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Business, Economics, and Taxes: Capitalism. Yay? >=(

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every time I look at Tesla I think it would be dumb to get in at that price. and then it goes up more.

i almost got in when it was down while there was talk of them potentially going bankrupt. It was like $200 then. Then the crazy run up to > $2000 happened, the 5:1 split and then the run back up to almost $900

Never ever regret missing something that's propped up by a cult.

I'm only angry about three misses:
1. Chipotle immediately after the food-borne illnesses. I was ready to dump a couple grand into this. It was such an opportunity and I never followed through. This one hurts the most.
2. Facebook 6 months after the IPO. I had this strategy talked over with my dad and I just didn't end up following through.
3. Target just after the pandemic hit

Yeah, I could talk about missing Apple and Tesla, but I don't think they're misses. They didn't fit with my portfolio, my portfolio already has a lot of Apple because of the index funds, and I still think Tesla is a crock of ****.

I'm hesitant to get into any individual stock becuase I just don't do enough research on them to accept the risk. I've always liked Cramer's rule of one hour per week per stock. I have held McDonalds since it was like $10 and my company's stock because it's basically a small index fund in itself. That's about it. My dad has suggested I need to get a brokerage going because I'm going to start hitting 401(k) caps and I need to get more money in non-tax-advantaged accounts for some extra liquidity.

I'm still thinking about getting in on Twitter though. I just see that as the platform moving forward over Facebook. "People" and organizations no longer use Facebook to communicate. It's dead. Twitter, on the other hand, is the platform. I don't see that changing any time soon. I just don't. And right now is the time to get in after its "trump correction".
 
Actually you underestimate how many people in the financial industry probably are gamers. If this was some other venture I would agree but in this case I would bet they have their ducks in a row.

And you give the SEC WAY too much credit.

This will likely not work very much in the future but if they pick and choose their spots I wouldn't be surprised to see it again. Things like this have been run for hundreds of years they just find better ways to hide it. There will always be ways to (pardon the pun) game the system in ways like this. This is just the first time it was crowdsourced. Usually they do it to each other ;^)

Man some students and I in my MBA classes discussed stuff like this in the hypothetical but never thought I would see it in practice. It is an expensive and risky venture...which is why crowdsourcing is smart. Again though it will end up co-opted.

The hedge funds would sell their parents if it made money. They don't care about the actual companies they trade. They care about the profits they can make. If that means burning a company to the ground, fuck 'em.
 
CNBC talking about the SEC getting involved. "A fair market for institutional and retail investors" is fine as long as the institutional investors always win.

I'm under no illusions that the reddit GME tactic is a Good Thing or healthy or even that it will end without catastrophe for some (many? most?) of the day traders. And judging by their posts I'd say a large percentage of those traders are the type of sad sack Incel who posts Pepe memes and votes for Dump. And again, going by the reddit thread, the drumbeat of a pump and dump con is clearly discernable underneath the political talk.

But we are also going to get another lesson how rigged everything is for the 1%, or more exactly the .01%. The business channels are reacting like a cross between Marie Antoinette and Pinochet.

All the talk is Big Bad Reddit, but CNBC had no qualms about passing along the news overnight that Melvin dropped their GME shorts which caused the premarket price to drop over $100 from its high...
 
All the talk is Big Bad Reddit, but CNBC had no qualms about passing along the news overnight that Melvin dropped their GME shorts which caused the premarket price to drop over $100 from its high...

Which is funny, because there are a lot of people calling BS on Melvin getting out.
 
The hedge funds would sell their parents if it made money. They don't care about the actual companies they trade. They care about the profits they can make. If that means burning a company to the ground, **** 'em.

That is why it is risky. The hedge funds/brokerages can afford to burn the money usually and the others can't. The people who buy too high on this little scheme are gonna get burned HARD. This is like an updated version of the scam from the film Boiler Room. Hell it isnt that far off from the con Bud Fox runs on Gordon Gecko...

Hey if you get in early on a Ponzi Scheme you can make some decent coin. Just make sure to get out early ;^)

FWIW I would never be a part of this...but it is fun to watch and talk about.
 
Which is funny, because there are a lot of people calling BS on Melvin getting out.

Insofar as I could follow it they pointed out that the volume of trades by institutional investors trying to drive the price back down are the same as yesterday, indicating that Melvin is still desperately trying to save their position.

Would it be illegal for Melvin to lie that they were out or is this just another way the rich are above the law?
 
All the talk is Big Bad Reddit, but CNBC had no qualms about passing along the news overnight that Melvin dropped their GME shorts which caused the premarket price to drop over $100 from its high...

I like CNBC but they are, and always have been, a tool of the brokerages and funds to rig the game a bit more in their favor. Fox Business is way worse about it but CNBC is definitely covered in fleas as well.
 
FWIW I would never be a part of this...but it is fun to watch and talk about.

I think of all Day Trading as some version of this only boring. I would never go near it. (1) It's gambling and I don't gamble, and (2) the House always wins. Either they fleece you on the floor of the casino (Wall Street) or they roll you in the parking lot (the courts) afterwards.
 
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I like CNBC but they are, and always have been, a tool of the brokerages and funds to rig the game a bit more in their favor. Fox Business is way worse about it but CNBC is definitely covered in fleas as well.

During the Bailout they dropped all pretense. They were (are) the Baghdad Bob of the 1%.

2019-10-16-guillotine.jpg
 
I'm seeing a lot of these morons post that they are in at like $350-$370 for a few $k. It's already down to $330.

If every single person bought exactly one share, the losses would be spread out somewhat. But someone is going to buy the share at its peak and that person gets fucked the hardest. It won't be a hedge fund, it will be one of these morons on reddit. It also sounds like several large platforms are halting trading (TD Ameritrade, something called T212). This is why you lose. Every time. The hedge funds go to CNBC and the retail trading platforms. Reddit is at their mercy. You will lose. The only way to win is not to play.

I did see something interesting though that caught my eye. This idea of the small guys collectively fucking the big guy is getting a lot of play. The seeds of collective bargaining are being planted.
 
One of the stocks the redditers are rocketing isNational Beverage, makers of Shasta and... Faygo!

Q meets ICP.
 
I'm seeing a lot of these morons post that they are in at like $350-$370 for a few $k. It's already down to $330.

Yeah, but it's volatile, so for all we know it will close at $500, dip overnight to $250, then go to $700 tomorrow.

The only certainty is eventually it will crater and the folks who are left will lose their shirts. But perhaps in the meantime they can bankrupt the Mets!

Wait. What?
 
Yeah, but it's volatile, so for all we know it will close at $500, dip overnight to $250, then go to $700 tomorrow.

The only certainty is eventually it will crater and the folks who are left will lose their shirts. But perhaps in the meantime they can bankrupt the Mets!

Wait. What?

This is all fun to watch, like the oil spot price last year.
 
I'm seeing a lot of these morons post that they are in at like $350-$370 for a few $k. It's already down to $330.

If every single person bought exactly one share, the losses would be spread out somewhat. But someone is going to buy the share at its peak and that person gets ****ed the hardest. It won't be a hedge fund, it will be one of these morons on reddit. It also sounds like several large platforms are halting trading (TD Ameritrade, something called T212). This is why you lose. Every time. The hedge funds go to CNBC and the retail trading platforms. Reddit is at their mercy. You will lose. The only way to win is not to play.

I did see something interesting though that caught my eye. This idea of the small guys collectively ****ing the big guy is getting a lot of play. The seeds of collective bargaining are being planted.
Yeah, even if this doesn’t work in the short term there are seeds being planted for the long term.
 
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