Stock scream room
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Re: Stock scream room
What the heck happened at 1 PM eastern time today?
- buddtholomew
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Re: Stock scream room
Hitlery is back in the news - reopening email investigation.ochotona wrote:What the heck happened at 1 PM eastern time today?
Re: Stock scream room
It moved the market that much? A buy order went through that I wasn't quite expecting, but then the price popped back up. It worked out well, but it was so strange.buddtholomew wrote:Hitlery is back in the news - reopening email investigation.ochotona wrote:What the heck happened at 1 PM eastern time today?
Re: Stock scream room
I put in a stock buy order at -1% relative to Tuesday's close, and it hit ! Then it kept on going up all day long today !
- dualstow
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Re: Stock scream room
(from the thread, "I think I'll rebalance today")Time for another trim. My S&P shares are just below doubling, 99.93%
My indie stocks doubled overall yesterday for the first time in my lifetime. 2004 was when I first started really buying, and I mostly stopped around 2010, opting for index funds. I'm not a good picker. I just held on for the dividends. What a feeling. Ready for the value to get cut in half now...
Abd here you stand no taller than the grass sees
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
Re: Stock scream room
FB -3.28%
NFLX -4.73%
AAPL -3.88%
GOOG -3.41%
MSFT -2.27
AMZN -3.16%
TSLA -3..43%
TWTR -3.92%
SNAP -4.08%
I wonder what will be going through tech investors' minds this weekend? Buy the f***ing dip? Or sell? Monday might be interesting.
NFLX -4.73%
AAPL -3.88%
GOOG -3.41%
MSFT -2.27
AMZN -3.16%
TSLA -3..43%
TWTR -3.92%
SNAP -4.08%
I wonder what will be going through tech investors' minds this weekend? Buy the f***ing dip? Or sell? Monday might be interesting.
Re: Stock scream room
Phhhhfffbbbtttt...nothing. My NVDA crashed better than any of those wusses today.
Re: Stock scream room
I'm going to convert to mutual funds, so there's no ticker to watch all day long.
- dualstow
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Re: Stock scream room
VITAX?ochotona wrote:I'm going to convert to mutual funds, so there's no ticker to watch all day long.
Abd here you stand no taller than the grass sees
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
Re: Stock scream room
I am a Schwabbie, so SWPPX or SWISX
- dualstow
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Re: Stock scream room
Oh, how I wish I'd bought NVDA. Most of the bitcoin and ether miners are using it, apparently.Kbg wrote:Phhhhfffbbbtttt...nothing. My NVDA crashed better than any of those wusses today.
Abd here you stand no taller than the grass sees
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
Re: Stock scream room
Yeah, it has been a good ride. Bumpy though.
- dualstow
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Re: Stock scream room
The market is so resilient, isn't it? North Korea, no problem. Domestic strife, fine.
The market knows that everything is fine.
The market knows that everything is fine.
Abd here you stand no taller than the grass sees
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
Re: Stock scream room
https://youtu.be/cCKONHUigVkdualstow wrote:The market is so resilient, isn't it? North Korea, no problem. Domestic strife, fine.
The market knows that everything is fine.
Re: Stock scream room
I wonder if Houston will impact the market on Monday. Talk about Black Swans.
Re: Stock scream room
Apparently gold floats.ochotona wrote:I wonder if Houston will impact the market on Monday. Talk about Black Swans.
- dualstow
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Re: Stock scream room
Is it really a Black Swan though?ochotona wrote:I wonder if Houston will impact the market on Monday. Talk about Black Swans.
ha!Tyler wrote:Apparently gold floats.
Abd here you stand no taller than the grass sees
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
And should you really chase so hard /The truth of sport plays rings around you
Re: Stock scream room
The severity and economic impact was a black "egret". I think the market doesn't know how to price it yet. This area has a huge GDP, larger than many nations.
Re: Stock scream room
The Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP) of Houston-Sugar Land-Woodlands is $0.5 trillion, about the same as Sweden or Poland. The GDP of Greece is $0.19 trillion.
Houston is home to half of the Fortune 500 companies in Texas. Houston trails only New York City for most names on the list.
We are shut down. The market has NOT priced this in.
Houston is home to half of the Fortune 500 companies in Texas. Houston trails only New York City for most names on the list.
We are shut down. The market has NOT priced this in.
Re: Stock scream room
Have you sold your stocks?ochotona wrote:The Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP) of Houston-Sugar Land-Woodlands is $0.5 trillion, about the same as Sweden or Poland. The GDP of Greece is $0.19 trillion.
Houston is home to half of the Fortune 500 companies in Texas. Houston trails only New York City for most names on the list.
We are shut down. The market has NOT priced this in.
Re: Stock scream room
No, I'm a trend-follower. I'll take a loss, then I'll sell {then they'll go up}Xan wrote:Have you sold your stocks?ochotona wrote:The Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP) of Houston-Sugar Land-Woodlands is $0.5 trillion, about the same as Sweden or Poland. The GDP of Greece is $0.19 trillion.
Houston is home to half of the Fortune 500 companies in Texas. Houston trails only New York City for most names on the list.
We are shut down. The market has NOT priced this in.

Re: Stock scream room
Still nothing. I hear gas prices are rising, but the stock market and energy sector carry on.ochotona wrote:The Gross Metropolitan Product (GMP) of Houston-Sugar Land-Woodlands is $0.5 trillion, about the same as Sweden or Poland. The GDP of Greece is $0.19 trillion.
Houston is home to half of the Fortune 500 companies in Texas. Houston trails only New York City for most names on the list.
We are shut down. The market has NOT priced this in.
Re: Stock scream room
FYI, the campuses of BP, ConocoPhillips, and Shell are underwater. We'll see who gets to work next week. Many of their employees are in shelters because they are flooded out, they have no cars to get to work. 10% of structures on the County tax rolls have water in them.Mr Vacuum wrote:Still nothing. I hear gas prices are rising, but the stock market and energy sector carry on.
Re: Stock scream room
(plugs ears) I can't hear you!ochotona wrote:FYI, the campuses of BP, ConocoPhillips, and Shell are underwater. We'll see who gets to work next week. Many of their employees are in shelters because they are flooded out, they have no cars to get to work. 10% of structures on the County tax rolls have water in them.Mr Vacuum wrote:Still nothing. I hear gas prices are rising, but the stock market and energy sector carry on.

Re: Stock scream room
Absolute market price fluctuation is probably not a good barometer for such events:
http://www.nasdaq.com/article/5-worst-d ... ct-cm68124
Perhaps it's not the absolute gains or losses, but rather the performance relative to what it might have been absent the hurricane. It may be that without it, stocks would have jumped after seeing the August jobs report. Instead, they've been fairly flat or gone up only slightly.
This is kind of like Obama's problem after the economic stimulus: there was no way to know if it worked or not.
http://www.nasdaq.com/article/5-worst-d ... ct-cm68124
Perhaps it's not the absolute gains or losses, but rather the performance relative to what it might have been absent the hurricane. It may be that without it, stocks would have jumped after seeing the August jobs report. Instead, they've been fairly flat or gone up only slightly.
This is kind of like Obama's problem after the economic stimulus: there was no way to know if it worked or not.