Anyone have the clip?Cramer says there won't be a recession.
The market is toast.
-QG
4 weeks ago he said we will have a recession.Cramer says there won't be a recession.
The market is toast.
-QG
4 weeks ago he said we will have a recession.Cramer says there won't be a recession.
The market is toast.
-QG
yikes ... if my math is correct, NVDA and AMZN are down about 20% from their all time high and hopefully that's not when you bought all of yours...I’m still down 30% in my nvda/amz account but only 4% elsewhere and I added more tech during all of this so I guess I’ll consider that a win for now.
No just those two. My position in NVDA is 98 a share and Amazon 113 in that account.yikes ... if my math is correct, NVDA and AMZN are down about 20% from their all time high and hopefully that's not when you bought all of yours...I’m still down 30% in my nvda/amz account but only 4% elsewhere and I added more tech during all of this so I guess I’ll consider that a win for now.
so guessing you have some other stocks in there that have really tumbled?
Buffett retires. Slacker - the dude is only 94.
I still have no idea why that thing is up 20% on the year and the SP is down. Yesterday’s earnings report was actually pretty terrible.Buffett retires. Slacker - the dude is only 94.
Makes zero sense actually.I still have no idea why that thing is up 20% on the year and the SP is down. Yesterday’s earnings report was actually pretty terrible.Buffett retires. Slacker - the dude is only 94.
Personally think YouTube is the Alphabet superstar.I'm still short the market. But I love Alphabet only because of Waymo. If the market acts like I suspect it will, I'm loading up on Meta and Alphabet. I hate their core products. Facebook and Google search suck so bad it is not worth talking about. If I could leverage my next 50 years of salary to bet against Facebook and Google search, I would. But Instagram and Waymo are super star products. Conglomerate investing has fully pivoted to tech. You've got to own ****ty products to own great ones now.
I haven't looked at their P&L but I imagine that YT ad revenue must be showing continued growth.Personally think YouTube is the Alphabet superstar.I'm still short the market. But I love Alphabet only because of Waymo. If the market acts like I suspect it will, I'm loading up on Meta and Alphabet. I hate their core products. Facebook and Google search suck so bad it is not worth talking about. If I could leverage my next 50 years of salary to bet against Facebook and Google search, I would. But Instagram and Waymo are super star products. Conglomerate investing has fully pivoted to tech. You've got to own ****ty products to own great ones now.
I haven't looked at their P&L but I imagine that YT ad revenue must be showing continued growth.Personally think YouTube is the Alphabet superstar.I'm still short the market. But I love Alphabet only because of Waymo. If the market acts like I suspect it will, I'm loading up on Meta and Alphabet. I hate their core products. Facebook and Google search suck so bad it is not worth talking about. If I could leverage my next 50 years of salary to bet against Facebook and Google search, I would. But Instagram and Waymo are super star products. Conglomerate investing has fully pivoted to tech. You've got to own ****ty products to own great ones now.
All good questions. I'm just not sure now what to believe because so many are just trying to push a narrative. I do know that we made it thru the COVID pandemic with obvious problems and we survived. When times get tough, people figure out a way to survive. I think adjustments will be made in our lives and corrections will occur but that there is no need to panic. There are always ups and downs in life. You just have to learn how to ride the waves.Every shipping and trucking company says they are slumping to pandemic levels of trade. I hear that shortages in a wide variety of products are imminent and that cars and replacement auto part prices are set to skyrocket
Do we not think these things are true, or that the market anticipates these challenges and has already priced them in, or that trade deals will get worked out in time somehow, or that the system is flashing red but that the market is thus far ignoring those signs? I feel like there's a significant disconnect between what is about to happen and how the market currently stands
The bold is correct but I doubt it takes 6 months.I think the publicly traded companies that have the most to lose with tariffs have already been hit. The companies with less exposure like MSFT and Google are rising as people pull away from the former type of companies.
What might not be priced in is a wave of small and medium businesses going under or laying off workers due the tariffs, causing a spike in unemployment, lower consumer spending and hence a recession. But that will take time, like another 6 months yet. I suppose there's hope that those companies can recover once a trade deal is done.
None of the panic (lack of confidence) from the realizations of impact have been priced in either.I think the publicly traded companies that have the most to lose with tariffs have already been hit. The companies with less exposure like MSFT and Google are rising as people pull away from the former type of companies.
What might not be priced in is a wave of small and medium businesses going under or laying off workers due the tariffs, causing a spike in unemployment, lower consumer spending and hence a recession. But that will take time, like another 6 months yet. I suppose there's hope that those companies can recover once a trade deal is done.
None of the panic (lack of confidence) from the realizations of impact have been priced in either.I think the publicly traded companies that have the most to lose with tariffs have already been hit. The companies with less exposure like MSFT and Google are rising as people pull away from the former type of companies.
What might not be priced in is a wave of small and medium businesses going under or laying off workers due the tariffs, causing a spike in unemployment, lower consumer spending and hence a recession. But that will take time, like another 6 months yet. I suppose there's hope that those companies can recover once a trade deal is done.
I don't "know" it. I can't predict the future. I'm rather confident though. When people start seeing prices go up, shelves starting to empty, and watch consumer confidence drop, market is going to react accordingly. This seems rather obvious to me, but I'm just an internet shmuck.None of the panic (lack of confidence) from the realizations of impact have been priced in either.I think the publicly traded companies that have the most to lose with tariffs have already been hit. The companies with less exposure like MSFT and Google are rising as people pull away from the former type of companies.
What might not be priced in is a wave of small and medium businesses going under or laying off workers due the tariffs, causing a spike in unemployment, lower consumer spending and hence a recession. But that will take time, like another 6 months yet. I suppose there's hope that those companies can recover once a trade deal is done.
How do you know that? - it seems the "uncertainties" have been priced in already, as evidenced by several days of extreme drops and the market still down overall since January.
I am not sure how this is all going to play out. I would be surprised with empty shelves but prices are definately going up.I don't "know" it. I can't predict the future. I'm rather confident though. When people start seeing prices go up, shelves starting to empty, and watch consumer confidence drop, market is going to react accordingly. This seems rather obvious to me, but I'm just an internet shmuck.None of the panic (lack of confidence) from the realizations of impact have been priced in either.I think the publicly traded companies that have the most to lose with tariffs have already been hit. The companies with less exposure like MSFT and Google are rising as people pull away from the former type of companies.
What might not be priced in is a wave of small and medium businesses going under or laying off workers due the tariffs, causing a spike in unemployment, lower consumer spending and hence a recession. But that will take time, like another 6 months yet. I suppose there's hope that those companies can recover once a trade deal is done.
How do you know that? - it seems the "uncertainties" have been priced in already, as evidenced by several days of extreme drops and the market still down overall since January.
Exactly, but you made the statement that it hasn’t been baked in when most of the people following the market have been beaten over the head with what the tariffs may bring and which direction the economy may be heading - which is why I don’t think you can say none of that has been baked in yet. Some companies have already suffered for not being able to offer future guidance.I don't "know" it. I can't predict the future
Not sure why you clipped my explanation of position but whatever. I guess we'll see. If all that is baked in, I'm happy to be completely wrong. I'll be shocked if we don't see more downward movement in the markets in the next 2-6 weeks.Exactly, but you made the statement that it hasn’t been baked in when most of the people following the market have been beaten over the head with what the tariffs may bring and which direction the economy may be heading - which is why I don’t think you can say none of that has been baked in yet.I don't "know" it. I can't predict the future
Could things turn for the worse, yes and they probably will - but the market has already been in the process of adjusting to that and we’ve already had some major corrections.
I’m not saying we’re out of the woods but we’ve been in the woods for a while now at least.
did you need to read it again or something? It was just for ease of reading through the board.Not sure why you clipped my explanation of position but whatever.
Exactly, but you made the statement that it hasn’t been baked in when most of the people following the market have been beaten over the head with what the tariffs may bring and which direction the economy may be heading - which is why I don’t think you can say none of that has been baked in yet. Some companies have already suffered for not being able to offer future guidance.I don't "know" it. I can't predict the future
Could things turn for the worse, yes and they probably will - but the market has already been in the process of adjusting to that and we’ve already had some major corrections.
I’m not saying we’re out of the woods but we’ve been in the woods for a while now at least.
It could be argued that we were due for a correction anyway, but tariffs news and "tweets" definitely had it's effects during that range.So I guess the question is was the Feb -> Mar for tariffs
That’s smart, because that’s almost certainly what’s going to happen.I think the market is acting like they're all going to get rolled back and/or forgotten.
I sold this one during the pullback earlier and not really sure why it has rebounded (outside of political things).Buying Palantir on the dip. Beat revenue and raised guidance...down 9%.
I mean 9% off puts it into ridiculous valuation from the previous insane valuation.Buying Palantir on the dip. Beat revenue and raised guidance...down 9%.
Is this like an offdee ranking for stocks?I mean 9% off puts it into ridiculous valuation from the previous insane valuation.Buying Palantir on the dip. Beat revenue and raised guidance...down 9%.
Dividend………about itHasn't Ford stock traded between $2 and $20 for the last 30 years? What's the inducement to invest in this one? I've never been even remotely interested in owning Ford stock. Ever.
It’s a dividend stock - although there’s far better ones.Hasn't Ford stock traded between $2 and $20 for the last 30 years? What's the inducement to invest in this one? I've never been even remotely interested in owning Ford stock. Ever.
Inverted head and shoulders. Was resisting the 50 day moving average, once it broke through that became bottom resistance. Was trading in a narrow band between the March high and 50 day MA. Once it broke through 100 it was set to run. You could see a retrace to $98 but support should be real strong there.I sold this one during the pullback earlier and not really sure why it has rebounded (outside of political things).Buying Palantir on the dip. Beat revenue and raised guidance...down 9%.
Why own any car company.Hasn't Ford stock traded between $2 and $20 for the last 30 years? What's the inducement to invest in this one? I've never been even remotely interested in owning Ford stock. Ever.