StockTwat29 wrote: » I'm a fairly inexperienced trader so I'm trying to educate myself by reading blogs, if you think there is a better way then maybe you could offer some help instead of trying to make fun of me
greenfield21 wrote: » CNBC and r/wallstreetbets are great for anyone learning to invest.such a wealth of information on there.We are so lucky to have them.
JMMCapital wrote: » Absolutely not, avoid them both CNBC is for sheep all they do is create “noise” in my opinion and r/wallstreetbets is nothing but gambling no solid investment advice from there.
Jim2007 wrote: » Make a list of traders who have been successful over the long term. The back of a cigarette packet should provide you with more than enough space. And then if you have any sense you’ll stay an inexperienced trader... The only people who are successful at trading are the pick and shovel sellers.What has worked in investing
all about the mane wrote: » So where would you go to learn?
StockTwat29 wrote: » Ya, haven't seen him on CNBC and yes he does look like a bit of a twat but their blogs and youtube videos are usually good
Jim2007 wrote: » When you are an investor in a company where the COO has fabricated the revenue figure, you get the hell out of there as fast as you can. Because you have absolutely no idea of what else might be going on. The stock may never trade again, it might trade for a few weeks when another investigation is opened etc.... it might go on even longer until the next investigation is opened etc...
Fol20 wrote: » What are the odds that luckin coffee will trade again. Took a punt of 50e so just wondering what ye think.
all about the mane wrote: » So you don’t trade?
Jim2007 wrote: » Why would I spend time and risk capital on something that does not work? But I have sold the picks and shovels....
all about the mane wrote: » Why do you partake in this thread?
Jim2007 wrote: » So that at least the odd person will realize the amount of utter nonsense that goes on and possibly save themselves a bit of money in the process. Trading is just a sophisticated sounding method of gambling nothing more. You’ve got all these people studying graphs and charts and trying to making insightful comments on the market this and that.... while ignoring one simple statistic - there are no hordes of wealthy traders out there, just like there are no hordes of wealthy gamblers out there. And nobody should be surprised about this, if you try to predict human behavior in a given economic situation without modeling either in your equation you should not be surprised if it does not go very well. If trading was such a successful method of generating wealth, why do you think financial institutions trade so little on their own account and spend their time trying to sell you services instead?
JMMCapital wrote: » Even if so, the stock is going to zero you don't come back from this.
hobie21 wrote: » I'll summerise the points. 1. Recession. Fewer customers buying cars (esp Chinese market 50% drop already) 2. The truck. What an ugly machine. 3. Cash burn, new factories in early stages in Germany China. 4. P/E of 50. Plan is short at 570 and get out at 250.
Shedite27 wrote: » On CNBC, while I understand that their anchors are obviously in the business of drumming up ratings by talking up Bull/Bears, do people feel their contributors aren't giving good advice on air? People like Bill Ackman, Mark Cuban, El-Erian etc? I even think the likes of Michael Santoli are quite level headed.
XMG wrote: » So as of this moment you are down $50 a share on $TSLA, are you still holding out?
hobie21 wrote: » Havn't done it yet
hobie21 wrote: » Hi Bob, I'm going to short TSLA. Why do you think I was dissuaded? I know timing is everything, especially when shorting stocks but I just think the time is right.
ELM327 wrote: » Well I guess that is not working out well for you FYI this is the worst time to short TSLA, stock is rising as there is 13.5% of TSLA shares currently shorted and traders are looking to keep their position open till after earnings call at end of April Good Q1 delivery numbers achieved and a good earnings call in prospect. This is a time to buy, not to short. Remember that trading 101 comment I made? Well this is Trading 102. Know Your Equity
ELM327 wrote: » TSLA is still overvalued. It is 250-300 usd (over 100%) over what it was in December - on a realistic PE number. I sold at ~900 and will buy back in when it drops to around 350. Anyone who "likes" TSLA at 514 USD current price is a madman. And I have a Tesla