Anyone investing heavily this year??

How much money did you lose/gain this past week?


  • Total voters
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  • Poll closed .

blackpepper

Rising Star
BGOL Investor

Explainer: Where are Wall Street's analyst notes on Trump's Truth Social?

NEW YORK, April 25 (Reuters) - Trump Media & Technology Group (DJT.O), opens new tab is one of the most actively traded U.S. stocks, yet Wall Street's equity analysts are staying clear.
Shares of the company that operates former U.S. President Donald Trump's social media app Truth Social listed on Nasdaq on March 26. An army of Trump supporters and speculators have snapped up the stock, giving it a market value of about $4.9 billion.
Yet there are still no widely distributed analyst notes from brokerages for it, unlike social media peers with smaller valuations that are covered by several brokerages, including Nextdoor (KIND.N), opens new tab, Bumble (BMBL.O), opens new tab and Grindr (GRND.N), opens new tab.

Here is what happening with the lack of analyst coverage of TMTG and the reasons behind it.
 

HellBoy

Black Cam Girls -> BlackCamZ.Com
Platinum Member
J.P.Morgan ("underweight", PT: $35) says despite being impressed by INTC's current execution, "the 12 months will be the most difficult" with the launch of two data center products and two major client products
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend






 

Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor


Apr 27, 2024

Markets have had a bit of a wobble recently and with US valuations so high I often hear from people that they are worried about investing large amounts of money given the current environment. So is it better to invest all your money in one lump sum or to dip feed (Dollar Cost Average) your money over a period of time just in case markets fall? In this video, we’ll look at which strategy performs best, how things change if you are risk averse, how long to space out your investments if you decide to drip feed and ways of overcoming the fear of investing.
 

Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor
Man I was just about post this. Are you familiar with Skywater technology Skyt?

Naw, but I will be doing some research...

(This is a year old, but may help)



Mar 1, 2023

SkyWater Technology is an exciting small-cap semiconductor foundry in the heartland of America. Is SKYT stock a buy now? When looking for stocks to buy now, due diligence is critical. This CEO interview with Thomas Sonderman from Skywater Technology will help you understand the company and its growth potential. SkyWater Technology stock SKYT stock, a $575 million small cap stock to buy now, could be the next winner in your long-term investing portfolio.
SKYT is a semiconductor foundry headquartered in Bloomington, Minnesota. SkyWater Technology stock reported just over $200 million in 2022 revenues, and its projected to grow to $1 billion before the end of this decade, making SKYT stock a 5x small cap stock to buy now. CEO interview, Skywater CEO interview, Thomas Sonderman interview, AMD, AMD stock, Global Foundries, small cap stocks to buy now, long term investing, semiconductor stocks to buy now.
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend




 

Madrox

Vaya Con Dio
BGOL Investor


Apr 28, 2024

The term progressive exposure in trading refers to the progressive increase or decrease in position size.
Often counter intuitive, new traders progressively increase their trade size after a series of bad trades trying to recoup their losses, when in fact the opposite should happen.

Position size should reflect the market environment which often correlates to the traders performance. Progressive exposure, up or down is a dynamic approach that should be applied to your trading.
 

RoomService

Dinner is now being served.
BGOL Investor
I’m not even surprised Eric had a video on this company.

Dude has some really good content. Thinking about joining his Patreon.

Thanks for putting me on @Madrox



 
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Aww Skeet Skeet!

The antithesis of nonsense.
BGOL Investor
As always, curious to see what the $AMD ER reveals. Lots of folks expecting a decent beat. I'm a bit more conservative. Lisa Su mentioned this quarter will be modest so I'm rolling with that. However, I need to hear what the guidance is for their AI chips.

I'll be on a plane so I won't know the results until I land in the evening.
 

HellBoy

Black Cam Girls -> BlackCamZ.Com
Platinum Member
As always, curious to see what the $AMD ER reveals. Lots of folks expecting a decent beat. I'm a bit more conservative. Lisa Su mentioned this quarter will be modest so I'm rolling with that. However, I need to hear what the guidance is for their AI chips.

I'll be on a plane so I won't know the results until I land in the evening.
I've noticed that AMD stock price is being hit hard by shorting. When other Semis are running, AMD lags.

If earnings/guidance disappoints, I wouldn't be surprised to see more shorts come in. Now, if they beat - I hope those shorts get squeezed.
 

A to Dah K

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
As always, curious to see what the $AMD ER reveals. Lots of folks expecting a decent beat. I'm a bit more conservative. Lisa Su mentioned this quarter will be modest so I'm rolling with that. However, I need to hear what the guidance is for their AI chips.

I'll be on a plane so I won't know the results until I land in the evening.
No wifi on board?
 

doe moe

Rising Star
Platinum Member
Opinions and suggestions needed.........

I'm 51 yrld, per IRS I can contribute $8,000 this year in my RothIRA.

I have way more than that in my credit union money market account earning pennies in interest. So I'm not worried about depleting my emergency fund which is what the money market account is for.

I'm thinking about dumping the amount to fulfill this years contribution requirements from my money market account and slowly putting funds back into my money market account throughout the year at $650 per month which is what I'm contributing now to RothIRA.

I figure I get a better deal on the ETF (cost of a share is lower now) I fund in my RothIRA now versus funding it monthly throughout the year as the cost of the ETF continues to rise.

Basically dump a lump sum to get the ETF at a lower rate, this of course assumes cost of the ETF continues to rise from now till December 31st. What I will earn in the ETF will be more than interest on the same amount sitting in a money market acct.

What say you?
 
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A to Dah K

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Opinions and suggestions needed.........

I'm 51 yrld, per IRS I can contribute $8,000 this year in my RothIRA.

I have way more than that in my credit union money market account earning pennies in interest. So I'm not worried about depleting my emergency fund which is what the money market account is for.

I'm thinking about dumping the amount to fulfill this years contribution requirements from my money market account and slowly putting funds back into my money market account throughout the year at $650 per month which is what I'm contributing now to RothIRA.

I figure I get a better deal on the ETF (cost of a share is lower now) I fund in my RothIRA now versus funding it monthly throughout the year as the cost of the ETF continues to rise.

Basically dump a lump sum to get the ETF at a lower rate, this of course assumes cost of the ETF continues to rise from now till December 31st. What I will earn in the ETF will be more than interest on the same amount sitting in a money market acct.

What say you?
Get out that credit union
 

HellBoy

Black Cam Girls -> BlackCamZ.Com
Platinum Member
Opinions and suggestions needed.........

I'm 51 yrld, per IRS I can contribute $8,000 this year in my RothIRA.

I have way more than that in my credit union money market account earning pennies in interest. So I'm not worried about depleting my emergency fund which is what the money market account is for.

I'm thinking about dumping the amount to fulfill this years contribution requirements from my money market account and slowly putting funds back into my money market account throughout the year at $650 per month which is what I'm contributing now to RothIRA.

I figure I get a better deal on the ETF (cost of a share is lower now) I fund in my RothIRA now versus funding it monthly throughout the year as the cost of the ETF continues to rise.

Basically dump a lump sum to get the ETF at a lower rate, this of course assumes cost of the ETF continues to rise from now till December 31st. What I will earn in the ETF will be more than interest on the same amount sitting in a money market acct.

What say you?
I max out my ROTH over the course of the year, because I'm extra picky on what I buy in that account. I pulled our money out of the HYSA because I can make more day trading with it. The largest ETF I have in the ROTH is SCHD.
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend
Opinions and suggestions needed.........

I'm 51 yrld, per IRS I can contribute $8,000 this year in my RothIRA.

I have way more than that in my credit union money market account earning pennies in interest. So I'm not worried about depleting my emergency fund which is what the money market account is for.

I'm thinking about dumping the amount to fulfill this years contribution requirements from my money market account and slowly putting funds back into my money market account throughout the year at $650 per month which is what I'm contributing now to RothIRA.

I figure I get a better deal on the ETF (cost of a share is lower now) I fund in my RothIRA now versus funding it monthly throughout the year as the cost of the ETF continues to rise.

Basically dump a lump sum to get the ETF at a lower rate, this of course assumes cost of the ETF continues to rise from now till December 31st. What I will earn in the ETF will be more than interest on the same amount sitting in a money market acct.

What say you?



Similar situation @doe moe


So what I did for about 20 years with my RRSP (registered retirement savings acct) was 90% medium risk, 10% high risk mutual funds. Definitely had its ups and downs over the years - tech, agricultural, science-related stuff. When things went haywire during the pandemic, I waited for stuff to recover back to where it was almost at, then withdrew it to be more careful.


I eventually moved stuff over to lower risk GIC(s) in recent years.


I have maxed out my TFSA account since its inception. I believe that (tax-free savings account) started around 2009 or 2010. This year the max contribution room was $7000. You can put that anywhere you like savings or investment-wise. It's totally up to you.

I have maxed out my RRSP as much as possible over the years to lower taxable income. Unfortunately the contribution room is minimal as your income grows annually, and of course is lowered by your pension plan contributions.


I have been taking advantage of the savings promos that banks have been doing though. So if I have money just sitting around that I haven't invested, I'll moved it over somewhere else to collect 5.25 - 6% while it sits idly and I wait to make my move and invest it more fully elsewhere. I was able to get 6% for an assortment of stuff.


Mostly have done 1 - 1.5 year GICs of late ... back in the day they were often 3 - 5 year investments, which you definitely had to be more patient with.


I had $50k mature on April 20th, and another 100k maturing this Saturday. I will re-invest that stuff ... I think probably just in a 6-month GIC, as I have some larger stuff maturing next year and I don't want to have too much taxable investment income all come due in the spring of next year. Minus whale have some of it mature this fall, then the rest of the stuff from January - April of 2025.
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend
The banks in Canada that I have mostly dealt with over the years are ...



- Scotiabank (savings & chequing / bill payments)
- Tangerine (formerly ING Direct - the bulk of my investments now)
- CIBC Wood Gundy (formerly with my mutual funds)
- Simplii Financial (formerly PC Financial)
- CIBC Securities (when my employer did Matching RRSP plan)
 

Helico-pterFunk

Rising Star
BGOL Legend




 
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