Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower:
Long Darden cuz Ma and Pop shops are probably screwed.
Yep. I've already staked my bets. Darden along with Texas Roadhouse, Bloomin Brands, and a handful of other well established casual dine in/carry out chains in the sector. I, like you am seeing a scenario where a considerable number of smaller offerings could go bankrupt. But my thinking is that a good number of the larger non pizza or fast food chains that are getting pounded right now are going to survive. I'm expecting a fair share of volatility and some short term losses until the market as a whole starts to see some light at the end of the tunnel. Like I mentioned , I've been wrong before. But that's the way I am seeing it. [Reply]
I hated when TD bought Scottrade. I hope they create another Scottrade. It was the best and most concise online brokerage. TD Ameritrade was so fucked up with too many bells and whistles and overkill.
I wanted to create my own simple layout and it was just a fucking eyesore on what they made you have on your home page.
I have Wells Fargo now and it sucks, so far behind the times. [Reply]
Now is not the time to get foolish. Let's talk about long term investing in sound companies. Here's my current list of positions I'm looking to add during this downturn for long term growth.
Johnson and Johnson
Visa
McDonald's
Apple
Catepillar (I question having this included)
Nike
Honeywell
Originally Posted by :
The Mortgage Bankers Association in a dire letter to regulators Sunday warned that the U.S. housing market is “in danger of large-scale disruption,” due to efforts by the Federal Reserve that were intended to help rescue the mortgage market.
At issue are the Fed’s unprecedented $183 billion of purchases last week of mortgage-backed securities. The purchases were meant to drive down rates, and they did.
But together with the storm that gripped financial markets from the coronavirus, they also effectively blew up a widespread hedge that mortgage bankers use to protect themselves against rate increases. The hedge pays them if the prevailing rate in the market is higher than the mortgage rate they locked in with the customer.
A comparison widget that shows trend, earnings per share (EPS), P/E ratio and beta for each of the companies on this list can be accessed through the link below.
Mortgage Service Industry Comparison Widget
Select the company’s link to access charts, news links and company website and social media information.
Mortgage Services: Small-Cap Stocks
Altisource Portfolio Solutions S.A. (ASPS) (Mortgage, financial and technology services to the real estate, mortgage and consumer debt industries)
Nationstar Mortgage Holdings Inc. (NSM) (Mortgage servicing)
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Now is not the time to get foolish. Let's talk about long term investing in sound companies. Here's my current list of positions I'm looking to add during this downturn for long term growth.
Johnson and Johnson
Visa
McDonald's
Apple
Catepillar (I question having this included)
Nike
Honeywell
Companies you'd add?
3M is nicely priced and pays good dividends. Great long term hold. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Discuss Thrower:
I've had my trading account flagged as a PDT and I'm needing to meet margin requirement in order to do any additional trades.
So today has been fun.
Pattern Day Trader? Is that what you mean by PDT?
Last year I had enough margin calls. I got whipsawed on a bunch of hedge positions, because I thought I knew what I was doing. Ended up fine because I still had the physical, but motherfucker, approving those ACHs are ass. I've had enough (As I sit here with a bunch of hedges through contracts on LOL).
Side story that probably only I think is funny, but I talked to an old guy I bought this sprayer from. Got a call from my broker. On call. Whatever, approve the ACH. He told me he had cattle hedged in the 80s, whatever year the market was limit down for something retarded like 12 days in a row or something fucking horrific. Anyway he told me the secretary for the broker would always call at the same time and had some cringey voice that was like nails on a chalkboard, "STAN, you're on call again today." I'll probably never forget the face he made. I laughed for days about that.
But yeah, that cattle market in the 80s. Those guys were tough sons of bitches. Paying ridiculous interest and daily limit margin calls. :-) [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
And they're a major mask maker. They got a contract a couple of weeks ago to make 35 million masks, and you figure more orders are coming.