codrulz wrote: » Because the close doesn't matter, the volatility does, you basically called the top for RR as it had rallied 45%... within an hour, RR was ~100% up on the day. You were wrong today, move on.
Saganist wrote: » Hi, I'm new to buying stock and have a n00b question. I bought Palantir ( PLTR ) a few weeks ago at $9 a share. It's up over 50% as of today. Good time to sell ? Any opinions ?
ceekay74 wrote: » Intel seems like one to watch for me. The price is good value and with if it drops much more with pressure on IT stocks it could be great value.
roosterman71 wrote: » Intel have just been surpassed in the gaming chip world by AMD now. They had held an advantage there. AMD architecture is down at 7nm while Intel are still on 10 and struggling to get to 7. They are under serious pressure in the chip business. AMD have surpassed them in gaming (single threaded operations since the new Ryzen chips were launched) and Intel were already behind in the standard day to day operations of chips. There likely move is to reduce the chip costs to maintain market share. I'd give Intel a miss
Liamo_mu wrote: » Netflix falling more in pre market. I'm already down on it after buying at 480 but think I'll pick up more. It's a volitile stock but to me it seems the stock overreacted to news of a vaccine. People will still be stuck inside for months. Netflix subscribers should stay very good. Before news of a vaccine yesterday Netflix was actually 522 on pre market. Anyone have any thoughts? I don't see any reason for it not to bounce back?
treatyman wrote: » My opinion for what it's worth is people don't tend to unsubscribe from these types of luxuries. Netflix doesn't cost that much and I think once you've budgeted and paying for it, get hooked on a series or 2, just because you won't be confined to your house as much in the coming month doesn't mean you'll stop watching Netflix.
Bob24 wrote: » Broadly agreed people who started subscribing to streaming services because of lockdowns will likely keep budgeting for they type of service when life gets back to normal. Having said that, competition has been ramping-up and due to special offers and/or having too much time to watch TV quite many households probably ended-up with access to many of those services at the same time (Neflix, Disney, Amazon, Apple, HBO, etc). At some point I suspect there will be some type of arbitrage with people deciding which one(s) to keep and which ones to ditch. Not sure what exactly it means for Neflix though. As the dominant player they’ll probably resist pretty well. But I’d still quote increased competition and a possible return to “normal life” next year as potential headwind.
Wombatman wrote: » I jumped in again on Boeing yesterday. Expecting a double whammy of Covid recovery and 737 Max approval over the coming months.
Bob24 wrote: » Broadly agreed that people who started subscribing to streaming services because of lockdowns will likely keep budgeting for this type of service when life gets back to normal. Having said that, competition has been ramping-up. And due to special introductory offers and/or having too much time to watch TV quite many households probably ended-up with access to many of those services at the same time (Neflix, Disney, Amazon, Apple, HBO, etc). At some point I suspect there will be some type of arbitrage with people deciding which one(s) to keep and which ones to stop paying for. Not sure what exactly it means for Neflix though. As the dominant player they’ll probably resist pretty well. But I’d still quote increased competition and a possible return to “normal life” next year as potential headwind.
p to the e wrote: » I see 4D Pharma dropped significantly on word of the Covid vaccine
Shedite27 wrote: » I like Netflix, the more I get into the habit of turning on my TV and going to the Apps in my TV over picking up the Sky remote, the more it becomes a habit and just the go-to thing. More Apps (Netflix, Prime, Disney), the more it moves me away from Sky. I can see a time fairly soon when I'll quit my Sky subscription. Netflix have great control over their costs now with the amount of stuff they make themselves