Anyone investing heavily this year??

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


  • Total voters
    30
  • Poll closed .
Damn it.

I had no idea they were going public.

Didn't know either, If they pull back i will get some shares but I think Robinhood is still the best and there is another brokerage called public which which might start giving them some competition.
 

China calls for its airlines to halt any further Boeing jet deliveries amid trade strife​

  • Bloomberg reports, citing people familiar with the matter
Justin Low
Justin Low
15/04/2025 | 08:10 GMT

It is said that China has ordered its airlines to stop any further delivers of Boeing jets as trade tensions continue with the US for the time being. It doesn't just stop there though. Beijing has also called for Chinese carriers to also halt any purchases of aircraft-related equipment and parts from US firms as well.
The order is said to have come after Beijing unveiled retaliatory tariffs at the end of last week here.

With Airbus already leading the way in terms of market share in China, this will just add to a further setback to Boeing's plans to try and win back some ground. That as China is forecast to make up roughly 20% of global aircraft demand in the coming two decades.​
 
Anyone own individual Meta (Facebook) stock?

I only have shares as part of my index fund.

I'm wondering with all this talk of breaking up Facebook into smaller companies will hurt its stock price.
 
Anybody doing any heavy day trading these days? I haven’t posted in a while but I used to be in a discord group that I joined because a member that posted in this thread. I can’t remember who it was. The way things are going I’m just sitting on cash for a few more months just to watch how things play out but I want to get back into more day trading. Anyone still doing the discord thing?
 
Anybody doing any heavy day trading these days? I haven’t posted in a while but I used to be in a discord group that I joined because a member that posted in this thread. I can’t remember who it was. The way things are going I’m just sitting on cash for a few more months just to watch how things play out but I want to get back into more day trading. Anyone still doing the discord thing?
I'm not day trading. Too volatile.
 
Anybody doing any heavy day trading these days? I haven’t posted in a while but I used to be in a discord group that I joined because a member that posted in this thread. I can’t remember who it was. The way things are going I’m just sitting on cash for a few more months just to watch how things play out but I want to get back into more day trading. Anyone still doing the discord thing?
sup stranger
 
Anybody doing any heavy day trading these days? I haven’t posted in a while but I used to be in a discord group that I joined because a member that posted in this thread. I can’t remember who it was. The way things are going I’m just sitting on cash for a few more months just to watch how things play out but I want to get back into more day trading. Anyone still doing the discord thing?
I played Netflix for this upcoming earnings week, I’m up big thank god. I’ve taken some massive Ls though. Trying to recoup
 


 

How the orange man going to slump the market while at the same time starting his own ETF.

dammit-stressed.gif
 
How the orange man going to slump the market while at the same time starting his own ETF.

dammit-stressed.gif

People talked about the uprising in Germany in the 1920s and why no one intervened. Fast forward to 2025, and look at the state of the United States. Ask yourself why congress isn't doing anything.

I'm so fuckin' sick and tired of people talking about Trump defying a judge and claiming that his actions are unconstitutional. However, the mere fact that his actions are unconstitutional doesn’t make them any more valid. Unless the courts and legislature, which have the power to enforce the Constitution of the United States, start doing so, the Constitution is nothing more than a piece of paper that I can wipe my ass with. Without enforcement, it holds no meaning.
 

Trump says Federal Reserve Chair Powell’s ‘termination cannot come fast enough’



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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump slammed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday, reiterating his frustration that the Fed has not aggressively cut interest rates and saying that the central bank leader’s “termination cannot come fast enough.”

Trump hinted at moving to fire Powell, whose term does not expire until next year. The Republican president’s broadside comes a day after Powell signaled that the Fed will keep its key interest rate unchanged while it seeks “greater clarity” on the impact of policy changes in areas such as immigration, taxation, regulation and tariffs.

Powell’s comments contributed to a drop in stock prices Wednesday.

“Oil prices are down, groceries (even eggs!) are down, and the USA is getting RICH ON TARIFFS,” Trump said in a social media post.

Referring to the European Central Bank, he added that Powell “should have lowered Interest Rates, like the ECB, long ago, but he should certainly lower them now. Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!”


The European Central Bank on Thursday lowered its key interest rate from 2.5% to 2.25%.

Powell was initially nominated by Trump in 2017, and he was appointed to another four-year term by President Joe Biden in 2022. At a November news conference, Powell indicated he would not step down if Trump asked him to resign.

He has also said that the removal or demotion of top Fed officials was “not permitted under the law.”







Trump’s comments come with the backdrop of a legal case headed to the Supreme Court that could determine whether presidents can fire the heads of independent agencies such as the Fed. Powell said Wednesday he was watching the case.

“A sudden crystallization of the threat to Fed independence would ... intensify market stress,” Krishna Guha, an analyst at investment bank Evercore ISI, wrote on Thursday. “If you liked the tariff debacle in markets, you’d love the loss-of-Fed-independence trade.”


Powell started Trump’s second term in a relatively secure spot with a low unemployment rate and inflation progressing closer to the Fed’s 2% target, conditions that could have spared the U.S. central banker from the president’s vitriol.

But Trump’s aggressive and haphazard tariffs have increased the threat of a recession with both higher inflationary pressures and slower growth, a tough spot for Powell, whose mandate is to stabilize prices and maximize employment. With the economy weakening because of Trump’s choices, the president appears to be looking to pin the blame on Powell.

Powell, in his remarks at the Economic Club of Chicago on Wednesday, said the Fed will base its decisions solely on what is best for all Americans.

“That’s the only thing we’re ever going to do,” Powell said. “We’re never going to be influenced by any political pressure. People can say whatever they want. That’s fine, that’s not a problem. But we will do what we do strictly without consideration of political or any other extraneous factors.”

“Our independence is a matter of law,” Powell continued. “We’re not removable except for cause. We serve very long terms, seemingly endless terms. So we’re protected into law. Congress could change that law, but I don’t think there’s any danger of that. Fed independence has pretty broad support across both political parties and in both sides of the Hill.”


Trump has unleashed a rash of tariffs that have put the U.S. economy and the Fed in an increasingly perilous spot. On April 2, the president rolled out aggressive tariff hikes based off U.S. trade deficits with other nations, causing a financial market backlash that almost immediately led him to announce a 90-day pause in which most countries would be charged a baseline 10% tariff while negotiations go forward. But Trump increased his tariff hikes on China to a rate of 145%, in addition to his existing tariffs on Canada, Mexico, autos and steel and aluminum.

Wall Street banks such as Goldman Sachs have raised their odds that a recession could start. Consumers are increasingly pessimistic in surveys about their job prospects and fearful that inflation will shoot up as the cost of the import taxes get passed along to them. The risk of stagflation — stagnant growth and high inflation — would make it harder for the Fed to respond with the same playbook as recent downturns.


The Budget Lab at Yale University estimated that the increased inflationary pressures from the tariffs would be equal to the loss of $4,900 in an average U.S. household.

___

AP journalists Sagar Meghani and Christopher Rugaber contributed reporting

 

Trump says Federal Reserve Chair Powell’s ‘termination cannot come fast enough’



90



WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump slammed Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on Thursday, reiterating his frustration that the Fed has not aggressively cut interest rates and saying that the central bank leader’s “termination cannot come fast enough.”

Trump hinted at moving to fire Powell, whose term does not expire until next year. The Republican president’s broadside comes a day after Powell signaled that the Fed will keep its key interest rate unchanged while it seeks “greater clarity” on the impact of policy changes in areas such as immigration, taxation, regulation and tariffs.

Powell’s comments contributed to a drop in stock prices Wednesday.

“Oil prices are down, groceries (even eggs!) are down, and the USA is getting RICH ON TARIFFS,” Trump said in a social media post.

Referring to the European Central Bank, he added that Powell “should have lowered Interest Rates, like the ECB, long ago, but he should certainly lower them now. Powell’s termination cannot come fast enough!”


The European Central Bank on Thursday lowered its key interest rate from 2.5% to 2.25%.

Powell was initially nominated by Trump in 2017, and he was appointed to another four-year term by President Joe Biden in 2022. At a November news conference, Powell indicated he would not step down if Trump asked him to resign.

He has also said that the removal or demotion of top Fed officials was “not permitted under the law.”







Trump’s comments come with the backdrop of a legal case headed to the Supreme Court that could determine whether presidents can fire the heads of independent agencies such as the Fed. Powell said Wednesday he was watching the case.

“A sudden crystallization of the threat to Fed independence would ... intensify market stress,” Krishna Guha, an analyst at investment bank Evercore ISI, wrote on Thursday. “If you liked the tariff debacle in markets, you’d love the loss-of-Fed-independence trade.”


Powell started Trump’s second term in a relatively secure spot with a low unemployment rate and inflation progressing closer to the Fed’s 2% target, conditions that could have spared the U.S. central banker from the president’s vitriol.

But Trump’s aggressive and haphazard tariffs have increased the threat of a recession with both higher inflationary pressures and slower growth, a tough spot for Powell, whose mandate is to stabilize prices and maximize employment. With the economy weakening because of Trump’s choices, the president appears to be looking to pin the blame on Powell.

Powell, in his remarks at the Economic Club of Chicago on Wednesday, said the Fed will base its decisions solely on what is best for all Americans.

“That’s the only thing we’re ever going to do,” Powell said. “We’re never going to be influenced by any political pressure. People can say whatever they want. That’s fine, that’s not a problem. But we will do what we do strictly without consideration of political or any other extraneous factors.”

“Our independence is a matter of law,” Powell continued. “We’re not removable except for cause. We serve very long terms, seemingly endless terms. So we’re protected into law. Congress could change that law, but I don’t think there’s any danger of that. Fed independence has pretty broad support across both political parties and in both sides of the Hill.”


Trump has unleashed a rash of tariffs that have put the U.S. economy and the Fed in an increasingly perilous spot. On April 2, the president rolled out aggressive tariff hikes based off U.S. trade deficits with other nations, causing a financial market backlash that almost immediately led him to announce a 90-day pause in which most countries would be charged a baseline 10% tariff while negotiations go forward. But Trump increased his tariff hikes on China to a rate of 145%, in addition to his existing tariffs on Canada, Mexico, autos and steel and aluminum.

Wall Street banks such as Goldman Sachs have raised their odds that a recession could start. Consumers are increasingly pessimistic in surveys about their job prospects and fearful that inflation will shoot up as the cost of the import taxes get passed along to them. The risk of stagflation — stagnant growth and high inflation — would make it harder for the Fed to respond with the same playbook as recent downturns.


The Budget Lab at Yale University estimated that the increased inflationary pressures from the tariffs would be equal to the loss of $4,900 in an average U.S. household.

___

AP journalists Sagar Meghani and Christopher Rugaber contributed reporting

Trump is trolling, we all know rate cuts are coming, he is tweeting this so when Powell cut rates he can get credit for it.
 
What if he doesn’t cut the rate and terminates Jerome?
Since he can't fire Powell I think that would cause more turmoil than Powell not cutting rates. Powell is doing his job and making decisions based on data, Trump just real estate guy who loves low rates. If Powell cut rates that would cause a small rally then when the market sells off again because of Tarriffs, what then more rate cuts?
 
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