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    Tuesday, September 14, 2021

    Stocks - r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Sep 14, 2021

    Stocks - r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Sep 14, 2021


    r/Stocks Daily Discussion & Technicals Tuesday - Sep 14, 2021

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 02:30 AM PDT

    This is the daily discussion, so anything stocks related is fine, but the theme for today is on technical analysis (TA), but if TA is not your thing then just ignore the theme and/or post your arguments against TA here and not in the current post.

    Some helpful day to day links, including news:


    Technical analysis (TA) uses historical price movements, real time data, indicators based on math and/or statistics, and charts; all of which help measure the trajectory of a security. TA can also be used to interpret the actions of other market participants and predict their actions.

    The main benefit to TA is that everything shows up in the price (commonly known as "priced in"): All news, investor sentiment, and changes to fundamentals are reflected in a security's price.

    TA can be useful on any timeframe, both short and long term.

    Intro to technical analysis by Stockcharts chartschool and their article on candlesticks

    If you have questions, please see the following word cloud and click through for the wiki:

    Indicator - Trade Signals - Lagging Indicator - Leading Indicator - Oversold - Overbought - Divergence - Whipsaw - Resistance - Support - Breakout/Breakdown - Alerts - Trend line - Market Participants - Moving average - RSI - VWAP - MACD - ATR - Bollinger Bands - Ichimoku clouds - Methods - Trend Following - Fading - Channels - Patterns - Pivots

    See our past daily discussions here. Also links for: Technicals Tuesday, Options Trading Thursday, and Fundamentals Friday.

    submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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    UPDATE 1-Amazon boosts hourly pay to over $18, to hire 125,000 workers

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 05:31 AM PDT

    https://finance.yahoo.com/news/1-amazon-boosts-hourly-pay-103153407.html

    Sept 14 (Reuters) - Amazon.com Inc hiked its average starting wage to $18 per hour on Tuesday and said it plans to hire more than 125,000 warehouse and transportation workers in the United States.

    The world's largest online retailer also said it would pay a sign-on bonus of $3,000 in some locations and the hourly wage could go up to $22.50. Amazon was among the first few retailers to set a $15 an hour minimum wage in 2018.

    This is a good news for amazon as it continue to expand the workforce. It is continuing to invest into the warehouses and logistic networks. It is the latest sign that amazon is still growing and trying to generate more revenue.

    submitted by /u/coolcomfort123
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    Is TA just financial astrology?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 06:16 AM PDT

    How right or wrong am I?

    It sounds like bullshit, most of the big guys seem to make more money teaching you how to do it, instead of doing it.

    If the stock market can only go up or down, that means anyone can make a prediction and have a 50 percent chance of being correct.

    50 percent chance is hardly difficult to be on the right side of more than once.

    submitted by /u/Helpthehelper1
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    Why Cepton lidars are getting deals over competitors ($GCAC)

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 09:59 AM PDT

    My position in $GCAC: 1000 shares @ $9.93

    Last week, Forbes reported that GM has selected Cepton to be its lidar supplier for upcoming cars produced in 2023 - 2027. The lidar space is quite full of names nowadays, but Cepton isn't usually one you hear. So why would GM select them?

    First off, SWAP-c. What is SWAP-c?

    SizeWeightand Power-Cost

    Cepton's nova lidar is <$100 while being ultra-compact and low-power. The small form factor lets automotive manufacturers place the lidar in a variety of places:

    The competitive price is simply too good.

    Cepton has partnered with a key tier 1 automotive parts supplier, Koito. This makes Cepton VERY attractive to OEMs, as Koito will definitely be able to mass-produce & integrate Cepton's lidars. Oh, did I mention Koito is the #1 global headlamp supplier?

    The ability to mass-produce the units while maintaining automotive grade is very difficult. You constantly see lidar companies showing off prototypes, but top OEMs like Toyota and GM want reliability and scalability.

    As taken from this article

    To be blunt, making lidar units is hard; mass producing them is even harder. Automakers need lidar units that are automotive grade and meet the exacting requirements of self-driving system developers. They also require a manufacturing and supply chain capable of supporting high-volume production. From R&D to manufacturing, supply, and after-sales support, lidar manufacturers need to demonstrate that they can consistently produce low runs of lidar prototypes and high volumes of commercial operation-ready lidar units to a growing number of markets globally. A lidar unit includes optics, electronics, and microscopic mechanical components. With the technology in its infancy, and with no longevity of experience to turn to, very few manufacturers have the required combination of manufacturing skills, or the ability to competitively produce at high volumes. Automakers and self-driving vehicle companies will look to those suppliers that can reliably produce cutting-edge technology at a reasonable cost.

    Let's not forget performance as a factor. There are other dirt cheap lidars out in the wild, but they are neither automotive-grade nor performant.

    submitted by /u/Nebuchadrezar
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    If there is a stock bubble, how does it burst?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 04:20 AM PDT

    Hey,

    I am reading multiple posts calling the top of the bull rally and speaking of an inminent crash.

    If that is your point of view, how do you see the market from today going into a crash? What is in your opinion the deciding factor that might cause the start of a bear market?

    In my opinion it has to be something external to the stock market and something that affects the US economy on a long term.

    I thought Covid might cause this but the policies put in place created an inflow of money into the market, and a curious situation right now the only apparent effect covid had right now in the economy is inflation and a negative effect on buying power.

    What's your point of view on this?

    submitted by /u/krLMM
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    Psycho Market Recap - Tue Sept 14

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 01:24 PM PDT

    Despite breaking a five-day losing streak yesterday, stocks once again fell today, with the three major indexes and the Russell 2000 (IWM) finishing firmly in the red as market participants digested new economic data and continue monitoring the coronavirus Delta variant situation in the US, which may finally be cresting. The Labor Department reported that its Consumer price index (CPI), which tracks the price of a weighted average market basket of consumer goods and services purchased, rose at its slowest pace in six months in August, suggesting that while the inflation rate may remain high for a while due to supply-side constraints, it's likely the rate of increase has already peaked. Core CPI, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, increased 0.1% last month, the smallest gain since February and below the 0.3% rise in July. On a year-on-year basis, CPI has decreased to 4% from 4.3% in July, an encouraging sign. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the core CPI gaining 0.3% and the overall CPI rising 0.4%. It may not seem like it but this is a large month-to-month change. The Fed's preferred inflation measure for its flexible 2% inflation target, the core personal consumption expenditures price index, increased 3.6% in the 12 months through July after a similar gain in June. August's data will be published later this month. The CPI report comes at a time when the market's attention is firmly focused on when the Fed will announce it will start scaling back pandemic-era quantitative easing. Powell has offered no signal beyond saying it "could be this year." Other members of the Fed have been more hawkish in their stance. As I have reiterated more times than I can count, I remain unconcerned with tapering talks (see the 2013 Taper Tantrum). I remain bullish until the Fed begins considering interest rate hikes, at which time I will reassess. In positive news, there are signs that the wave of coronavirus Delta variant cases in the US may be cresting. The seven-day average of daily Covid cases is about 144,300 as of Sept. 12, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. That figure is down 12% over the past week and 14% from the most recent peak in case counts on Sept. 1, when the country was reporting an average of roughly 167,600 cases per day. Dr. Arturo Casadevall, Chair of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology at Johns Hopkins University said, This is good news.

    It could represent that we have reached a peak and we are now on the way down." As of Sept 12, 54.4% of the US population is fully vaccinated while 63.8% have received at least one dose of either Pfizer (PFE) or Moderna (MRNA). Highlights - Yesterday, according to a report by the Financial Times, the CCP intends to break up Alipay, the financial super-app owned by Jack Ma's Ant Group that has more than $1 billion users, and force the creation of a new entity for the company's lending unit. The plan will also see Ant turn over user data that underpins its data decision to a new credit scoring joint-venture which will be partly state-owned. https://www.ft.com/content/01b7c7ca-71ad-4baa-bddf-a4d5e65c5d79 - Boeing (BA) raised long-0term demand forecasts today, signaling the company expects a snapback in commercial air travel once coronavirus Delta variant fears temper. - Microsoft (MSFT) outperformed after Morgan Stanley released a report saying it was expecting a 10% dividend hike. - China, the world's biggest vehicle market where regulators are implementing new rules on data protection, is developing machines that will be able to track data sent abroad by cars, a government-backed agency said on Tuesday. - Last week, a judge in California sided with Epic Games and issued Apple a permanent injunction against their App Store policies. This move opens the door for developers to offer customers third-party payment options that do not force developers to pay Apple's 15-30% commission. This is massive for companies that make a lot of their revenue through the app store. - A cyber surveillance company based in Israel has developed a tool than can break into Apple iPhones with a never-before-seen technique for at least six months, internet security watchdog group Citizen Lab said on Monday. The discovery is important because of the critical nature of the vulnerability, which affects all versions of Apple's iOS, OSX, and watchOS. Apple confirmed the vulnerability and said the issue has been fixed in today's software update.

    • ViacomCBS (VIAC) will be restructuring Paramount Pictures amid a broader management shake-up, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal. The realignment will see Paramount focus primarily on making content for sister cable and streaming networks.

    No target prices today apologies

    "Learn as if you will live forever, live like you will die tomorrow." — Mahatma Gandhi

    submitted by /u/psychotrader00
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    Is it still possible to get paper stock certificates?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 10:26 AM PDT

    My daughter's first birthday is coming up and my wife wants to do a time capsule for her to open on her 18th birthday. I was thinking a few paper stock certificates might be a good idea but I don't know how to get them.

    submitted by /u/ImLazyWithUsernames
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    Here is a Market Recap for today Monday, September 13, 2021

    Posted: 13 Sep 2021 07:37 PM PDT

    PsychoMarket Recap - Monday, September 13, 2021

    My bad for the late post, I had the recap written and sent it out, just forgot to post it here. Apologies

    After being negative through most of the day, the three major indexes reversed in the last hour of the market in order to snap a five-day consecutive losing streak, the longest since February. The S&P 500 (SPY) closed the day 0.25% up, the tech-heavy Nasdaq (QQQ) closed even while the Dow Jones (DIA) broke its recent streak of relative underperformance to close 0.74% higher. The Russell 2000 (IWM), which tracks the performance of small-caps, closed 0.58% higher.

    Last week, new economic data showed that prices paid by producers for materials once again rose last month, once again highlighting the strain that stills exists as supply-side pressures and labor market shortages once again push inflationary readings higher. This report shows that, despite the pandemic surging once again, demand by consumers remains red-hot and continues to outstrip manufacturing capacity, causing shortages, which, as basic economics shows, pushes prices higher. The producer price index for final demand rose 0.7% last month after two straight monthly increases of 1.0%, the Labor Department said. The gain was led by a 0.7% advance in services following a 1.1% jump in July. A 1.5% increase in trade services, which measure changes in margins received by wholesalers and retailers, accounted for two-thirds of the broad rise in services. Goods prices jumped 1.0% after climbing 0.6% in July, with food rebounding 2.9%. In the 12 months through August, the PPI accelerated 8.3%, the biggest year-on-year advance since November 2010, though one has to take into account this number is inflated due to easy comparisons to last year, given the absolute collapse of prices during the height of the pandemic before the vaccine existed. Economists had forecast a rise of 0.6% on a monthly basis and 8.2% on a yearly basis, basically in line with reality.

    Mike Loewengart, Managing Director at E-Trade Financial, said of the PPI, "Anyone who has bought pretty much everything recently knows that supply chain issues are widespread and inflation is real, so this won't be too much of a surprise for the market. Keep in mind we're still in the transitory period where the Fed is not inclined to budge of easy money policies."

    In positive news, there are signs that the wave of coronavirus Delta variant cases in the US may be cresting. The seven-day average of daily Covid cases is about 144,300 as of Sept. 12, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. That figure is down 12% over the past week and 14% from the most recent peak in case counts on Sept. 1, when the country was reporting an average of roughly 167,600 cases per day. Dr. Arturo Casadevall, Chair of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology at Johns Hopkins University said, This is good news. It could represent that we have reached a peak and we are now on the way down." As of Sept 12, 54.4% of the US population is fully vaccinated while 63.8% have received at least one dose of either Pfizer (PFE) or Moderna (MRNA).

    Shares of Chinese companies were broadly lower again as the regulatory crackdown by the CCP continues. According to a report by the Financial Times, the CCP intends to break up Alipay, the financial super-app owned by Jack Ma's Ant Group that has more than $1 billion users, and force the creation of a new entity for the company's lending unit. The plan will also see Ant turn over user data that underpins its data decision to a new credit scoring joint-venture which will be partly state-owned. https://www.ft.com/content/01b7c7ca-71ad-4baa-bddf-a4d5e65c5d79

    Looking ahead, market participants are closely eyeing new reports on inflation and consumer spending set to be released next week. The former will be monitored to signal whether upward price pressures during the recovery have extended further and whether the Federal Reserve may need to step in sooner rather than later to stave off a lasting jump in inflation. Consensus economists expect Tuesday's consumer price index (CPI) to rise by 5.3% in August over last year, pulling back from July's more than a decade-high annual rise of 5.4%.

    The new data on August retail sales out from the Commerce Department later this week will also offer a look at how consumer spending has held up amid concerns over the Delta variant and rising prices. Overall retail sales are expected to drop by 0.8% in August in Thursday's report, extending July's 1.1% decline. As a reminder, consumer spending accounts for roughly 70% of US GDP.

    Highlights

    • House Democrats released details of a plan that intends to help pay for the $3.5 trillion 2021 spending bill currently in consideration. House Ways and Means Committee Chairman Richard Neal, D-Mass., on Monday released details of plan that includes increasing the top corporate tax rate to 26.5%, up from the current rate of 21%, and restoring the top rate to 39.6% for individuals earning over $400,000 and married couples earning over $450,000. In order for the bill to pass and avoid the filibuster, Democrats are using special budget rules but need all 50 Democratic Senators and virtually all other House Democrats to agree.
    • In more news coming out of China, regulators ordered the largest internet companies to stop blocking links from rivals on their apps, another step designed to increase competition among tech companies. Authorities have made the move against blocking external links a key focus of a campaign that started in July, after receiving multiple complaints from users, an official with the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said.
    • Last week, a judge in California sided with Epic Games and issued Apple a permanent injunction against their App Store policies. This move opens the door for developers to offer customers third-party payment options that do not force developers to pay Apple's 15-30% commission. This is massive for companies that make a lot of their revenue through the app store.
    • A cyber surveillance company based in Israel has developed a tool than can break into Apple iPhones with a never-before-seen technique for at least six months, internet security watchdog group Citizen Lab said on Monday. The discovery is important because of the critical nature of the vulnerability, which affects all versions of Apple's iOS, OSX, and watchOS. Apple confirmed the vulnerability and said the issue has been fixed in today's software update.
    • ViacomCBS (VIAC) will be restructuring Paramount Pictures amid a broader management shake-up, according to a report by the Wall Street Journal. The realignment will see Paramount focus primarily on making content for sister cable and streaming networks.
    • **Please note that current stock price was written during the session and may not reflect closing prices*\*
    • Affirm (AFRM) target raised by Barclays from $115 to $140 at Overweight. Stock currently around $109
    • Albemarle (ALB) with a host of target raises. Average price target $280 at Buy. Stock currently around $229
    • Asana (ASAN) target raised by Jefferies from $90 to $115 at Buy. Stock currently around $101
    • AutoZone (AZO) target raised by Wells Fargo from $1700 to $1750 at Overweight. Stock currently around $1554
    • Palo Alto Networks (PANW) target raised by Goldman Sachs from $515 to $535 at Buy. Stock currently around $476
    • Zebra Technologies (ZBRA) target raised by Stephens from $600 to $700 at Overweight. Stock currently around $580

    "It is the mark of an educated mind to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it." - Aristotle

    submitted by /u/psychotrader00
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    Shipping containers stocks

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 07:14 AM PDT

    Shipping containers are making so much profits at the moment and it will continue.

    Any other stocks besides the ones below?

    https://www.bbc.com/news/business-58479148

    A.P. Møller-Mærsk A/S (AMKBY)

    Hapag-Lloyd AG (HPGLY)

    Danaos Corp. (DAC)

    Navios Maritime Partners LP (NMM)

    ZIM Integrated Shipping Services Ltd. (ZIM)

    submitted by /u/JanCloudeVonDamn
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    MAPS (WM Technology Inc): Acquires Leading Cannabis CRM & Marketing Platform Sprout

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 07:01 AM PDT

    https://www.marketscreener.com/quote/stock/WM-TECHNOLOGY-INC-123820628/news/WM-Technology-Inc-Acquires-Leading-Cannabis-CRM-Marketing-Platform-Sprout-36420161/

    WM Technology, Inc. ("WM Technology" or the "Company") (Nasdaq: MAPS), a leading technology and software infrastructure provider to the cannabis industry, announced today that it has acquired Sprout, a leading, cloud-based CRM & marketing platform for the cannabis industry. WM Technology's acquisition of Sprout reinforces the company's end-to-end operating system as one of the most comprehensive software solutions available in the cannabis market today.

    "Our strategy focuses on establishing WM Business as the software solution of choice for cannabis businesses. With the addition of Sprout, we are one step closer to realizing this vision of providing an all-in-one seamless and integrated solution to run, manage, and grow one's cannabis business," said Chris Beals, CEO and Chairman of WM Technology, Inc. "This acquisition will allow our clients to better target, reach, acquire and retain customers at scale. I also want to welcome Jaret Christopher, Sprout's exceptionally talented Founder and CEO, and everyone at Sprout to our team."

    Sprout empowers cannabis retailers to acquire new customers, retain existing ones and grow revenues. Sprout's purpose-built, omni-channel software platform combines all-in-one CRM and marketing, third party integrations, a robust targeted messaging system across text, email and in-app, a loyalty program, compliance modules, and analytics. WM Technology's acquisition of Sprout strengthens the company's position between retailers and consumers in the rapidly growing legal cannabis industry.

    "We're incredibly excited to join WM Technology. We look forward to leveraging the breadth and scale of users, retailers and brands on the Weedmaps marketplace to accelerate the reach of Sprout as part of WM Business," said Jaret Christopher, Founder and CEO of Sprout.

    submitted by /u/_hiddenscout
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    CPI question

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 06:19 AM PDT

    Where does the CPI get its shelter component from? And why is there such a large discrepancy from the real world? The CPI has shelter inflation at 2.8% for the year. Yet my apartment that I moved into last October for $1350 is increasing to $1511. That's a 12% increase. What's ever more crazy is that the price they're giving me is a discount because the market is garnering $2100 a month for my apartment!

    I currently own a duplex in which 1 side was vacant and the other was getting $900 a month for rent. I just put the other side up for rent for $1200. A 33% increase. I had to pull the add and shut my phone off because I was getting so many interested renters. How could their be such a big difference between the shelter component of the CPI and the real world?

    submitted by /u/billyd187
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    Are semiconductors ETF's worth in 2021 and possibly in 2022

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 02:09 AM PDT

    I am looking into buying a small portion of ETF's of semiconductors I am looking SMH in particular despite being ATH I feel like this chip shortage madness will continue at least for another year or two- Do you have position in any of these ETF's and what is your outlook, is it worth jumping now?

    submitted by /u/BrownGaze
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    Best European ETF's?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 07:44 AM PDT

    There's been plenty of discussion on the popular US ETF's such as ARK, QQQ etc however the broker I am using seems to be limiting me to European ETF's.

    Can anyone recommend some of the best one's to go for. I currently have EQQQ.

    submitted by /u/bengill24
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    How effective is a margin call liquidation?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 08:57 AM PDT

    I'm with Interactive Broker UK and have 5x leverage (20=100) with a 10% maintenance margin on CFD's.

    1. Ballpark calculation, if the underlying stock goes down about -12% I'd be margin called is that correct?
    2. My main concern is what happens if it goes down -20% in say 2 days. Can they instantly liquidate at -12%? Would they have enough time to get me out or do they have to rely on the market or liquidity?

    I understand how dangerous leverage can be.

    Thanks

    submitted by /u/FINIXX
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    $LVS bargain buy?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 07:59 AM PDT

    From what I have read today, Macau has been planning these regulations for months now. The regulation itself is only to add a timer to certain machines in the casino. How hard is it to just move over one seat and continue to play slots or whatever machine? I believe Chinese tech and these Macau gambling stocks are getting the same sentiment after we hear the words regulations and they shouldn't be. Yes you still run a risk of Chinese Government fucking up everything, but it seems like an overreaction. Plus Cnbc pumping this stock for the last week and anyone who bought in is most likely selling now.

    submitted by /u/tahopg
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    Reasons for QYLD/SCHD over SPY?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 06:30 AM PDT

    Many times when someone has a chunk of money to invest, I see people advise the OP to dump it into QYLD or something similar. Back testing, it seems like SPY with DRIP would basically always be better in the long run than any of the typical dividend paying stocks/etfs.

    I can think of only a few special circumstances where this makes sense:

    1 - You want monthly income and don't care about too much growth. I don't even know how to test this, but since the CAGR on SPY is higher, wouldn't you be able to still do better than QYLD even selling a stock here or there? The only thing I can think of is if you are forced to sell stocks in a bear market.

    2 - Depending on account tax status, you eventually will want to switch your money into QYLD for retirement, so it's better to DRIP QYLD for 30 years than sell SPY after 30 years, take a huge hit on tax, then buy QYLD. I'm just guessing, I don't know if that's true or if it's a reason why people suggest QYLD.

    submitted by /u/is_not_sam
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    Sell My Hilton Shares?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 08:49 AM PDT

    I only have a few left but it's approaching the 52W high even with the market down today. I bought in at 71 in the beginning of the pandemic and sold at this price point once before yet retained some. Does anyone see it really booming in the next year or is this more or less the pinnacle?

    submitted by /u/LuigiC173
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    Using moving averages. What does it mean when you extend or zoom into a different day?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 10:11 AM PDT

    For example, lets say im using a simple moving average with a length of 180 days. is that only effective if i am looking at the last 180 day chart?

    what if im using a 180 day SMA and looking at a 100 day chart? 50 day chart? 1 year chart?

    same question in regards to an EMA

    i guess i dont understand how a "x" day SMA (or EMA) line is used if not looking at the same x day chart. how is it plotting the other days? since by definition, it uses the past x days to calculate and plot the line. if you are using a 50 day SMA line, and its using the last 50 days to plot the line, how does it line even work when looking at a 100 or 200 day chart?

    submitted by /u/LearningKR
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    What's going to happen to my $SPRT shares tomorrow? (GREE merger)

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 12:03 PM PDT

    I have 6 shares of SPRT and they said that I'll get 0,115 $GREE shares for each SPRT shares, so my question is: Will I get 0,69 shares (6*0,115) or 0 shares + cash? How do the fraction shares in this situation work?

    submitted by /u/APiteFinom
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    What exactly happens when a hedge fund “blows up”? What happens to investors’ money?

    Posted: 13 Sep 2021 05:36 PM PDT

    I can't seem to find any concise info on historical data regarding performance of different hedge funds.

    And also, more relevant to the question at hand, what happens to funds, and investors in said funds, if they perform very poorly/blow up?

    Are there any significant consequences to the hedge fund managers/etc.?

    Is there any reliable place to look for this information?; or anyone care to drop any knowledge pertaining to this topic.

    submitted by /u/putsonmylife
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    Is anyone aware about the energy supply crunch currently going on in Europe?

    Posted: 13 Sep 2021 03:23 PM PDT

    I don't know if people have followed that but there is a huge energy supply crunch currently happening in Europe & UK.

    Due to several factors (CO2 quotas, high dependency to new renewables + no wind currently, high competition with Asia, inventories historically low especially in Germany and Netherlands, many gas powered projects made in the last years, etc.) the prices for natural gas & electricity are currently skyrocketing like crazy.

    For the MWh of gaz we went from ~14 EUR to ~57 EUR for the october futures.

    https://www.theice.com/products/27996665/Dutch-TTF-Gas-Futures/data?marketId=5285052&span=3

    In the UK, over the last decade (2010-2020), the MWh of electricity vas about £45. It is currently around £354.

    Gas & electricity are of course used in many processes. These are also absolutely vital for domestic heating (and we are still in late summer here). The inflation we will see, if those prices stay in the mid-long term, is feared to be really high (as those prices impact every level of the society: production, heating at home, the supermarket fridges,...) . The probability this trend could last is really low. It is nearly sure that a correction will somehow happen in Europe because of that supply crunch and the impoverishment it will cause. Not a lot of politicians are currently talking of that problem so far and it's hard to know if most of them are aware of it (a lot of the current discussions still revolve around covid, etc). However there are already reports of a few manifestations in Spain.

    Even if that trend is not viable in the long term, it is not going to stop in the short term seeing the level of the German & Netherland gas reserve. I just wanted to give a fair warning as we know that commodity prices surge was one of the reasons the 2008 crisis happened.

    submitted by /u/jimkoons
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    $EXOD Day #1 Recap: Opens at $28.00 —> Trades Up to $75.00 —> Closes Up at $48.00 —> UP by 75.05% with blockchain transparency TZROP —>

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 01:34 PM PDT

    $EXOD Day #1 Recap: Opens at $28.00 —> Trades Up to $75.00 —> Closes Up at $48.00 —> UP by 75.05% with blockchain transparency —> Price Discovery based upon pure Free Market Forces! —> tZERO should have an avalanche of New Listings coming onto the tZERO Blockchain Trading Platform !!... Bullish !!! This is just "The Beginning" ... The New Listings should start rolling in now! The tZERO Blockchain-Tech Platform PROTECTS shareholders from all the price manipulation on Wall Street. I'm bullish on the $TZROP 10% of Adjusted Gross Revenues (Gross Profits), Quarterly Dividend, Preferred Equity Tokens. Let's Roll !!!

    submitted by /u/balletta99
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    How does 1 figure out a good entry into a trade?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 05:42 AM PDT

    I've heard of looking at RSI values and MACD crossovers, but ive never really understood which chart to look at. Should i focus more on the 1D chart, 1W chart or the 1M chart? I've been trying to get this answer everywhere but even if there is an answer i usually never understand anything that i read. So if anyone can help me out thank you:)

    submitted by /u/Dizdieek
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    Pumping & Dumping in Markets?

    Posted: 14 Sep 2021 07:06 AM PDT

    After seeing the market peak broadly about 10 days ago, there has been a repetitive cycle of massive rallying in the premarket and complete dumping in the first 30 min to 1 hr. Has anyone else noticed this?

    submitted by /u/thisisawnedys
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