What's a good method for quickly comparing options ROR that you guys use? Right now I'm doing everything manually using active trader pro, going through my watchlist, and putting all the bids/strikes into an excel sheet
Those articles are the worst, and they'll literally pivot in the same day.
10:00 am: Stocks down due to weak earnings report!
2:00 pm: Stocks up despite weak earnings report!?
I swear, they have a better gig than weathermen and sports casters.
Was able to sell my PLTR today at 10.40, had gotten in at 10. Took the money and sold a covered put at the november 10$ strike. I figure worst case scenario I get the stock back at my original buy in with my 4% gain and the 1.5$ premium per share.
@Sanrith Descartes @Blazin Do ya'll sell any in the money puts or do you do out the money, or a combination depending on which contracts/bids/volume are available and your feeling on the stock?
So million dollar question, buy now, or see if the bloodbath continues tomorrow? Probably see more selling tomorrow and in futures tonight since the trading day is almost over
What's everyone's take on docusign? Dropped from 260 to 190 in the september slump, back up to 225. Some big names still giving it a 260 price target, and with covid still around, it still can scoop up some business.
I was reading back through this thread over the weekend, specifically about options. @Blazin, you mentioned you focus on selling puts. I was reading on strategies around that and was just curious on if you'd share yours? What I gather is you collect premiums on stocks that you think are long...
Every year I've maxed my roth IRA and 401k, and then put any extra money in a regular brokerage account. If what I'm reading is correct, and I wanted to experiment with some active trading, there's really no downside to trading in my roth as opposed to my brokerage account?
We were using a tree to hold our target one time, hit the tree plenty of times and none of the arrows broke, they either stuck, deflected, or bounced out. That was with a mix of 25lb and 40lb recurve shooting with blunt points.
Yeah, I meant trading daily. Have some free time and money on my hands that I'd like to put towards generating some extra income. Thanks for the info guys
Looking at the last month, there were at least three dips followed by a 5%+ gain, so looks like a good strategy. Hardest part as always will be timing the bottom, but more opportunities increases your chances.
So as far as palantir, are people viewing it as a long term hold or something they'll be able to make some short term profit on due to volatility in the initial offering, or a little of both?
The laws are one thing, it's like with the riots, what good are the laws if the local/state DA's and judges aren't enforcing them. I would look to see if there was a way to see how law enforcement and judges were actually enforcing (or not enforcing) the existing eviction laws
Well I think the point was, rentals were already on shaky ground, anyone looking at rentals now see the possibility for the government to come in with these EO's and it adds a new risk to evaluate
The question that comes up when these big fines hit are 1. How much did they make doing what they were fined for, and did it out weight the fine, and 2. For everything they get caught doing, god knows how many things they're doing that haven't been detected.
This shit will keep on happening...
I'm staying long in the indexes, from what I've been reading and seeing, even if Biden somehow eeks out a win, there's enough liquidity out there to keep the indexes going up, just not as much as they have been.
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/new-york-subway-pension-loses-over-300-million-in-collapsed-hedge-fund-11601224350?mod=home-page
This shit needs to be made illegal, and the pension managers need to be fired and or thrown in jail.
Just youtube some stuff. I watched a couple on the basics like setting and using knock points properly, etc. As far as drawing etc, there's a few different forms depending on what/how you want to shoot.
Yes, you can drink well water. You'll want to have the water tested though, I don't know about your area but in NE Florida we have extremely hard water and can also have a lot of sulfur gas which require more than just a simple filter set up.
Can you break down the pro's/cons of dividends a bit more? I know the basics that certain companies pay out dividends to a various degree to incentivize investors, but is the payout based on earnings, stock price, or some kind of combination of both?