Idiotic.Short US dollar is reported to be the most crowded trade currently, first time ever.
I think there late to the party actually.
View attachment 289565
If any, soon buy UUP
Idiotic.Short US dollar is reported to be the most crowded trade currently, first time ever.
I think there late to the party actually.
View attachment 289565
Cisco is a better match, a bigger crash, and more correlated in strategy - Cisco was going to fuel the hardware for the .com revolution.Look at stock chart of Intel from 2000 and Nvidia 2025.
If you aren’t off the pot in 5 you are old.Wendy's continues to post a new low everyday and it looks dismal...
You are the marketAMZN says its laying people off in AWS. I thought that was the future? Stock is up - ya for me. I wonder if its time to lighten that one - its up 25% since I bought in April. Maybe I put a trailing stop in.
Same with GOOG - its up 17% from same time.
Problem is I lack investment ideas. Everything is overpriced and overbought.
I'm looking for new stocks to get in because of the same.AMZN says its laying people off in AWS. I thought that was the future? Stock is up - ya for me. I wonder if its time to lighten that one - its up 25% since I bought in April. Maybe I put a trailing stop in.
Same with GOOG - its up 17% from same time.
Problem is I lack investment ideas. Everything is overpriced and overbought.
A bunch on X are touting rotation into IWM. Same narrative as last year - lower interest rates lift the zombie boats.I'm looking for new stocks to get in because of the same.
AMZN says its laying people off in AWS. I thought that was the future? Stock is up - ya for me. I wonder if its time to lighten that one - its up 25% since I bought in April. Maybe I put a trailing stop in.
Same with GOOG - its up 17% from same time.
Problem is I lack investment ideas. Everything is overpriced and overbought.
Yes i was trading LMTA bunch on X are touting rotation into IWM. Same narrative as last year - lower interest rates lift the zombie boats.
Were you the one trading LMT?
I cannot directly help you. I don't use or know of such software, but I know Fidelity does this. I think you would need an account though.Hi All! I'm not sure if this should be a dedicated post, but I figured I would ask here. My mom died some years ago and since I have more free time now, I'm really trying to go through some of her investments to determine if I should hold or keep. I need a tool where I can easily see what the total returns have been over the last several years by putting in a symbol, purchase date, number of shares, and a selection of reinvest distributions or not. Some of these are mutual funds and though just looking at the NAV makes them look like poor performers, they have had sizeable distributions in the past (short and long term cap gains as well as dividends). I have looked at some (Sharesight is one), but they are very spotty with what they capture. I had to manually track down information from my institution's transaction history and manually populate what I could. I would think the date is available publicly and a tool would exist that can do this. Any help is much appreciated!
Aren't the loan rates set by demand and supply in the marketplace? I have some linger shares of an index that pays 0.625% which amounts to peanuts... but I figure at least the peanuts are free.I notice the other day I have a new Fidelity person "assigned" to my accounts.
So I send him an email Monday asking why the loan rates on my shares being lent are so low lately. Crickets.
The old guy was attentive at least. Hmmm..............oh well, be careful what you ask for - as the saying goes.
They are and I also asked him if we can decline 0.5% loaners. If Fidelity put a go/no go system in place basically. Crickets was mah pornt.Aren't the loan rates set by demand and supply in the marketplace? I have some linger shares of an index that pays 0.625% which amounts to peanuts... but I figure at least the peanuts are free.![]()