DVY said:KO and MCD are beast companies. Truly world-class business models, great brands that self-adjust for inflation, leverage other peoples money (KO in terms of bottlers and MCD for franchisees), and have a long track-record of performance. They also increase dividends every year.
Cincinnatus said:Heavily interested in marijuana-related stocks at the moment.
Cannabis Science Inc. (ticker:CBIS) closed yesterday at $0.18 ... 52 week high $0.26, 52 week low $0.03
Medical Marijuana Inc. (ticker:MJNA) closed yesterday at $0.37 ... 52 week high $0.50, 52 week low $0.09
GrowLife Inc. (tickerHOT) closed yesterday at $0.31 ... 52 week high $0.47, 52 week low $0.0042
Honestly I don't know much about trading stock (I've only bought, have never sold),
Steve9 said:Cincinnatus said:Heavily interested in marijuana-related stocks at the moment.
Cannabis Science Inc. (ticker:CBIS) closed yesterday at $0.18 ... 52 week high $0.26, 52 week low $0.03
Medical Marijuana Inc. (ticker:MJNA) closed yesterday at $0.37 ... 52 week high $0.50, 52 week low $0.09
GrowLife Inc. (tickerHOT) closed yesterday at $0.31 ... 52 week high $0.47, 52 week low $0.0042
Honestly I don't know much about trading stock (I've only bought, have never sold),
Cincinnatus, these seem like penny stocks that have been heavily hyped (have you seen the movie "The Wolf of Wall Street"....)
You seem to be an investing noob, so I would tread very carefully - there is a good chance you will get screwed on these stocks.
DVY said:American companies are still amazing because there is (for the most part) cultural integrity. There are a few bad apples here and there, but by and large GAAP accounting, SEC regs and other agencies prevent OUTRIGHT FRAUD.
This isn't the case for developing nations.
Cincinnatus said:Steve9 said:Cincinnatus said:Heavily interested in marijuana-related stocks at the moment.
Cannabis Science Inc. (ticker:CBIS) closed yesterday at $0.18 ... 52 week high $0.26, 52 week low $0.03
Medical Marijuana Inc. (ticker:MJNA) closed yesterday at $0.37 ... 52 week high $0.50, 52 week low $0.09
GrowLife Inc. (tickerHOT) closed yesterday at $0.31 ... 52 week high $0.47, 52 week low $0.0042
Honestly I don't know much about trading stock (I've only bought, have never sold),
Cincinnatus, these seem like penny stocks that have been heavily hyped (have you seen the movie "The Wolf of Wall Street"....)
You seem to be an investing noob, so I would tread very carefully - there is a good chance you will get screwed on these stocks.
No doubt - I am an investing newbie, hence the only stocks I own at the moment are established companies with a solid track record - most based in my hometown.
That said, I've decided that my "30 minutes a day" project will be learning as much as possible about investing and trading stocks.
I've signed up for WallStreetDaily.com's newsletter and have read most of their reports. And I've been playing around with marketwatch.com's stock market game just to get a feel for things.
I don't doubt that I could lose an assload of money, but if I don't play with more than I can afford to lose, I don't see the problem with throwing some money at the market - especially considering a decent payoff could happen.
Haven't seen The Wolf of Wall Street yet, it's on my "must-view" list though. Waiting for it to come out on DVD.
BIGINJAPAN said:DVY said:American companies are still amazing because there is (for the most part) cultural integrity. There are a few bad apples here and there, but by and large GAAP accounting, SEC regs and other agencies prevent OUTRIGHT FRAUD.
This isn't the case for developing nations.
HAHAHA
You clearly dont understand GAAP accounting and integrity.
Good luck investing
BIGINJAPAN said:HAHAHA
You clearly dont understand GAAP accounting and integrity. And the SEC sure did a great job of finding all those Ponzi schemes. I guess they were too busy watching tranny porn. Or sucking Jamie Dimon's cock. JP morgans made hundreds of billions of dollars fucking everyone and they get find 20 billion. HSBC is laundering hundreds of billions of dollars and no one has gone to jail, just a small fine.
Good luck investing
BIGINJAPAN said:^^^^^ Before he talked about " high quality " stocks he was talking about american companies integrity. Well if you know anything about GAAP accounting then it is anything but integrity... GAAP pretty much allows walking zombie companies to show profitability even though they are anything but.... You will all learn a hard lesson if you investing based on GAAP earnings...
Secondly he praised the SEC... Which is constantly having its employees caught watching porn and specifically tranny porn at work... What a great american institution for protecting investors... We dont need to talk about the banks as examples... How about enron, worldcom and the likes ? How about future companies like FB, NFLX, AMZN, SBUX.. GAAP is allowing them to fuck investors
As for high quality stocks, why would you invest in something like MCDs and KO now ? Don't you think you missed the boat on those ? Why not find the future ones for our generation ? Besides there will come a time that those companies will struggle once more people wake up to the harm they cause to the human body... Not to mention MCD had an epic fail with its value menu and now is struggling with earnings.
BIGINJAPAN said:Now is earnings season, so everything pay attention to these websites as major companies report earnings. You might be shocked to see how great american companies are nothing but legends in their own minds
reaper23 said:hypothesis:
volatility is low, market is over valued, P/E's out of wack, share buy backs propping up prices, yen carry trade pushing assets, fed QE pushing economy, nothing real moving economy.
play:
i want to play long vol, short the market
question:
best way to do this with the understanding that the market can be irrational longer than i can be solvent
one thought I had was out of the money long dated puts on DIA or SPY. but I can't get expiration dates later than dec '14 / jan '15 through etrade.
any ideas?
BIGINJAPAN said:If you doubt what i am saying just go to www.zerohedge.com or market-ticker.org for real breakdowns of Earnings and how GAAP and NON GAAP accounting really works and how it looks on graphs...
Now is earnings season, so everything pay attention to these websites as major companies report earnings. You might be shocked to see how great american companies are nothing but legends in their own minds
JayJuanGee said:Cincinnatus said:Steve9 said:Cincinnatus said:Heavily interested in marijuana-related stocks at the moment.
Cannabis Science Inc. (ticker:CBIS) closed yesterday at $0.18 ... 52 week high $0.26, 52 week low $0.03
Medical Marijuana Inc. (ticker:MJNA) closed yesterday at $0.37 ... 52 week high $0.50, 52 week low $0.09
GrowLife Inc. (tickerHOT) closed yesterday at $0.31 ... 52 week high $0.47, 52 week low $0.0042
Honestly I don't know much about trading stock (I've only bought, have never sold),
Cincinnatus, these seem like penny stocks that have been heavily hyped (have you seen the movie "The Wolf of Wall Street"....)
You seem to be an investing noob, so I would tread very carefully - there is a good chance you will get screwed on these stocks.
No doubt - I am an investing newbie, hence the only stocks I own at the moment are established companies with a solid track record - most based in my hometown.
That said, I've decided that my "30 minutes a day" project will be learning as much as possible about investing and trading stocks.
I've signed up for WallStreetDaily.com's newsletter and have read most of their reports. And I've been playing around with marketwatch.com's stock market game just to get a feel for things.
I don't doubt that I could lose an assload of money, but if I don't play with more than I can afford to lose, I don't see the problem with throwing some money at the market - especially considering a decent payoff could happen.
Haven't seen The Wolf of Wall Street yet, it's on my "must-view" list though. Waiting for it to come out on DVD.
Cincinnatus:
I can definitely relate to your above response.
I have a somewhat evolving philosophy regarding investment; however, I have always considered that a guy can take a certain level of high risk with a percentage of his total investment portfolio (taking high risk with possibly up to around 10% of the total), so long as the remainder of the investment portfolio is fairly well diversified.
Surely, guys are going to come to differing specific choices about how to distribute their investment risks and how much risks they feel comfortable to take... maybe also depending on various timeline factors as to when they are going to need the money.
As Steve 9 mentioned, I would be very skeptical of any investment choices that appear to be being hyped up based on what occurred last year without some further info about the company or the fund (unless maybe if I am throwing only less than perhaps 1% of my total investment portfolio at such an unknown risk).
JayJuanGee said:BIGINJAPAN said:DVY said:American companies are still amazing because there is (for the most part) cultural integrity. There are a few bad apples here and there, but by and large GAAP accounting, SEC regs and other agencies prevent OUTRIGHT FRAUD.
This isn't the case for developing nations.
HAHAHA
You clearly dont understand GAAP accounting and integrity.
Good luck investing
Big_in_J:
Do you have a link or some kind of further explanation for your assertion regarding DVY's post, rather than merely asserting that a guy is ill informed?
Personally, I do NOT put a lot of credence in the financial shenanigans within the USA financial system, yet I believe it would be a fairly complicated matter to unravel regarding the various kinds of hocus pocus that occurs to mislead and deceive investors which likely varies considerably from company to company and industry to industry.
Honestly if I were in your position I'd sell most of it off and pick up a good book to learn how to invest, not speculate. You need to fundamental base for your portfolio instead of trying to play the market by news. Most likely all the MAJOR money on marajuana stocks has been made, any leftover scraps probably aren't worth chasing unless you do some serious research.
Dollar cost average SPY, SCHX (models SPY), or SCHB (models dow and some).
I don't think there are enough cult people following pot stocks right now for it to become a cult like Tesla.
Richiavelli said:JayJuanGee said:Cincinnatus said:Steve9 said:Cincinnatus said:Heavily interested in marijuana-related stocks at the moment.
Cannabis Science Inc. (ticker:CBIS) closed yesterday at $0.18 ... 52 week high $0.26, 52 week low $0.03
Medical Marijuana Inc. (ticker:MJNA) closed yesterday at $0.37 ... 52 week high $0.50, 52 week low $0.09
GrowLife Inc. (tickerHOT) closed yesterday at $0.31 ... 52 week high $0.47, 52 week low $0.0042
Honestly I don't know much about trading stock (I've only bought, have never sold),
Cincinnatus, these seem like penny stocks that have been heavily hyped (have you seen the movie "The Wolf of Wall Street"....)
You seem to be an investing noob, so I would tread very carefully - there is a good chance you will get screwed on these stocks.
No doubt - I am an investing newbie, hence the only stocks I own at the moment are established companies with a solid track record - most based in my hometown.
That said, I've decided that my "30 minutes a day" project will be learning as much as possible about investing and trading stocks.
I've signed up for WallStreetDaily.com's newsletter and have read most of their reports. And I've been playing around with marketwatch.com's stock market game just to get a feel for things.
I don't doubt that I could lose an assload of money, but if I don't play with more than I can afford to lose, I don't see the problem with throwing some money at the market - especially considering a decent payoff could happen.
Haven't seen The Wolf of Wall Street yet, it's on my "must-view" list though. Waiting for it to come out on DVD.
Cincinnatus:
I can definitely relate to your above response.
I have a somewhat evolving philosophy regarding investment; however, I have always considered that a guy can take a certain level of high risk with a percentage of his total investment portfolio (taking high risk with possibly up to around 10% of the total), so long as the remainder of the investment portfolio is fairly well diversified.
Surely, guys are going to come to differing specific choices about how to distribute their investment risks and how much risks they feel comfortable to take... maybe also depending on various timeline factors as to when they are going to need the money.
As Steve 9 mentioned, I would be very skeptical of any investment choices that appear to be being hyped up based on what occurred last year without some further info about the company or the fund (unless maybe if I am throwing only less than perhaps 1% of my total investment portfolio at such an unknown risk).
I agree 100%. Honestly if I were in your position I'd sell most of it off and pick up a good book to learn how to invest, not speculate. You need to fundamental base for your portfolio instead of trying to play the market by news. Most likely all the MAJOR money on marajuana stocks has been made, any leftover scraps probably aren't worth chasing unless you do some serious research.
Dollar cost average SPY, SCHX (models SPY), or SCHB (models dow and some).
I don't think there are enough cult people following pot stocks right now for it to become a cult like Tesla.
JayJuanGee said:BIGINJAPAN said:DVY said:American companies are still amazing because there is (for the most part) cultural integrity. There are a few bad apples here and there, but by and large GAAP accounting, SEC regs and other agencies prevent OUTRIGHT FRAUD.
This isn't the case for developing nations.
HAHAHA
You clearly dont understand GAAP accounting and integrity.
Good luck investing
Big_in_J:
Do you have a link or some kind of further explanation for your assertion regarding DVY's post, rather than merely asserting that a guy is ill informed?
Personally, I do NOT put a lot of credence in the financial shenanigans within the USA financial system, yet I believe it would be a fairly complicated matter to unravel regarding the various kinds of hocus pocus that occurs to mislead and deceive investors which likely varies considerably from company to company and industry to industry.
FYI I'd take America's financial system over China's financial system or any other emerging market. Take your ChInEsE rEvErSe MeRgErS if you wish.