Originally Posted by lewdog:
You know there is!!!!
And you know they'll never admit it............
Nah even before it took off this had eat Buehler445s lunch written all over it.
I talked to a buddy that I harass periodically for agronomy. Anyway he asked me about it and mentioned that surely he’d be looking to sell (yesterday). I told him’ “Man, you know both our asses would be out by 50 LOL”.
Not to go off on a rant here, but I’m really concerned as to what the regulatory response is going to be. It was all fun and games until I start reading tweets from politicians about it. And that’s as far as I’ll go there because it will be speculation.
But let’s be real here. Even if the GameStop thing is 100% Reddit jackasses (I’m 85% sure other hedge funds ran it and used Reddit jackasses as cover), structurally it’s no different than what these hedge funds do to each other. They just published it, talked a bunch of shit, and have no exit strategy (largely).
What Citrion et al did was strictly bad decision making and risk management. I’ve made bad decisions before and precisely nobody gave half a fuck about it. I just don’t want any negative repercussions from this madness. [Reply]
Originally Posted by IrishChief:
Anyone into crypto check out Telcoin. I invested last week and have more than doubled my money. Do some research, solid project and goes live in a few weeks.
Serious gains in Telcoin since i posted that. Hope some of yas invested [Reply]
Originally Posted by lewdog:
Add AHCO to your watchlist. I added shares this week.
I made a killing in NVAX and MRNA in 2020. Too bad it was in my Robinhood account and not my IRA. The healthcare sector should be strong at least through 2021. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
I presume that most of us have some GOOG. It's a good day to have GOOG, especially when it's my largest individual holding.
Yup, GOOGL is my 2nd largest holding behind NVDA. It's been a very good day. [Reply]
In general the large caps are doing way better than expectations
Originally Posted by :
The blended year-over-year earnings-per-share (EPS) growth estimate for the S&P 500, which includes results already reported and the average estimates of analysts of coming results, is now positive 0.2%, with six of the 11 sectors showing positive growth, according to FactSet.
That compares with a growth estimate of negative 13.1% when the quarter started (as of Sept. 30), with 10 sectors showing declines, and an estimate of negative 6.9% growth as the earnings-reporting season kicked off in mid-January.
PayPal reported this afternoon and is up nearly 6% after hours [Reply]