500 is about to be up 7 months in a row, one of the longest monthly win streaks ever.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    It is what happens next that has our attention. As the LPL Chart of the Day shows, after 7-month win streaks, the S&P 500 has been higher six months later 13 out of 14 times, with a very impressive 7.8% average return. This reinforces our belief that in the event of a well-deserved pullback, it would be an opportunity to buy at cheaper prices.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    With a very highly anticipated Federal Reserve Bank meeting in September, along with continued Delta variant worries, coupled with the fact that stocks haven't pulled back in a long time, investors should be on the lookout for some seasonal volatility in September. We remain in the camp that any weakness, should it occur, could be short-term and likely be contained in the 5-8% range. This bull market is alive and well and we would view any potential weakness as an opportunity.


    August Payrolls Disappoint

    It seems to be two steps forward, one step back for the U.S. labor market.

    The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics released its August employment report this morning, revealing that the domestic economy added a disappointing 235,000 jobs during the month, falling well short of Bloomberg-surveyed economists' median forecast for a gain of 733,000. This comes on the heels of a strong July during which payrolls climbed by an upwardly revised 1.053 million jobs. The unemployment rate fell to 5.2% in August, in line with expectations, and was paired with an unchanged labor force participation rate, which stayed at 61.7%.

    "The Delta variant surge is the unsurprising story behind August's big payroll miss," explained LPL Financial Chief Market Strategist Ryan Detrick. "Leisure and hospitality jobs, a proxy for economic reopening, were flat month over month. The good news is that we see promising signs Delta's effect will wane in coming months and payrolls will resume growing at a fast clip."

    As seen in the LPL Chart of the Day, we remain 5.3 million payrolls shy of February 2020's peak.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    The other key takeaway from this report is wage pressures are building. Average hourly earnings came in hotter than expected, an increasingly common occurrence, posting a 0.6% month-over-month gain versus expectations for 0.3%, and a 4.3% gain year over year versus expectations for 3.9%. Wages have important implications in the inflation debate, as they and rents are considered to be among the "stickier" components of inflation. Today's report is likely to bolster those in the camp asserting inflation will be less transitory than the Federal Reserve (Fed) thinks, though it should be noted that the lack of employment growth in lower wage in-person sectors likely contributed to the higher wage numbers.

    Looking ahead, we continue to believe there is reason to expect a strong jobs rebound in coming months. Schools closed for the summer, potential disincentives from enhanced unemployment benefits, and the troublesome Delta variant have all acted as speed limits on the pace of employment growth recently. August's report, though, figures to be the last where all of these factors remain in full force. Enhanced unemployment benefits are set to expire on Labor Day (ironically), meaning their effects will only be present for part of the September report's observation window, and will be fully gone by the October report. Schools and daycare facilities, meanwhile, are beginning to reopen, freeing up parents to rejoin the labor force. And, most importantly, we are seeing promising signs that the worst of the latest flare-up in COVID-19 cases may be behind us.

    Zooming out, this job report has the potential to delay the Fed's tapering timeline. Fed Chair Powell has made it clear that the labor market will serve as his tell regarding when to begin tapering asset purchases. With today's big payroll miss, it is clear the labor market is under some near term pressure, and while these pressures are likely to dissipate the Fed will probably err on the side of caution to avoid acting prematurely. The next month is sure to be an interesting one for Fed-watchers.


    Bullish Sentiment Finally Rises in Back to Back Weeks

    The S&P 500 has continued to press higher resulting in a coincident rise in sentiment. The AAII's weekly reading on bullish sentiment rose back above 40% for the first time since the week of July 8th. While 43.4% is not a particularly elevated reading on sentiment (72nd percentile of all periods), the move higher is particularly notable in that it was the first time bullish sentiment has risen in back-to-back weeks since February. That is especially surprising given the fact that bullish sentiment was very elevated at points between now and then, such as back in the spring when it eclipsed 50%. That is also a historically long stretch of time without back-to-back increases in bullish sentiment. As shown in the second chart below, at just over half of a year-long, the only two similar streaks on record were in 1995 and from 1997 to 1998.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)
    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Negative sentiment has broadly picked up over the past couple of months. In the AAII survey, bearish sentiment was slightly higher at 33.3% versus 33% last week. While below the peak from only a couple of weeks ago, that is still elevated versus readings from earlier this year.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Similarly, the Investors Intelligence survey of newsletter writers has also seen bearish sentiment on the rise throughout the summer. This week, it topped 20% for the first time since March 10th. At 21.3%, bearish sentiment in this survey is at the highest level since last October. With that said, the current reading is also well below the 20 year average of 24.19%.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    As a result of the larger gains to bullish versus bearish sentiment, optimism remains the favored response in the AAII survey. The bull-bear spread rose back into positive double digits this week for the first time since the last week of July.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Given both bullish and bearish sentiments were higher, neutral sentiment has continued to unwind. That reading fell 4.3 percentage points this week to a new low of 23.2%. That was the fourth decline in the past five weeks as neutral sentiment came in at the lowest level since mid-April.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Emerging Markets Leave China Behind

    In last night's Closer, we noted the record underperformance of Chinese equities relative to the US over the past six months. As a result of the weakness in Chinese equities, the MSCI Emerging Market ETF (EEM)—which has roughly a 37% weight in Hong Kong and Chinese stocks—is well off of its highs and has been trending lower over the past several months. Today, EEM is up a healthy 1.37%, but that brings it just short of its 50-DMA which recently fell below its 200-DMA. That is also at similar levels to the lower high from the start of this month.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    When factoring out China, emerging markets look much better. Again, the MSCI Emerging Market ETF that excludes China (EMXC) is currently 1.13% below its 52-week high, but the downtrend that has been in place since the early June highs has been on the ropes over the past couple of sessions. Yesterday saw the ETF trade and close right at that downtrend line, but the 1.15% gain today has smashed through it. That leaves EMXC at the highest level since June 15th. The ETF is also at some of the most overbought levels (1.8 standard deviations from its 50-DMA) since then.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    Pivoting over to bonds, looking at the Fixed Income screen of our Trend Analyzer, the best performer over the past five days is also in the EM space. The USD Emerging Markets Bond ETF (EMB) had been mostly flat throughout the summer trending right alongside its sideways 50- and 200-DMAs. Significant gains last Friday and yesterday led EMB to break out of that range as it reaches some of the highest levels since February today.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    As previously mentioned, EMB has not ventured far from its 50-DMA recently. In fact, the rolling 50-day standard deviation has been right around some of the lowest levels on record since EMB began trading in 2008. Given that lack of volatility, the rip higher this week has resulted in the ETF moving well beyond the upper end of its narrow trading range. In fact, yesterday the ETF closed over 3 standard deviations above its 50-DMA. That joins only 14 other days where the ETF closed at least 3 standard deviations above its 50-DMA with the most recent of those back in June 2019 when it reached as high as 4 standard deviations above its moving average.

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)

    STOCK MARKET VIDEO: Stock Market Analysis Video for Week Ending September 3rd, 2021

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE YOUTUBE VIDEO!)

    STOCK MARKET VIDEO: ShadowTrader Video Weekly 9.5.21

    ([CLICK HERE FOR THE YOUTUBE VIDEO!]())

    (VIDEO NOT YET POSTED.)


    Here are the most notable companies (tickers) reporting earnings in this upcoming trading week ahead-


    • (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.)

    ([CLICK HERE FOR NEXT WEEK'S MOST NOTABLE EARNINGS RELEASES!]())

    (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.)

    ([CLICK HERE FOR NEXT WEEK'S HIGHEST VOLATILITY EARNINGS RELEASES!]())

    (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.)


    Below are some of the notable companies coming out with earnings releases this upcoming trading week ahead which includes the date/time of release & consensus estimates courtesy of Earnings Whispers:


    Monday 9.6.21 Before Market Open:

    ([CLICK HERE FOR MONDAY'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!]())

    NONE. (U.S. MARKETS CLOSED IN OBSERVANCE OF LABOR DAY.)

    Monday 9.6.21 After Market Close:

    ([CLICK HERE FOR MONDAY'S AFTER-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!]())

    NONE. (U.S. MARKETS CLOSED IN OBSERVANCE OF LABOR DAY.)


    Tuesday 9.7.21 Before Market Open:

    (CLICK HERE FOR TUESDAY'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Tuesday 9.7.21 After Market Close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR TUESDAY'S AFTER-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Wednesday 9.8.21 Before Market Open:

    (CLICK HERE FOR WEDNESDAY'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Wednesday 9.8.21 After Market Close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR WEDNESDAY'S AFTER-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Thursday 9.9.21 Before Market Open:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THURSDAY'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Thursday 9.9.21 After Market Close:

    (CLICK HERE FOR THURSDAY'S AFTER-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Friday 9.10.21 Before Market Open:

    (CLICK HERE FOR FRIDAY'S PRE-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!)

    Friday 9.10.21 After Market Close:

    ([CLICK HERE FOR FRIDAY'S AFTER-MARKET EARNINGS TIME & ESTIMATES!]())

    (NONE.)


    (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.)

    (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.) (T.B.A. THIS WEEKEND.).

    (CLICK HERE FOR THE CHART!)


    DISCUSS!

    What are you all watching for in this upcoming trading week?


    I hope you all have a wonderful 3-day weekend a great trading week ahead r/StockMarket. :)

    submitted by /u/bigbear0083
    [link] [comments]

    Wk 24 1k portfolio

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 04:35 PM PDT

    What kind of pattern is this !?

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 01:56 AM PDT

    Taking out a loan to invest in stocks, instead of SIP

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 09:13 AM PDT

    I have been recently wondering if instead of choosing the SIP plan (systematic investment plan) wherein you automatically invest a fixed sum every month, I choose to take out a loan to invest in the market.

    My calculations (might be flawed as I was very confused throughout the calculation):

    PS: The numbers have been rounded off

    Scenario 1- I dont take out a loan.

    • Monthly investment: $3100
    • Average Return: 10% (S & P 500)
    • Duration: 40 Years

    Total Net Worth at the end: $17.2 million

    Scenario 2- I take out a loan

    • Loan amount: $500,000
    • Interest rate: 7% p.a.
    • Duration: 40 Years (I'm an 18 year old eligible for a 40 year loan)
    • Loan EMI amount: $3100

    (Assume the stock market returns & tenure to be the same)

    With this I end up paying an $1,000,000 (Interest) + $500,000 (Principle)

    The wealth generated - Money paid back:

    $22.2m - $1.5m= $20.7m

    Hence, total net worth at the end: $20.7 million and thats why I was wondering if instead of paying in the stock market I pay that money to the bank and use the money that they gave me from the start to get better returns.

    According to this calculation it seems that I'll end up with $3.5 million more, but is it worth it to take the psychological stress of taking out a loan and keep paying the EMI for 40 years?

    I also wonder if inflation might have some effect on the EMI amount as I'll be paying less dollars in value in future years.

    I would love to hear your take on this topic, and if there are any flaws in the calculation please tell me.

    Thanks

    submitted by /u/Repulsive-Sell9277
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    Another green day for DSCR 3/3 this month of September. I'm telling y'all don't sleep on this stock. Doing a full reversal anything under 0.015 is a bargain. Currently at 0.006 JV announcement this month and the commence of mining the Ruby Gold Mine.

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 01:21 PM PDT

    End of the week for my fourth portfolio. My gains has been over 5%

    Posted: 03 Sep 2021 01:09 PM PDT

    I’m I too diversified? New at this!

    Posted: 02 Sep 2021 11:57 PM PDT

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