[ 3 / biz / cgl / ck / diy / fa / ic / jp / lit / sci / vr / vt ] [ index / top / reports ] [ become a patron ] [ status ]
2023-11: Warosu is now out of extended maintenance.

/biz/ - Business & Finance


View post   

File: 62 KB, 540x405, fire.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490173 No.13490173 [Reply] [Original]

Before you buy anything, make a brokerage account and read investopedia articles and/or the books in the OP list. If you don't have a broker, you can't buy stocks and if you blindly buy things without understanding how the stock market works or doing any research on the individual stocks you're buying, you will lose money and it will be entirely your fault.

List of popular brokers:
https://pastebin.com/mrSchZPg

List of basic stock market terminology for newfags:
https://pastebin.com/VtnpN5iJ
Real-time market news:
https://thefly.com/index.php

Educational sites:
https://www.investopedia.com/
https://www.khanacademy.org/economics-finance-domain

Best free stock screener
https://finviz.com/

Free in depth technical analysis charts:
http://www.tradingview.com

Premarket Data:
https://www.investing.com/indices/indices-futures

Earnings Report Calendars:
https://calendar.google.com/calendar/embed?src=moonmissioncontrol2.0%40gmail.com
https://biz.yahoo.com/research/earncal/today.html
https://www.earningswhispers.com/calendar

Pump and Dump Advertising:
https://stocktwits.com

Boomer Investing 101:
https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Getting_started

Options Markets 101:
https://cdn.ymaws.com/afajof.site-ym.com/resource/resmgr/files/Historical_Texts/cox-rubinstein-ocr-1985.pdf

Suggested books:
https://pastebin.com/jgA5zTuC

List of hedge fund holdings:
https://fintel.io/

previous thread
>>13482578

>> No.13490180

>didn't even put a subject
why are you so bad at this

>> No.13490189

> gay porn
> no subject

mods

>> No.13490191

>>13490180
i'm lazy

>> No.13490195

YUMA please, you motherfuckers please, just do something cool with your company. Even fake rumors are fair. But don't let me down like this bruv

>> No.13490197
File: 117 KB, 284x177, 1543900727504.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490197

> Qfan

Q predicted this.

>> No.13490200

>>13490191
at least you're honest

>> No.13490201 [DELETED] 

>>13490173

>no subject

YOU HAD ONE JOB

>> No.13490229
File: 1.04 MB, 948x630, 1527369485252.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490229

27000 today

>> No.13490231

lol searching smg in the catalog still gives you this thread because smg is in the url for this
Options Markets 101:
https://cdn.ymaws.com/afajof.site-ym.com/resource/resmgr/files/Historical_Texts/cox-rubinstein-ocr-1985.pdf

4D chess

>> No.13490236

>>13490195
the virgin stock buyer vs. the CHAUD gold BVLL

>> No.13490237

>that pathetic bear swipe trying to get the market to go down, only to have the market blast back up
Love seeing this

>> No.13490264
File: 137 KB, 300x200, 1510239992147.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490264

So I'm still learning about options - how does buying and selling an option in terms of profits and gains compare to just buying 100 shares and holding it in terms of value? Was trying find info on how gains work in greater detail for options but really couldn't get much on that.

>> No.13490265

Anyone got the Google drive to those books in the OP?

>> No.13490274

>>13490229
I think uncle powell is going to give us the springtime rape kike.

>> No.13490279

>>13490265
> Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
Communism
> The Intelligent Investor by Benjamin Graham
Good
> The General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money by John Maynard Keynes
Communism
> Capitalism and Freedom by Milton Friedman
Communism.
> Risk, Uncertainty, and Profit by Frank H. Knight
Pretty good.
> Trading and Exchanges by Larry Harris
Haven't read (communism?)
> A Random Walk Down Wall Street: The Time-Tested Strategy for Successful Investing (11th Edition) by Burton G. Malkiel
Pretty good

Books are available most likely in LibGen.

>> No.13490287
File: 529 KB, 350x398, JauntyGlaringHartebeest-size_restricted[1].gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490287

Mornin' /smg/!

What are ya holdin'? I'm in XLV, GE, F, ZNGA (free stock lul)

>> No.13490292
File: 90 KB, 1200x654, guldlel.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490292

>>13490229
>Comrade Powell pumps the Dow to insane levels despite raising interest rates

>> No.13490297

>>13490236

I could have sold for a 30 dollars profit but some shit happened suddenly and I forgot about my portfolio entirely, now I'm just holding a shitty pennystock that shows no sign of going back up.

Man I would be glad even if it goes back to .34-35 so I can only loose 20 dollars. But damn I won't sell for a -80 dollars loss. I preffer to hold that shit to death.

>> No.13490303 [DELETED] 
File: 21 KB, 420x420, 1i5haj43zx721.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490303

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/curaleaf-notches-largest-us-cannabis-acquisition-with-nearly-1-billion-deal-143128500.html

>> No.13490309

>>13490264
I already told you if you buy a call it's like having the stock and a put less the strike less the dividend plus the interest on the strike. So if you were to just have stock it would be like the call and put would cancel out and the strike would go to 0 and then interest would be 0 so you're just left with the dividend.

>> No.13490316

>>13490279
How can a book written in the 18th century be about communism. Or do you use that to be synonymous to bad

>> No.13490339

>>13490279
Wealth of Nations is the foundational document of capitalism

>> No.13490369

>>13490339
Adam Smith failed to mention that the labor unions in the pen manufacturing trade would be given better quality of life, pay and benefits because of how they're able to leverage negotiating power together.

>> No.13490401 [DELETED] 

>>13490339
>>13490369

Oh look, it's another episode of tripfags shit up the thread with off-topic discussion

>> No.13490407

is buying puts to hedge indicies even worth it?

>> No.13490425

>>13490401
We're discussing literature in the op, why don't you just go on and keep smoking pot? I hear it'll cure you of all your illnesses.

>> No.13490427

Both overall volume and short volume on GALT has greatly increased going into the RO and during the subscription period
The big boys (institutions, etc) are dragging the price down to the $4 floor set by Uihlein in order to make sure the alternative price (25 day VWAP) is as low as possible to maximize the number of shares and warrants they can pick up in the RO

>> No.13490438

>>13490309
The other thread 404d before I saw fren sorry. But that makes sense, thanks.

>> No.13490442
File: 231 KB, 1024x768, 1528273647191.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490442

>>13490265
>> Wealth of Nations by Adam Smith
>Communism
Nice b8.

>> No.13490458

>>13490407
you can purchase protective puts if you're afraid of a rise in volatility. It'll limit your losses if shit does hit the fan, but they do cost you. Better off with a trailing stop in my opinion.

>> No.13490474 [DELETED] 

>>13490425

It's off topic retard, go start your own thread if you want to discuss economic policy

>> No.13490479
File: 21 KB, 423x245, dividends-monopoly-man.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490479

THREADLY REMINDER THAT DIVIDENDS ARE YOUR FREN AND OP IS A DICKHEAD FOR NOT PUTTING THE TITLE IN THE ORIGINAL POST

>> No.13490484

>>13490474
it's in the op retard, go start your own thread that's got a fucking subject and shit if you're but hurt about it.

>> No.13490497

>>13490474
Economic policy has a direct impact on the stock market (see: the market freaking out every time the fed does something)
This might be hard for you to wrap your head around, but the stock market is part of the economy

>> No.13490507 [DELETED] 

>>13490484

FUCK OFF. THIS IS A STOCK THREAD.

YOU ARE FUCKING WORTHLESS

>> No.13490517

>>13490316
Adam Smith was an Enlightenment Liberal, and presupposed universal values (and the lowest common value is noise, no order or hierarchy, and it's ontological & epistemological engine is 'Democracy' in the current year) which stem from Christianity, and Communism is abnormal versions of same values.

> a book written in the 18th century be about communism
Poland, Germany and France have had Communist uprisings and religious cults since the 14th century.

>> No.13490523

What stock buy 2B $$$ 10 yrs

>> No.13490524
File: 23 KB, 482x349, fe39b4fcba8287474e7be55c199ee00c9793fc1f_00[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490524

>>13490479
baste dibidends

>>13490474
>>13490507
holy shit, how red are you right now?

>> No.13490528 [DELETED] 

>>13490497

A LOT OF THINGS HAVE AN IMPACT YOU FUCKING RETARD. PSYCHOLOGY DOES TOO BUT THAT DOESN'T MEAN WE SHOULD START DISCUSSING CARL JUNG HERE.

KILL YOURSELF CRETIN

>> No.13490541

>NBRV settling right around 2.35
Highly recommend you get in at this price point. This is easy money with the FDA having no problems with the drug and safety. With another catalyst looming in August, this is gonna be a pretty great one of they can get the approval before then.

>> No.13490542
File: 196 KB, 768x372, 1550300711438.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490542

>>13490474
the market is ran by Steve's plunge protection team, political economy is a fine discussion topic.

>> No.13490547 [DELETED] 
File: 51 KB, 600x485, cat.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490547

>>13490524

GREEN YOU FAGGOT. JUST SICK AND TIRED OF TRIPFAGS RUINING THESE THREADS

>> No.13490553
File: 63 KB, 800x600, BigDaddyB.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490553

PROTIP
R
O
T
I
P

>> No.13490558

>>13490507
If you want to have a civil discussion regarding /smg/ etiquette I'd be happy to discuss this further, but you're being a whiny lil' bitch and should take the cocks out of your mouth and ass before you click post next time. faggot.

>> No.13490562
File: 155 KB, 500x600, wojak_aaaaa_hat_df.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490562

>DF'd yet again
Anyone else holding this dogshit through the ER?

>> No.13490565

Daily reminder that you can sell January 2021 $20 TQQQ puts for about $1.50

>> No.13490573

>>13490547
desu senpai, this place had better discussions when baggie, comfy, lciguy, earnings badger, etc. were posting. except for gommie faggot, he was the worst

>> No.13490581

So oddly enough Im hearing from lots of ppl they expect rate cut, how ridiculous
>>13490562
I only hold stuff that make sense sorry

>> No.13490582

>>13490553
I'll hodl YUMA then

>> No.13490583

What time today is my boy Powell going to speak and announce the +0.25% rate hike? My SPY puts are ready. Going to double my money today.

>> No.13490586

I NEEDA UP-SHOOOOP! xO

>> No.13490588
File: 299 KB, 500x311, tumblr_mse4wyE5Ya1r6wksoo1_500[1].gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490588

>>13490547
lol

>>13490562
big lol

Also, where's that LCI shill? His shit's still pumpan

>> No.13490591
File: 1.73 MB, 200x293, 1538605093553.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490591

>>13490474
>Matters discussed in the OP are off-topic.

>> No.13490603
File: 786 KB, 1413x1050, b1beb07.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490603

>>13490474
Listen I hate trip fags as much as the next guy but this isn't really off topic. Market factors heavily influence the stock prices. It's not really hurting anyone so chill out.

>> No.13490624

>>13490474

This must be a robinhood """""""investor."""""""""

>> No.13490626

holy shit what's going on with Frontier? This is like the falling knife of falling knives to grab with bother hands.

>> No.13490632

>>13490591
he must be the guy thats always reporting me for being off topic

>> No.13490640

>>13490479
>DIVIDENDS ARE YOUR FREN
Wouldn't you rather be invested in a business that invests in itself rather than throwing money out to window?

>> No.13490642

>>13490517
If you actually read Wealth of Nations, you'll see that he basically spends the whole book bitching about government intervention fucking up markets, not any of that faggot shit you just typed.

>> No.13490644 [DELETED] 

The Marxist system has many bmnches. The central doctrine, however, is the conception which came to be known as J fistorical Materialism, or the materialist concep-tion of history. The classic formulation of this doctrine is found in the preface to the Critique of Political Economy which i\l arx published in 1859. There he describes how he was led to "the conclusion that legal relations as well as fonns of the state could neithe r be understood by themselves, nor explained by the so-called general progress of the human mind, but that they are rooted in the mate-rial conditions of life." Expanding on this statement, he continued:

>> No.13490650
File: 737 KB, 620x590, 1536877674838.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490650

>>13490583
I am willing to entertain the notion that there will be rape hike only because couple days ago I read about new way Fed aims to control short term interest rates.

https://www.cnbc.com/2019/04/29/fed-looking-at-a-program-that-could-be-version-of-quantitative-easing.html

> Federal Reserve economists have floated the idea of a “standing repo facility” which would allow banks to exchange Treasurys for reserves. The idea would be to get banks to hold fewer reserves, and thus would help the Fed in its quest to shrink its balance sheet.

>> No.13490651 [DELETED] 

Tn tl1e social production of their material life, men enter into definite relations that arc indispensable and independent of their wills; these relations of prOduction corre~pond to a d(·6nite state of tile development of tlleir material forces of production. The sum total of these rclalions of production makes up the economic structure of society-the real foundation on which arises a legal and political superstructure and to which cor-respond definite forms of social coosciou~ncss. The mode of production of material life determines the social, political aod intellectual life process in general It is not the consciousness of men that determines their existence, but rather it is their social exi~tence that determines their consciousness. At a cert.1in stage of their dc,•t·lopmcnt, the material forces of production in society come into conflict with the existing rela-tions of production or-what is but a legal expres~ion of the same thing-with the property relations within which they have been at work before. From forms of dcvelopmt!nt of the productive forces, these relatious tum into their fetters. Then begins an epoeh of social revolution. With the chan~e of the economic foundation, the entire immense superstructure is more or bs rapidly transformed.

>> No.13490654

>>13490651
>>13490644
Please stop sperging out you pathetic faggot

>> No.13490660

>>13490644
>>13490651

t. faggot kid in college repeating libtard professors

>> No.13490666

>>13490573
there were better days in these threads thats forsure. I gotta watch what I say now or i'll get banned.. pretty lame

>> No.13490668

>>13490640
dividends have been a large factor in total stock market returns.

and my dividend portfolio focuses on established businesses that pay shareholders instead of wasting money on ventures that wouldn't return profit. like how people with lots of cash in their pocket usually find something to spend it on regardless if its a good idea? these companies reward shareholders instead

furthermore, i invest in growth companies that don't have dividends, but I don't have time to research that so my mutual fund advisors do that for me for a small fee.

>> No.13490669
File: 416 KB, 941x1386, breezy.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490669

>>13490650
the minutes get released at 2:00pm EST correct?

>> No.13490671 [DELETED] 

The feudal aristocracy was not the only class that was ruined by the bourgeoisie, not the only
class whose conditions of existence pined and perished in the atmosphere of modern bourgeois
society. The medieval burgesses and the small peasant proprietors were the precursors of the
modern bourgeoisie. In those countries which are but little developed, industrially and
commercially, these two classes still vegetate side by side with the rising bourgeoisie.
In countries where modern civilisation has become fully developed, a new class of petty
bourgeois has been formed, fluctuating between proletariat and bourgeoisie, and ever renewing
itself as a supplementary part of bourgeois society. The individual members of this class,
however, are being constantly hurled down into the proletariat by the action of competition, and,
as modern industry develops, they even see the moment approaching when they will completely
disappear as an independent section of modern society, to be replaced in manufactures,
agriculture and commerce, by overlookers, bailiffs and shopmen.
In countries like France, where the peasants constitute far more than half of the population, it was
natural that writers who sided with the proletariat against the bourgeoisie should use, in their
criticism of the bourgeois régime, the standard of the peasant and petty bourgeois, and from the
standpoint of these intermediate classes, should take up the cudgels for the working class. Thus
arose petty-bourgeois Socialism. Sismondi was the head of this school, not only in France but
also in England.
This school of Socialism dissected with great acuteness the contradictions in the conditions of
modern production. It laid bare the hypocritical apologies of economists. It proved,
incontrovertibly, the disastrous effects of machinery and division of labour; the concentration of
capital and land in a few hands; overproduction and crises; it pointed out the inevitable ruin/..

>> No.13490673
File: 12 KB, 320x320, 1548565893193.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490673

>>13490651
have you had enough gay sex today?

>> No.13490681

>>13490666
meh I'll say it for you. Fuck jannies, fuck niggers, fuck commies, fuck unions, and buy LCI faggots.

>> No.13490687
File: 64 KB, 600x600, 1474425150629.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490687

>>13490588
>Also, where's that LCI shill? His shit's still pumpan
LCI going to 30.. AT LEAST

>> No.13490690 [DELETED] 

>>13490654


Economic policy has a direct impact on the stock market. This might be hard for you to wrap your head around, but the stock market is part of the economy

>> No.13490694

>>13490640
How is giving the owners of the business their cut of the profits "throwing money out to window"? Corporations are not supposed to be bitcoin.

>> No.13490702
File: 123 KB, 1542x791, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490702

>>13490681
>>13490687
I don't see it but glhf degenerates

>> No.13490706 [DELETED] 

You must, therefore, confess that by “individual” you mean no other person than the bourgeois,
than the middle-class owner of property. This person must, indeed, be swept out of the way, and
made impossible.
Communism deprives no man of the power to appropriate the products of society; all that it does
is to deprive him of the power to subjugate the labour of others by means of such appropriations.
It has been objected that upon the abolition of private property, all work will cease, and universal
laziness will overtake us.
According to this, bourgeois society ought long ago to have gone to the dogs through sheer
idleness; for those of its members who work, acquire nothing, and those who acquire anything do
not work. The whole of this objection is but another expression of the tautology: that there can no
longer be any wage-labour when there is no longer any capital.
All objections urged against the Communistic mode of producing and appropriating material
products, have, in the same way, been urged against the Communistic mode of producing and
appropriating intellectual products. Just as, to the bourgeois, the disappearance of class property
is the disappearance of production itself, so the disappearance of class culture is to him identical
with the disappearance of all culture.
That culture, the loss of which he laments, is, for the enormous majority, a mere training to act as
a machine.
But don’t wrangle with us so long as you apply, to our intended abolition of bourgeois property,
the standard of your bourgeois notions of freedom, culture, law, &c. Your very ideas are but the
outgrowth of the conditions of your bourgeois production and bourgeois property, just as your
jurisprudence is but the will of your class made into a law for all, a will whose essential character
and direction are determined by the economical conditions of existence of your class.

>> No.13490707

>>13490690
macroeconomy is political intervention (non--market) to market economy too.

>> No.13490710

>>13490640
You should read up on why companies pay dividends. In most cases, it hardly cuts into their overall cash flow. You can only put so much money into your company before it starts not producing returns.

>> No.13490723

Ok I'm getting desperated, YUMA keeps going down, should I just sell now for a 100 dollar loss and play another stock?

>> No.13490727

>>13490706
kys commie

>> No.13490728 [DELETED] 

>>13490706

The selfish misconception that induces you to transform into eternal laws of nature and of reason,
the social forms springing from your present mode of production and form of property –
historical relations that rise and disappear in the progress of production – this misconception you
share with every ruling class that has preceded you. What you see clearly in the case of ancient
property, what you admit in the case of feudal property, you are of course forbidden to admit in
the case of your own bourgeois form of property.
Abolition [Aufhebung] of the family! Even the most radical flare up at this infamous proposal of
the Communists.
On what foundation is the present family, the bourgeois family, based? On capital, on private
gain. In its completely developed form, this family exists only among the bourgeoisie. But this
state of things finds its complement in the practical absence of the family among the proletarians,
and in public prostitution.
The bourgeois family will vanish as a matter of course when its complement vanishes, and both
will vanish with the vanishing of capital.
Do you charge us with wanting to stop the exploitation of children by their parents? To this crime
we plead guilty.
But, you say, we destroy the most hallowed of relations, when we replace home education by
social.
And your education! Is not that also social, and determined by the social conditions under which
you educate, by the intervention direct or indirect, of society, by means of schools, &c.? The
Communists have not invented the intervention of society in education; they do but seek to alter
the character of that intervention, and to rescue education from the influence of the ruling class.
The bourgeois clap-trap about the family and education, about the hallowed co-relation of parents
and child, becomes all the more disgusting, the more, by the action of Modern Industry, all the

>> No.13490745 [DELETED] 

>>13490728

family ties among the proletarians are torn asunder, and their children transformed into simple
articles of commerce and instruments of labour.
But you Communists would introduce community of women, screams the bourgeoisie in chorus.
The bourgeois sees his wife a mere instrument of production. He hears that the instruments of
production are to be exploited in common, and, naturally, can come to no other conclusion that
the lot of being common to all will likewise fall to the women.
He has not even a suspicion that the real point aimed at is to do away with the status of women as
mere instruments of production.
For the rest, nothing is more ridiculous than the virtuous indignation of our bourgeois at the
community of women which, they pretend, is to be openly and officially established by the
Communists. The Communists have no need to introduce community of women; it has existed
almost from time immemorial.
Our bourgeois, not content with having wives and daughters of their proletarians at their disposal,
not to speak of common prostitutes, take the greatest pleasure in seducing each other’s wives.
Bourgeois marriage is, in reality, a system of wives in common and thus, at the most, what the
Communists might possibly be reproached with is that they desire to introduce, in substitution for
a hypocritically concealed, an openly legalised community of women. For the rest, it is self-
evident that the abolition of the present system of production must bring with it the abolition of
the community of women springing from that system, i.e., of prostitution both public and private.

>> No.13490746

>>13490702
>I don't see it
thats because you are looking at a chart and not the filings. I have a friend that tries to trade on technicals only.. he doesn't do so well..

>> No.13490749
File: 18 KB, 300x250, OsA4reBwzf-4[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490749

>>13490479
>>13490640
I always felt that a company could eventually hit a ceiling or scale so big that they would still have money left over after reinvesting (eg AAPL). In fact, wasn't it Carl Icahn that squeezed his way in on early Apple and forced Jobs to start offering a dividend to investors because he felt they had too much cash sitting around, even after its reallocation? (Also because he was a mad activist cunt?)

Also, I've been too spooped to actually buy for the sole purpose of dividends in the current times. Everyone says everything is overvalued and yields are low. Also, I'm a heavy TA trader, so a tank in price would shake me and I would most likely already have stop losses in place to get me out, dividend plan be damned.

>> No.13490760 [DELETED] 

>>13490745

The Communists are further reproached with desiring to abolish countries and nationality.
The working men have no country. We cannot take from them what they have not got. Since the
proletariat must first of all acquire political supremacy, must rise to be the leading class of the
nation, must constitute itself the nation, it is so far, itself national, though not in the bourgeois
sense of the word.
National differences and antagonism between peoples are daily more and more vanishing, owing
to the development of the bourgeoisie, to freedom of commerce, to the world market, to
uniformity in the mode of production and in the conditions of life corresponding thereto.
The supremacy of the proletariat will cause them to vanish still faster. United action, of the
leading civilised countries at least, is one of the first conditions for the emancipation of the
proletariat.
In proportion as the exploitation of one individual by another will also be put an end to, the
exploitation of one nation by another will also be put an end to. In proportion as the antagonism
between classes within the nation vanishes, the hostility of one nation to another will come to an
end.
The charges against Communism made from a religious, a philosophical and, generally, from an
ideological standpoint, are not deserving of serious examination.
Does it require deep intuition to comprehend that man’s ideas, views, and conception, in one
word, man’s consciousness, changes with every change in the conditions of his material
existence, in his social relations and in his social life?
What else does the history of ideas prove, than that intellectual production changes its character
in proportion as material production is changed? The ruling ideas of each age have ever been the
ideas of its ruling class.

>> No.13490768

>>13490728
wtf is an &c? ?!?!!

>> No.13490772
File: 68 KB, 320x262, d64431fb53546efda415f67aa6087eca78a304da_00[1].gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490772

>>13490746
lul, you need new TA frens

>> No.13490775

Why the fuck would I read all of this if I can beat any broker over 10 years by just investing in an S&P 500 index

>> No.13490782 [DELETED] 

>>13490760

When people speak of the ideas that revolutionise society, they do but express that fact that
within the old society the elements of a new one have been created, and that the dissolution of the
old ideas keeps even pace with the dissolution of the old conditions of existence.
When the ancient world was in its last throes, the ancient religions were overcome by
Christianity. When Christian ideas succumbed in the 18th century to rationalist ideas, feudal
26 Chapter II: Proletarians and Communists
society fought its death battle with the then revolutionary bourgeoisie. The ideas of religious
liberty and freedom of conscience merely gave expression to the sway of free competition within
the domain of knowledge.
“Undoubtedly,” it will be said, “religious, moral, philosophical, and juridical ideas have been
modified in the course of historical development. But religion, morality, philosophy, political
science, and law, constantly survived this change.”
“There are, besides, eternal truths, such as Freedom, Justice, etc., that are common to all states of
society. But Communism abolishes eternal truths, it abolishes all religion, and all morality,
instead of constituting them on a new basis; it therefore acts in contradiction to all past historical
experience.”
What does this accusation reduce itself to? The history of all past society has consisted in the
development of class antagonisms, antagonisms that assumed different forms at different epochs.
But whatever form they may have taken, one fact is common to all past ages, viz., the exploitation
of one part of society by the other. No wonder, then, that the social consciousness of past ages,
despite all the multiplicity and variety it displays, moves within certain common forms, or general
ideas, which cannot completely vanish except with the total disappearance of class antagonisms.

>> No.13490785

>>13490772
until someone can prove to me that TA works i'll stick to what i'm doing.. I don't know any retail trader that uses TA and is successful over a the course of a few years. Good luck though.

>> No.13490788
File: 14 KB, 426x364, 1539918905158.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490788

This salty bitch, kek.

>> No.13490791

>>13490775
Gambling is fun, anon

>> No.13490794 [DELETED] 

>>13490782
The Communist revolution is the most radical rupture with traditional property relations; no
wonder that its development involved the most radical rupture with traditional ideas.
But let us have done with the bourgeois objections to Communism.
We have seen above, that the first step in the revolution by the working class is to raise the
proletariat to the position of ruling class to win the battle of democracy.
The proletariat will use its political supremacy to wrest, by degree, all capital from the
bourgeoisie, to centralise all instruments of production in the hands of the State, i.e., of the
proletariat organised as the ruling class; and to increase the total productive forces as rapidly as
possible.
Of course, in the beginning, this cannot be effected except by means of despotic inroads on the
rights of property, and on the conditions of bourgeois production; by means of measures,
therefore, which appear economically insufficient and untenable, but which, in the course of the
movement, outstrip themselves, necessitate further inroads upon the old social order, and are
unavoidable as a means of entirely revolutionising the mode of production.
These measures will, of course, be different in different countries.
Nevertheless, in most advanced countries, the following will be pretty generally applicable.

>> No.13490795

>>13490528
I would be pretty interested in the psyche of investors! Being able to read their behaviors would allow me to adjust my own trading strategy.

>> No.13490808

>>13490723

Always ask yourself: Would I enter this trade today if I didn't have a position?

>> No.13490815 [DELETED] 

>>13490794

1. Abolition of property in land and application of all rents of land to public
purposes.
2. A heavy progressive or graduated income tax.
3. Abolition of all rights of inheritance.
4. Confiscation of the property of all emigrants and rebels.
5. Centralisation of credit in the hands of the state, by means of a national bank
with State capital and an exclusive monopoly.
6. Centralisation of the means of communication and transport in the hands of the
State.
7. Extension of factories and instruments of production owned by the State; the
bringing into cultivation of waste-lands, and the improvement of the soil generally
in accordance with a common plan.
8. Equal liability of all to work. Establishment of industrial armies, especially for
agriculture.
9. Combination of agriculture with manufacturing industries; gradual abolition of
all the distinction between town and country by a more equable distribution of the
27 Chapter II: Proletarians and Communists
populace over the country.
10. Free education for all children i public schools.
Abolition of children’sfactory labour in its present form. Combination of education with industrial production/ When, in the course of development, class distinctions have disappeared, and all production has been concentrated in the hands of a vast association of the whole nation, the public power will lose its political character. Political power, properly so called, is merely the organised power of one class for oppressing another. If the proletariat during its contest with the bourgeoisie is compelled, by the force of circumstances, to organise itself as a class, if, by means of a revolution, it makes itself the ruling class, and, as such, sweeps away by force the old conditions of production, then it will, along with these conditions, have swept away the conditions for the existence of class antagonisms and of classes generally, and will thereby have abolished its own
supremacy as a class.

>> No.13490816

>>13490808
This is good advice.

>> No.13490827

>>13490815
are you done yet?

Remember folks these are the 10 pillars that will destroy America.

>> No.13490829

>>13490808
I mean, right now it looks like its about to bounce back to the .30s. If I didn't went on that trade I would buy a lot right now.

>> No.13490846
File: 45 KB, 800x800, ocp.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490846

>>13490794
stfu faggot nobody cares

>> No.13490857 [DELETED] 

>>13490795

Glad you asked

A total of over forty-five different major crises in various regions of
the world, which resulted from preceding euphoric and speculative booms in
some market activity and which spread either locally or internationally, have
struck the markets since the beginning of the seventeenth century
(Kindleberger, 1978/2005; Galbraith, 1994). Historical examples include the
Dutch Tulip Bulb mania in 1636 and 1637, the Mississippi / South Sea
bubble, which peaked in 1720, the late 1920ies stock market mania or the
New Economy bubble from 1995 to 2000. The review of financial market
history indicates that recurrent episodes of speculative booms and their
reversals in the form of crashes and panics can be regarded as a natural
element in financial market history.
Compared to the crises and recessions observed in the past decades,
such as the banking and loan crisis of the 1980ies, the Asian crisis in the
1990ies or the collapse of the Dot.com bubble in March 2000, the recent
crisis reflects the deepest and most severe financial and economic crisis since
the Great Depression in the 1930s. Hence, there is an extensive discussion
among practitioners and academics on the origins of the recent global crisis.
In addition to economic elucidations and rationalizations, there are
behavioral and socio-economic explanations, which take into account the
powerful social and psychological forces at work in financial markets. For
example, Shiller (2008) draws the attention to the process of social contagion
and Deutschmann (2008) views the recent financial crisis in light of long-
term structural socio-economic changes in advanced industrial societies.

>> No.13490858

>>13490846
He's a pathetic manchild sperging out because people are talking about things he doesn't like

>> No.13490860

>>13490815

>1 credit hour has been added to your philosophy undergraduate degree w/ minor in women's studies

How does all that knowledge help you make my frappuccino faster, Anon?

>> No.13490871

>>13490723
Looks like trash and I've seen this penny shilled here a bunch so it most likely is.

If it hits 25 cents, that shit is done, the real selling will begin

>> No.13490886 [DELETED] 

>>13490815

he Principles of Communism
– 1 –
What is Communism?
Communism is the doctrine of the conditions of the liberation of the proletariat.
– 2 –
What is the proletariat?
The proletariat is that class in society which lives entirely from the sale of its labor and does not
draw profit from any kind of capital; whose weal and woe, whose life and death, whose sole
existence depends on the demand for labor – hence, on the changing state of business, on the
vagaries of unbridled competition. The proletariat, or the class of proletarians, is, in a word, the
working class of the 19th century.6
– 3 –
Proletarians, then, have not always existed?
No. There have always been poor and working classes; and the working class have mostly been
poor. But there have not always been workers and poor people living under conditions as they are
today; in other words, there have not always been proletarians, any more than there has always
been free unbridled competitions.
– 4 –
How did the proletariat originate?
The Proletariat originated in the industrial revolution, which took place in England in the last half
of the last (18th) century, and which has since then been repeated in all the civilized countries of the world. This industrial revolution was precipitated by the discovery of the steam engine, various spinning
machines, the mechanical loom, and a whole series of other mechanical devices. These machines, which were very expensive and hence could be bought only by big capitalists, altered the whole
mode of production and displaced the former workers, because the machines turned out cheaper and better commodities than the workers could produce with their inefficient spinning wheels and handlooms.

>> No.13490899

>>13490871
Yeah I will sell if it goes back to low .20s and take my well deserved loss, and load up 100 bucks more next paycheck.

>> No.13490903 [DELETED] 

>>13490857 The mainstream economic approach in asset pricing, which crucially depends on utility maximization and rational expectations of a so-called “homo economicus”, can neither explain why asset price bubbles and overreactions in short-term market price movements arise in first place, nor
rule them out in general (Stracca, 2004). Populated with rational market participants an economic market does remarkably well in coordinating and integrating the efforts of millions of self-serving individuals. However, numerous research works in Behavioral Finance have provided convincing evidence that financial market prices spend far more time deviating from the
theoretical equilibrium postulated by the efficient market hypothesis (EMH)
than actually tending towards it (Thaler, 1992; Shefrin, 2000; Shleifer, 2000; Prechter and Parker, 2007). Nnetheless the EMH has remained the prevailing paradigm in financial markets for many decades and some representatives of the standard economic approach to financial markets plea for sticking to market efficiency. They argue that abnormal returns are chance events, that overreaction to information is about as common as
underreaction, and that apparent anomalies, which are reported with
statistical significance, are most likely no more than methodological errors
and disappear with reasonable changes in technique (Fama, 1998). On the other hand, Shiller (Shiller, 1984; 1990; 2000; 2008), Shleifer (2000), Prechter and Parker (2007) and others present several reasons why
traditional economic and financial theories often fail to explain and predict
financial market trends and their underlying trading behavior realistically.
The two predominant aspects are that the mainstream approaches do neither
pay enough attention to psychological aspects of human behavior, such as
systematic cognitive biases in the intuitive judgment of financial risks

>> No.13490916
File: 589 KB, 825x619, stonks edit.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490916

>>13490173
Please click my Stonks.

https://youtu.be/6wQv-DVLeNk

>> No.13490926 [DELETED] 

>>13490886

The machines delivered industry wholly into the hands of the big capitalists and
rendered entirely worthless the meagre property of the workers (tools, looms, etc.). The result was
that the capitalists soon had everything in their hands and nothing remained to the workers. This
marked the introduction of the factory system into the textile industry.
Once the impulse to the introduction of machinery and the factory system had been given, this
system spread quickly to all other branches of industry, especially cloth- and book-printing,
pottery, and the metal industries.
Labor was more and more divided among the individual workers so that the worker who
previously had done a complete piece of work now did only a part of that piece. This division of
labor made it possible to produce things faster and cheaper. It reduced the activity of the
individual worker to simple, endlessly repeated mechanical motions which could be performed
not only as well but much better by a machine. In this way, all these industries fell, one after
another, under the dominance of steam, machinery, and the factory system, just as spinning and
weaving had already done.
But at the same time, they also fell into the hands of big capitalists, and their workers were
deprived of whatever independence remained to them. Gradually, not only genuine manufacture
but also handicrafts came within the province of the factory system as big capitalists increasingly
43 Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith
displaced the small master craftsmen by setting up huge workshops, which saved many expenses
and permitted an elaborate division of labor.

>> No.13490938 [DELETED] 

>>13490903

The second aspect, which our work focuses on, includes the fact that
market participants are socially embedded in an environment, which
influences their decisions, behaviors and preferences; vice versa this
environment is also affected by their actions and choices. Individuals do not
just interact with their environment, which includes other individuals, groups
of individuals, the collectivity and other entities, but their interactions have
consequences for the choices they, and others, make. As a result of these
interactions people adjust their behavior to the behavior of friends, peers,
family and other acquaintances in their social environment, or even to
models provided by the mass media (Cynamon and Fazzari, 2008). This is
particularly true when environmental complexity is overwhelming and when
individuals have little or no experience and information. Even in everyday
life we often choose cars, fashion, stores and restaurants depending on how
European Scientific Journal September 2013 edition vol.9, No.25 ISSN: 1857 – 7881 (Print) e - ISSN 1857- 7431
406
popular they seem to be among others around us. Hence, what we often
observe in economic behavior is not necessarily utility-maximization or
rational choice on the micro-level, but behavior that depends on what others
are doing or on how others are expected to behave and decide. Already Keynes (1936) suggested in his metaphor of the market as
"beauty contest" that traders often behave in the very same way in asset
markets. Most notably Shiller (1984) pointed out that market speculation is a
social activity, as investors spend a substantial part of their leisure time
discussing investments, reading about investments or gossiping about others’
successes or failures in investing

>> No.13490940
File: 105 KB, 559x660, FF7AA924-3915-4E73-BF9E-F5FCBEB4D7EC.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490940

to the guy who posted this, would love to have a chat with you. if you have a reddit account too that would be great.

>> No.13490951
File: 66 KB, 1500x645, 61IDcowHMZL._SL1500_[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490951

>>13490916
ty stonkman

>> No.13490959
File: 48 KB, 502x432, 1472492653108.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490959

this guys literally has copy pasta saved just so he can derail this thread.. wow.. just wow.. what a faggot.

nobody reply to him

Buy LCI

>> No.13490965
File: 2.16 MB, 1125x669, screenshot.2019-05-01 11.46.39.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490965

goodnight sweet prince

>> No.13490973

Can I found a holding company in a country with no income tax, have all my stocks be in that company, and pay no tax on those dividends?

>> No.13490980 [DELETED] 

>>13490926

This is how it has come about that in civilized countries at the present time nearly all kinds of
labor are performed in factories – and, in nearly all branches of work, handicrafts and
manufacture have been superseded. This process has, to an ever greater degree, ruined the old
middle class, especially the small handicraftsmen; it has entirely transformed the condition of the
workers; and two new classes have been created which are gradually swallowing up all the others.
These are:
(i) The class of big capitalists, who, in all civilized countries, are already in almost
exclusive possession of all the means of subsistence and of the instruments
(machines, factories) and materials necessary for the production of the means of
subsistence. This is the bourgeois class, or the bourgeoisie.
(ii) The class of the wholly propertyless, who are obliged to sell their labor to the
bourgeoisie in order to get, in exchange, the means of subsistence for their
support. This is called the class of proletarians, or the proletariat

>> No.13490984

Nice thread today.....
Nice market today :^)
VIX to 15 sometime this week
Jerome the BIG man keeping things spicy

>> No.13490993

>mods will delete porn but won't delete flooding
Makes me think

>> No.13490999
File: 50 KB, 500x347, asperger king.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13490999

>>13490959
I don't understand what could have made him have such a tard rage, he's pissed off people were talking about economics?

>> No.13491006 [DELETED] 

>>13490938
Moreover one has to consider that individuals may belong to a
collective, which they possibly do not understand and sometimes do not even
notice at all; comparable to a community of ants, which builds an
architecturally impressive anthill in the collective although not a single
individual ant intends that. In a similar way humans often show collective
behaviors which exceed the horizon of an individual. In particular, individual
incentives and the micromotives of millions of people, who exert social
influence on each other through interactions in the environment, may lead to
collective results that the individuals neither intend nor need to be aware of.
For example a bank run, in which people believe that a bank is on the verge
of insolvency and hurry to withdraw their deposits, may cause a bank failure,
although there is no universal desire for the bankruptcy of the bank.
The aggregation of this type of behavior often entails dynamics that
cause exuberant rise or fall in market prices. What goes on in the hearts and
thoughts of millions of traders and investors, who participate in financial
markets, often has little to do with the massive results that they can generate.
Financial market panics, where securities and other assets are being sold on a
massive scale, are such an example. Behavior which appears rational for the
individual creates danger to the entire community, as attempts made by
individuals to save themselves contribute to everyone’s downfall. Such
situations, in which individual choices and actions depend on the choices of
other people, don’t permit any simple summation or extrapolation to the
aggregates. This is an often little-understood point not only in financial
markets but also in many other settings where social dynamics emerge.

>> No.13491010
File: 9 KB, 249x243, 91E2E2FE-84F5-407B-B2CE-32B9CBF5835C.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491010

INTC calls look good for the 27th super cheap to stay close to 51-53 range totally worth it
Buy 2 calls for 51 strike and hodl you might get lucky ;)

>> No.13491029

>>13490297
Did you even look at the history of the stock before buying? $0.12 - $0.15 is what you can expect it to settle at. You got played.

>> No.13491038 [DELETED] 

>>13490980
Under what conditions does this sale of the
labor of the proletarians to the bourgeoisie take place?
Labor is a commodity, like any other, and its price is therefore determined by exactly the same
laws that apply to other commodities. In a regime of big industry or of free competition – as we
shall see, the two come to the same thing – the price of a commodity is, on the average, always
equal to its cost of production. Hence, the price of labor is also equal to the cost of production of
labor.
But, the costs of production of labor consist of precisely the quantity of means of subsistence
necessary to enable the worker to continue working, and to prevent the working class from dying
out. The worker will therefore get no more for his labor than is necessary for this purpose; the
price of labor, or the wage, will, in other words, be the lowest, the minimum, required for the
maintenance of life.
However, since business is sometimes better and sometimes worse, it follows that the worker
sometimes gets more and sometimes gets less for his commodities. But, again, just as the
industrialist, on the average of good times and bad, gets no more and no less for his commodities
than what they cost, similarly on the average the worker gets no more and no less than his
minimum.
This economic law of wages operates the more strictly the greater the degree to which big
industry has taken possession of all branches of production

>> No.13491040

>>13490999
he obviously had this derailment planned

>> No.13491060

>>13491029
Then what was all that movement the last month?

>> No.13491061 [DELETED] 

>>13491006In particular financial market booms and crises are aggregate results that often
have no recognizable counterpart at the level of the individual, making them hard to unveil at an early stage. In order to make the connection between micromotives and macrobehavior in such situations one has to study the
system of interactions between individuals and their environment, which
includes the interactions between individuals and other individuals as well as
between individuals and the collectivity (Schelling, 1978/2006).
Consequently the macrobehavior associated with recurrent patterns of asset
prize bubbles and crashes has micro-foundations, which among others
involve heterogeneous propensities to herd as well as interdependency of
speculative behavior on the individual level.

n the attempt to explain the phenomena of synchronized exuberant
rise and fall in financial market prices and the underlying behavioral patterns
of traders and investors, the concept of herding has been established in
Behavioral Finance over the past decades. The essence of herding is that
unconscious herding impulses sensed by market participants in situations of
uncertainty, which are reinforced by strong affective feelings produced in the
limbic system and which have evolutionary origins, lead to mass
psychological dynamics in the patterns of human aggregate behavior, which
produce non-mean-reverting dynamism in financial markets (Prechter and
Parker, 2007). The disagreement of mainstream economists on whether
empirical research has failed to provide convincing evidence of herding in
financial markets can be contrasted with the works of Scharfstein and Stein
(1990), Trueman (1994) and Welch (2000). More recent evidence for the
theory of herding is provided by the works of Prechter and Parker (2007),
Sias (2004) or Blasco and Ferreruela (2008).

>> No.13491093

>>13491040

It's hard for these kids man. They get to college and don't know how to make any friends so they do little cries for attention. This is just step 1 on this kid's inevitable incel revenge journey. He'll be shooting up the quad by this time next year.

>> No.13491097 [DELETED] 

>>13491038
What working classes were there before the industrial
revolution?
The working classes have always, according to the different stages of development of society,
lived in different circumstances and had different relations to the owning and ruling classes.
In antiquity, the workers were the slaves of the owners, just as they still are in many backward
countries and even in the southern part of the United States.
In the Middle Ages, they were the serfs of the land-owning nobility, as they still are in Hungary,
Poland, and Russia. In the Middle Ages, and indeed right up to the industrial revolution, there
were also journeymen in the cities who worked in the service of petty bourgeois masters.
Gradually, as manufacture developed, these journeymen became manufacturing workers who
were even then employed by larger capitalists.
n what way do proletarians differ from slaves?
The slave is sold once and for all; the proletarian must sell himself daily and hourly.
The individual slave, property of one master, is assured an existence, however miserable it may
be, because of the master’s interest. The individual proletarian, property as it were of the entire
bourgeois class which buys his labor only when someone has need of it, has no secure existence.
This existence is assured only to the class as a whole.
The slave is outside competition; the proletarian is in it and experiences all its vagaries.
The slave counts as a thing, not as a member of society. Thus, the slave can have a better
existence than the proletarian, while the proletarian belongs to a higher stage of social
development and, himself, stands on a higher social level than the slave.
The slave frees himself when, of all the relations of private property, he abolishes only the
relation of slavery and thereby becomes a proletarian; the proletarian can free himself only by
abolishing private property in general

>> No.13491116

>>13490940
hey fren, thats me. i dont have a reddit account

>> No.13491122 [DELETED] 

>>13491061
owever, aggregate outcomes in the social sciences (e.g. product
hypes, mass hysteria, riot or revolt, etc.) involve not merely a sufficient
number of market participants following a herding impulse. In particular
they often entail complex social dynamics, which are among others based on
the propensities for emulation and other-directedness in human behavior, and
which imply contagion processes. The research on Mass Psychology (Le
Bon, 1895/1982; Canetti, 1962/1984; Pelzmann, 2002), an important sub
discipline of Social Psychology, accounts for this fact, that is, individuals
exert social influence on each other through interactions in the environment.
Moreover Mass Psychology considers that people may belong to a collective,
which they possibly do not understand and perhaps do not notice at all.
Hence the concepts of Mass Psychology can play an important part in the
description of the emergence and of the dynamics of asset price bubbles and
financial market crashes. Several postulated mechanisms behind, and
specific characteristics of, mass phenomena are briefly outlined in the
following two subsections.
2.5 Other-directedness and emulation
People have a strong tendency to behave other-directed and to
emulate other people’s behavior, meaning that they use other people’s
behavior to align themselves and to evaluate what is correct or prudent in a
particular situation, where the best course of action is unknown. This
proposition, which implies that contemporaries and peers are an important
European Scientific Journal September 2013 edition vol.9, No.25 ISSN: 1857 – 7881 (Print) e - ISSN 1857- 7431
409
source of direction for the individual, has a solid backing in social
psychological theory and research, ranging from conformity experiments
(Asch, 1951) and the concept of other-directedness (Riesman, 1961/2001) to
the social comparison theory (Veblen, 1899/2002).

>> No.13491128

>>13490940
What am I looking at, here?

>> No.13491129
File: 184 KB, 1382x824, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491129

Midday update

>> No.13491134

>>13491060
Looks like people pump and dump every 4ish months.

>> No.13491141

>>13491128
thats my dividend portfolio. black are the stocks i have positions in, red are the ones on my watchlist. those change but i'm likely going in on CB, LEG, MCD and MMM next if everything else stays the same

>> No.13491146
File: 680 KB, 940x704, 7b9[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491146

>>13491128
Not him but I believe it was a dividend-focused portfolio's payment schedule

>> No.13491148 [DELETED] 

>>13491097
In what way do proletarians differ from serfs?
The serf possesses and uses an instrument of production, a piece of land, in exchange for which he gives up a part of his product or part of the services of his labor. The proletarian works with the instruments of production of another, for the account of this other,
in exchange for a part of the product.
The serf gives up, the proletarian receives. The serf has an assured existence, the proletarian has
not. The serf is outside competition, the proletarian is in it.
The serf liberates himself in one of three ways: either he runs away to the city and there becomes
a handicraftsman; or, instead of products and services, he gives money to his lord and thereby
becomes a free tenant; or he overthrows his feudal lord and himself becomes a property owner. In short, by one route or another, he gets into the owning class and enters into competition. The
proletarian liberates himself by abolishing competition, private property, and all class differences.

>> No.13491157 [DELETED] 

>>13491122
Especially in the financial market setting, where risk and uncertainty
are pervasive and cause increased emotional arousal, many traders and
investors tend to become other-directed and act on or react to other people’s
behavior while facts and fundamental data become negligible and irrelevant.
They often act along the lines: everybody else can’t be wrong. The
application of this behavioral rule is not irrational but “ecologically rational”
to the degree that people are using the structure of information provided by
their environment (Pelzmann, 2005). As a consequence genuine individual
decision-making processes on investment and trading are often displaced by
responses to other market participants’ behavior. Thus people’s behavior and
actions relate directly to other people’s choices, dependent on perceived risk.
The higher the uncertainty and the greater the arousal in a situation, the more
market participant’s choices, actions and reactions depend on the behavior of
other traders and investors. Shiller (1990), for example, found in his
investigation of the crash on Black Monday in October 1987 that in absence
of any relevant news and under the influence of increased emotional arousal
traders simply overreacted to each other, trying to figure out what the others
are doing or what they are likely to do. Even professional money and
portfolio managers, financial analysts and institutional investors may follow
others in such an environment and select stocks that others select to avoid
falling behind and looking bad (Trueman, 1994; Shleifer, 2000; Welch,
2000; Sias, 2004; Menkhoff and Nikiforow, 2009).
However, according to Schelling (1978/2006) we have to be aware of
the fact that it is not necessarily constraints of conformity that account for
assimilation and adaption to other peoples’ behavior.

>> No.13491161

>>13491093
it's getting out of control.. he's probably 19 and just found this site a few weeks ago.. sad.. he'll be here forever like the rest of us.. maybe he is just now realizing it and feeling the rage.

>> No.13491167

>>13491141
Just buy SDYL

>> No.13491172

>>13491134
So I should wait for the next pump? I mean at this point I don't care about the investment, its not that much money to me.

>> No.13491183 [DELETED] 

>>13491148
In what way do proletarians differ from handicraftsmen?
In contrast to the proletarian, the so-called handicraftsman, as he still existed almost everywhere
in the past (eighteenth) century and still exists here and there at present, is a proletarian at most
temporarily. His goal is to acquire capital himself wherewith to exploit other workers. He can
often achieve this goal where guilds still exist or where freedom from guild restrictions has not
yet led to the introduction of factory-style methods into the crafts nor yet to fierce competition
But as soon as the factory system has been introduced into the crafts and competition flourishes
fully, this perspective dwindles away and the handicraftsman becomes more and more a
proletarian. The handicraftsman therefore frees himself by becoming either bourgeois or entering
the middle class in general, or becoming a proletarian because of competition (as is now more
often the case). In which case he can free himself by joining the proletarian movement, i.e., the
more or less communist movement.
In what way do proletarians differ from manufacturing
workers?
The manufacturing worker of the 16th to the 18th centuries still had, with but few exception, an
instrument of production in his own possession – his loom, the family spinning wheel, a little plot
of land which he cultivated in his spare time. The proletarian has none of these things.
The manufacturing worker almost always lives in the countryside and in a more or less
patriarchal relation to his landlord or employer; the proletarian lives, for the most part, in the city
and his relation to his employer is purely a cash relation.
The manufacturing worker is torn out of his patriarchal relation by big industry, loses whatever
property he still has, and in this way becomes a proletarian.

>> No.13491194

Holy shit just filter the trip, report, and stop talking about it retards FUCK.

Is real estate the best dividend sector or should I drop how heavy in it I am?

>> No.13491198
File: 16 KB, 396x385, 1540022016205.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491198

>>13491161
Just bought 1279 more shares of LCI.

>> No.13491200
File: 47 KB, 1067x600, 1536454057836.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491200

>>13490940
>if you have a reddit account

>> No.13491201 [DELETED] 

>>13491157
Keynes (1936) grasped this aspect as a rational motive
for herd behavior, when he mentioned that worldly wisdom teaches that it is
better for reputation to fail conventionally than to succeed unconventionally.
For example emulation leads to a trend in consumer behavior towards
conspicuous consumption, since the consumption of more excellent goods
serves as a signal of wealth. Similarly emulation is one of the driving forces
European Scientific Journal September 2013 edition vol.9, No.25 ISSN: 1857 – 7881 (Print) e - ISSN 1857- 7431
410
behind mass psychological dynamics in financial market behavior. This
suggestion is supported by the fact that money derives its origins not only
from the search for a means of exchange but also from people’s aspiration
towards reputation and prestige (Schmoelders, 1996). Hence perceived
success or failure in investing, which results from capital gains and losses,
becomes an essential signal among market participants, as traders habitually
gossip about others’ trading successes or failures.
2.6 Social contagion
Social influence on, and contagiousness of, behavior and behavioral
attitudes play an important issue in the formation of aggregate outcomes in
the social sciences; they are central to mass phenomena (Schelling,
1978/2006; Shiller, 1984; Pelzmann, 2002; Dodds and Watts, 2004;
Salganik, Dodds and Watts, 2006; Salganik and Watts, 2008; Brudermann
and Fenzl, 2010). Contagion processes can be found in very diverse
phenomena, such as the diffusion of innovations , the spread of fads and rumors (Banarjee, 1992; Bikhchandani, Hirschleifer and Welch, 1998; Kelly and O’Grada, 2005), the outbreak of political or
social unrest (Granovetter, 1978), and many others. Latest findings in the
research on societal trends and behavioral traits suggest that contagion processes even appear to be relevant in health and health care (Fowler and Christakis, 2008; Smith and Christakis, 2008).

>> No.13491213
File: 569 KB, 958x1112, 1517551768806.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491213

>>13491198
>Just bought 1279 more shares of LCI.

>> No.13491214 [DELETED] 

>>13491183
– 11 –
What were the immediate consequences of the industrial
revolution and of the division of society into bourgeoisie
and proletariat?
First, the lower and lower prices of industrial products brought about by machine labor totally
destroyed, in all countries of the world, the old system of manufacture or industry based upon
hand labor.
In this way, all semi-barbarian countries, which had hitherto been more or less strangers to
historical development, and whose industry had been based on manufacture, were violently
forced out of their isolation. They bought the cheaper commodities of the English and allowed
their own manufacturing workers to be ruined. Countries which had known no progress for
thousands of years – for example, India – were thoroughly revolutionized, and even China is now
on the way to a revolution.
We have come to the point where a new machine invented in England deprives millions of
Chinese workers of their livelihood within a year’s time.
In this way, big industry has brought all the people of the Earth into contact with each other, has
merged all local markets into one world market, has spread civilization and progress everywhere
and has thus ensured that whatever happens in civilized countries will have repercussions in all
other countries.
It follows that if the workers in England or France now liberate themselves, this must set off
revolution in all other countries – revolutions which, sooner or later, must accomplish the
liberation of their respective working class.
Second, wherever big industries displaced manufacture, the bourgeoisie developed in wealth and
power to the utmost and made itself the first class of the country. The result was that wherever
this happened, the bourgeoisie took political power into its own hands and displaced the hitherto
ruling classes, the aristocracy, the guildmasters, and their representative, the absolute monarchy.

>> No.13491230 [DELETED] 

>>13491201
Behavioral Finance has identified contagion as one of the underlying
mechanisms of booms and panics in financial markets, where contagious
entities such as rumors, profit expectations, trading rules and others are
transmitted via social interactions. Shiller (1984, 2000, 2008) eminently
emphasizes the impact of social contagion processes on the synchronization
of trading behavior. Contagion is of particular importance from the mass
psychological perspective, since it is not restricted to cognitive processes but
may also include emotional contagion. In this process individuals and groups
of individuals influence each others’ emotions or behavior in social
interactions through the conscious or unconscious induction of behavioral
attitudes and emotion states (Barsade, 2002). Hence the concept of contagion
can provide an explanation for the rapid diffusion of euphoria and fear
among individuals in the financial market setting, where pervasive
uncertainty leads to increased emotional arousal, and where other-directed market participants continuously monitor the behavior and consequences of
actions of others in the environment. Our contribution to a socio-economic understanding of the recent
global economic and financial crisis originates from previous research on the
distinction between mass phenomena. In particular we present an existing
concept in mass psychology in this section, which we will apply to financial
markets later in the paper

>> No.13491243 [DELETED] 

>>13491214
The bourgeoisie annihilated the power of the aristocracy, the nobility, by abolishing the
entailment of estates – in other words, by making landed property subject to purchase and sale,
and by doing away with the special privileges of the nobility. It destroyed the power of the
guildmasters by abolishing guilds and handicraft privileges. In their place, it put competition –
that is, a state of society in which everyone has the right to enter into any branch of industry, the
only obstacle being a lack of the necessary capital.
The introduction of free competition is thus public declaration that from now on the members of
society are unequal only to the extent that their capitals are unequal, that capital is the decisive
power, and that therefore the capitalists, the bourgeoisie, have become the first class in society
46 Draft of a Communist Confession of Faith
Free competition is necessary for the establishment of big industry, because it is the only
condition of society in which big industry can make its way.
Having destroyed the social power of the nobility and the guildmasters, the bourgeois also
destroyed their political power. Having raised itself to the actual position of first class in society,
it proclaims itself to be also the dominant political class. This it does through the introduction of
the representative system which rests on bourgeois equality before the law and the recognition of
free competition, and in European countries takes the form of constitutional monarchy. In these
constitutional monarchies, only those who possess a certain capital are voters – that is to say, only
members of the bourgeoisie. These bourgeois voters choose the deputies, and these bourgeois
deputies, by using their right to refuse to vote taxes, choose a bourgeois government.

>> No.13491254
File: 390 KB, 899x1200, 1555516482388.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491254

Secretary of State for Defense fired by Theresa May.
https://twitter.com/Peston/status/1123631482629697536

He blamed May's deputy for leaking (secret) details of Huawei's involvement in UK's 5G network.

>> No.13491255 [DELETED] 

>>13491230
Already in the early beginnings of the investigations of mass
movements and crowds Le Bon (1895/1982) recognized the distinct meaning
and differing impact of visible and invisible mass phenomena. He found that
the remarkable historic events are visible and recognized impacts of invisible
and unrecognized shifts in human thinking, which take place over the long
haul. For instance the biggest historic shocks, which led the way to cultural
transformations, seem to be determined by revolt, destruction, invasion and
others. The French revolution at the end of the 18th century is such a pattern.
A proper investigation of these remarkable historic events however reveals
gradual but substantial changes in people’s ideas and thinking as their true
causes. In the case of the French revolution these changes are reflected by a
new set of ideas and values originating from Enlightenment, which already
peaked in the mid 18th century. Nonetheless it took almost another half
century until apparent revolt and unrest emerged as a visible consequence.
Based on the studies of Le Bon and on the analysis and investigation
of numerous mass phenomena in the social, political and economic context, a
distinction between subtle, unrecognized first order mass dynamics and their
visible and recognized outbreaks in the form of second order mass
phenomena can be drawn (Fenzl, 2009; Malik, 2010). First order phenomena
continuously shape and influence human thinking and social mood trends
and thus determine the character of social actions manifested as economic,
political, or cultural events. Second order mass movements, which compared
to first order phenomena only last for a rather short period of time but
usually produce an intense and visible effect, include phenomena such as
political revolution, revolt, mass hysteria, and others.

>> No.13491268 [DELETED] 

>>13491243
Third, everywhere the proletariat develops in step with the bourgeoisie. In proportion, as the
bourgeoisie grows in wealth, the proletariat grows in numbers. For, since the proletarians can be
employed only by capital, and since capital extends only through employing labor, it follows that
the growth of the proletariat proceeds at precisely the same pace as the growth of capital.
Simultaneously, this process draws members of the bourgeoisie and proletarians together into the
great cities where industry can be carried on most profitably, and by thus throwing great masses
in one spot it gives to the proletarians a consciousness of their own strength.
Moreover, the further this process advances, the more new labor-saving machines are invented,
the greater is the pressure exercised by big industry on wages, which, as we have seen, sink to
their minimum and therewith render the condition of the proletariat increasingly unbearable. The
growing dissatisfaction of the proletariat thus joins with its rising power to prepare a proletarian
social revolution.
What were the further consequences of the industrial
revolution?
Big industry created in the steam engine, and other machines, the means of endlessly expanding
industrial production, speeding it up, and cutting its costs. With production thus facilitated, the
free competition, which is necessarily bound up with big industry, assumed the most extreme
forms; a multitude of capitalists invaded industry, and, in a short while, more was produced than
was needed.
As a consequence, finished commodities could not be sold, and a so-called commercial crisis
broke out. Factories had to be closed, their owners went bankrupt, and the workers were without
bread.

>> No.13491273
File: 42 KB, 637x358, F02CF73A2EFE5470BA87652C2DAC1018752B2433[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491273

>>13491167
Looks juicy buttttt
>ETN
>not liquid
And he can probably beat this ETN with a self-assembled dividend port and a schedule that suits him

>>13491198
lel

>>13491194
How heavy and what ETF/REIT? XLRE, IYR...? I wouldn't go heavy in just one sect, RE is a good supplement to a healthy div port, though. (Peep AMT)

>> No.13491284 [DELETED] 

>>13491255
When looking at prevailing socio-economic trends in the past
decades, first and foremost a significant increase in private consumption can
be observed in western industrialized countries. Global consumption rose by
28% in the 10-year-period from 1996 to 2006 and even tripled since 1960 in
due consideration of population growth . The
trend was eminently distinct in the United States, where domestic
consumption not only became the major economic engine but also reduced
the severity of recessions in the past decades Importantly, one has to keep in mind that the increase in
consumption evolved rather slowly, with an average annual increase of 2.5%
during 1996 and 2006.
As Yamada (2008) points out, accumulation of capital is seriously
hampered in an economic setting, where consumers have status preference
and where the economy is characterized by consumerism and a bandwagon
type social norm. His research points the direction to another socio-economic
trend coming along with the increase in consumption, namely a significant
shift in savings behavior, which brought about a private household debt
binge. For example, the average U.S. personal savings rate had slowly turned
into negative territory starting from +9% in the mid 1980s while the U.S.
household mortgage debt gradually decupled during the past three decades57,
as depicted in figure 3. Simultaneously the U.S. private household debt to
Gross Domestic Product ratio had risen from around 50% in the mid 1980s
to its peak of 98% in 2008. However, private household debt did not only
surge in the United States but also in many other developed countries of the
world, for example in the UK or Australia (Girouard, Kennedy and André,
2006; Keen, 2009). This unrestrained accumulation of debt in private
households, which led to the highest private debt to income ratios in decades,
was favored by the constant relaxation of standards in bank lending, which
will be discussed in section 4.3

>> No.13491290

>>13491273
>And he can probably beat this ETN with a self-assembled dividend port and a schedule that suits him
can you borrow at LIBOR?

>> No.13491295 [DELETED] 

>>13491268
What will this new social order have to be like?
Above all, it will have to take the control of industry and of all branches of production out of the
hands of mutually competing individuals, and instead institute a system in which all these
branches of production are operated by society as a whole – that is, for the common account,
according to a common plan, and with the participation of all members of society.
It will, in other words, abolish competition and replace it with association.
Moreover, since the management of industry by individuals necessarily implies private property,
and since competition is in reality merely the manner and form in which the control of industry
by private property owners expresses itself, it follows that private property cannot be separated
from competition and the individual management of industry. Private property must, therefore, be
abolished and in its place must come the common utilization of all instruments of production and
the distribution of all products according to common agreement – in a word, what is called the
communal ownership of goods.
In fact, the abolition of private property is, doubtless, the shortest and most significant way to
characterize the revolution in the whole social order which has been made necessary by the
development of industry – and for this reason it is rightly advanced by communists as their main
deman

>> No.13491297

Bioscript has filed preliminary proxy statements relating to merger with Option Care

what does this mean for the stock?

>> No.13491301
File: 126 KB, 1024x1024, 1553522334156m.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491301

ODP

>> No.13491308
File: 2.44 MB, 320x320, wtf.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491308

Why is the defunct tiny ZOOM chinese company still rocketing?

>> No.13491312 [DELETED] 

>>13491284
To sum up, the most prominent socio-economic trend during the last
decades involves a continuous process of change in consumer and savings
behavior. Traditional savings behavior and conventional consumer behavior
were gradually and slowly replaced by a subtle trend in society towards
conspicuous consumption and living on tick, which strengthened steadily in
many advanced industrial countries and throughout various social classes in
the past century. For the benefit of signaling status and wealth to ones social
environment by consuming more excellent goods, and conversely for
avoiding the failure to consume in due quantity and quality, more and more
people accepted progressively rising financial burden.

>> No.13491320

>>13490829

Hope you were patient and followed your own answer.

>> No.13491327 [DELETED] 

>>13491295
Will the peaceful abolition of private property be possible?
It would be desirable if this could happen, and the communists would certainly be the last to
oppose it. Communists know only too well that all conspiracies are not only useless, but even
harmful. They know all too well that revolutions are not made intentionally and arbitrarily, but
that, everywhere and always, they have been the necessary consequence of conditions which were
wholly independent of the will and direction of individual parties and entire classes.
But they also see that the development of the proletariat in nearly all civilized countries has been
violently suppressed, and that in this way the opponents of communism have been working
toward a revolution with all their strength. If the oppressed proletariat is finally driven to
revolution, then we communists will defend the interests of the proletarians with deeds as we now
defend them with words

>> No.13491347

>>13491320
You know what? 300 dollars is not that much of an L for me, and its just what was left from my birthday money (family got together to buy me a new PC and I had 300 left so I decided to learn how to invest with that).

I will leave it there and see what's up, who knows people are saying that it may go higher than .50 next spike.

>> No.13491348 [DELETED] 

>>13491327
What will be the course of this revolution?
Above all, it will establish a democratic constitution, and through this, the direct or indirect
dominance of the proletariat. Direct in England, where the proletarians are already a majority of
the people. Indirect in France and Germany, where the majority of the people consists not only of
proletarians, but also of small peasants and petty bourgeois who are in the process of falling into
the proletariat, who are more and more dependent in all their political interests on the proletariat,
and who must, therefore, soon adapt to the demands of the proletariat. Perhaps this will cost a
second struggle, but the outcome can only be the victory of the proletariat.
Democracy would be wholly valueless to the proletariat if it were not immediately used as a
means for putting through measures directed against private property and ensuring the livelihood
of the proletariat. The main measures, emerging as the necessary result of existing relations, are
the following:
(i) Limitation of private property through progressive taxation, heavy inheritance
taxes, abolition of inheritance through collateral lines (brothers, nephews, etc.)
forced loans, etc.
(ii) Gradual expropriation of landowners, industrialists, railroad magnates and
shipowners, partly through competition by state industry, partly directly through
compensation in the form of bonds.
(iii) Confiscation of the possessions of all emigrants and rebels against the
majority of the people.
(iv) Organization of labor or employment of proletarians on publicly owned land,
in factories and workshops, with competition among the workers being abolished
and with the factory owners, in so far as they still exist, being obliged to pay the
same high wages as those paid by the state.

>> No.13491355

is there any way for a regular person to tell if a buy that comes through is a short covering?

>> No.13491361

>>13491129
Wait that’s super cool
Is that thinkOrSwim or some other free service?

>> No.13491364

>>13491312
Who thought it would be a good idea to spend money they don't have on shit they don't need and will be obsolete in 20 years?

>> No.13491365 [DELETED] 

>>13491327
An equal obligation on all members of society to work until such time as
private property has been completely abolished. Formation of industrial armies,
especially for agriculture.
(vi) Centralization of money and credit in the hands of the state through a national
bank with state capital, and the suppression of all private banks and bankers.
(vii) Increase in the number of national factories, workshops, railroads, ships;
bringing new lands into cultivation and improvement of land already under
cultivation – all in proportion to the growth of the capital and labor force at the
disposal of the nation.
(viii) Education of all children, from the moment they can leave their mother’s
care, in national establishments at national cost. Education and production
together.
(ix) Construction, on public lands, of great palaces as communal dwellings for
associated groups of citizens engaged in both industry and agriculture and
combining in their way of life the advantages of urban and rural conditions while
avoiding the one-sidedness and drawbacks of each.
(x) Destruction of all unhealthy and jerry-built dwellings in urban districts.
(xi) Equal inheritance rights for children born in and out of wedlock.
(xii) Concentration of all means of transportation in the hands of the nation.
It is impossible, of course, to carry out all hese measures at once. But one will always bring
others in its wake. Once the first radical attack on private property has been launched, the
proletariat will find itself forced to go ever further, to concentrate increasingly in the hands of the
state all capital, all agriculture, all transport, all trade. All the foregoing measures are directed to
this end; and they will become practicable and feasible, capable of producing their centralizing
effects to precisely the degree that the proletariat, through its labor, multiplies the country’s productive forces.
,

>> No.13491378
File: 8 KB, 225x225, images[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491378

>>13491290
I was referring to performance beat

>>13491355
Not really, unless you tape read and notice a very odd large block buy trade that could be a cover, which may also follow subsequent big block buys, starting a short squeeze.

You really have to know your tape reads and how it usually looks

>> No.13491382

>>13491364
Basically everyone?

>> No.13491392 [DELETED] 

>>13491365
What will be the consequences of the
ultimate disappearance of private property?
Society will take all forces of production and means of commerce, as well as the exchange and
distribution of products, out of the hands of private capitalists and will manage them in
accordance with a plan based on the availability of resources and the needs of the whole society.
In this way, most important of all, the evil consequences which are now associated with the
conduct of big industry will be abolished.
There will be no more crises; the expanded production, which for the present order of society is
overproduction and hence a prevailing cause of misery, will then be insufficient and in need of
being expanded much further. Instead of generating misery, overproduction will reach beyond the
elementary requirements of society to assure the satisfaction of the needs of all; it will create new
needs and, at the same time, the means of satisfying them. It will become the condition of, and the
stimulus to, new progress, which will no longer throw the whole social order into confusion, as
progress has always done in the past. Big industry, freed from the pressure of private property,
will undergo such an expansion that what we now see will seem as petty in comparison as
manufacture seems when put beside the big industry of our own day. This development of
industry will make available to society a sufficient mass of products to satisfy the needs of
everyone.
The same will be true of agriculture, which also suffers from the pressure of private property and
is held back by the division of privately owned land into small parcels. Here, existing
improvements and scientific procedures will be put into practice, with a resulting leap forward
which will assure to society all the products it needs.
In this way, such an abundance of goods will be able to satisfy the needs of all its members.

>> No.13491395
File: 504 KB, 720x513, 1517252579193.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491395

>>13491273
It's currently my largest dividend position (33 percent, next closest is telecom at 20 if that gives you any idea).

O - 15 percent
LTC -15 percent
AVB - 12 Percent
Main - 11 percent
STOR - 11 percent
WELL - 11 percent
SPG - 11 percent
IRM - 8 percent
APTS - 6 percent
Percentages are all somewhat arbitrary here, but the yield of this portfolio is about 4.8 percent. But I am somewhat concerned about the market performance in the long term and how a recession will fuck up the dividend growth. Just cut a good earner a while ago for dropping their dividend (name is slipping me)

>> No.13491398 [DELETED] 

>>13491392
The division of society into different, mutually hostile classes will then become unnecessary.
Indeed, it will be not only unnecessary but intolerable in the new social order. The existence of
classes originated in the division of labor, and the division of labor, as it has been known up to
the present, will completely disappear. For mechanical and chemical processes are not enough to
bring industrial and agricultural production up to the level we have described; the capacities of
the men who make use of these processes must undergo a corresponding development.
Just as the peasants and manufacturing workers of the last century changed their whole way of
life and became quite different people when they were drawn into big industry, in the same way,
communal control over production by society as a whole, and the resulting new development, will
both require an entirely different kind of human material.
People will no longer be, as they are today, subordinated to a single branch of production, bound
to it, exploited by it; they will no longer develop one of their faculties at the expense of all others;
they will no longer know only one branch, or one branch of a single branch, of production as a
whole. Even industry as it is today is finding such people less and less useful.
Industry controlled by society as a whole, and operated according to a plan, presupposes well-
rounded human beings, their faculties developed in balanced fashion, able to see the system of
production in its entirety

>> No.13491401

>>13491355

The candle patterns are obvious. It's usually no more than 3 of the same-sized small, green candles that appear during a cascade of selling with high seller's volume.

>> No.13491402
File: 177 KB, 600x595, cebd788e6953adde1f1efcfd11ad0cf4[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491402

>>13491361
Its Koyfin.com. A bunch of market analtyics and comparison tools/charts, all free, with a created account. The developers are super cool and add new features all the time based off of active suggestions on Twitter.

OP had it in the OP links but then it disappeared.

>> No.13491408 [DELETED] 

>>13491398
The form of the division of labor which makes one a peasant, another a cobbler, a third a factory
worker, a fourth a stock-market operator, has already been undermined by machinery and will
completely disappear. Education will enable young people quickly to familiarize themselves with
the whole system of production and to pass from one branch of production to another in response
to the needs of society or their own inclinations. It will, therefore, free them from the one-sided
character which the present-day division of labor impresses upon every individual. Communist
society will, in this way, make it possible for its members to put their comprehensively developed
faculties to full use. But, when this happens, classes will necessarily disappear. It follows that
society organized on a communist basis is incompatible with the existence of classes on the one
hand, and that the very building of such a society provides the means of abolishing class
differences on the other.
A corollary of this is that the difference between city and country is destined to disappear. The
management of agriculture and industry by the same people rather than by two different classes
of people is, if only for purely material reasons, a necessary condition of communist association.
The dispersal of the agricultural population on the land, alongside the crowding of the industrial
population into the great cities, is a condition which corresponds to an undeveloped state of both
agriculture and industry and can already be felt as an obstacle to further development.

>> No.13491424 [DELETED] 

>>13491408
The general co-operation of all members of society for the purpose of planned exploitation of the
forces of production, the expansion of production to the point where it will satisfy the needs of
all, the abolition of a situation in which the needs of some are satisfied at the expense of the needs
of others, the complete liquidation of classes and their conflicts, the rounded development of the
capacities of all members of society through the elimination of the present division of labor,
through industrial education, through engaging in varying activities, through the participation by
all in the enjoyments produced by all, through the combination of city and country – these are the
main consequences of the abolition of private property. What will be the influence of communist society on the
family?
It will transform the relations between the sexes into a purely private matter which concerns only
the persons involved and into which society has no occasion to intervene. It can do this since it
does away with private property and educates children on a communal basis, and in this way
removes the two bases of traditional marriage – the dependence rooted in private property, of the
women on the man, and of the children on the parents.
And here is the answer to the outcry of the highly moral philistines against the “community of
women”. Community of women is a condition which belongs entirely to bourgeois society and
which today finds its complete expression in prostitution. But prostitution is based on private
property and falls with it. Thus, communist society, instead of introducing community of women,
in fact abolishes it

>> No.13491436 [DELETED] 

“Demands of the Communist Party in Germany” were written by Karl Marx and Frederick Engels in
Paris between March 21 (when Engels arrived in Paris from Brussels) and March 24, 1848. This
document was discussed by members of the Central Authority, who approved and signed it as the.
political programme of the Communist League in the revolution that broke out in Germany. In March
it was printed as a leaflet, for distribution among revolutionary German emigrant workers who were
about to return home
Demands of the Communist Party in Germany
“Workers of all countries, unite!”
1. The whole of Germany shall be declared a single and indivisible republic.
2. Every German, having reached the age of 21, shall have the right to vote and to be elected,
provided he has not been convicted of a criminal offence.
3. Representatives of the people shall receive payment so that workers, too, shall be able to
become members of the German parliament.
4. Universal arming of the people. In future the armies shall be simultaneously labour armies, so
that the troops shall not, as formerly, merely consume, but shall produce more than is necessary
for their upkeep.
This will moreover be conducive to the organisation of labour.
5. Legal services shall be free of charge

>> No.13491437

Why do all of these trader and investor youtubers have courses or books for sale and are shilling them constantly? Makes them look like scam artists.
Are there any genuinely good trader youtubers that don't try to sell you on anything?

>> No.13491448 [DELETED] 

>>13491436
6. All feudal obligations, dues, corvées, tithes etc., which have hitherto weighed upon the rural
population, shall be abolished without compensation.
7. Princely and other feudal estates, together with mines, pits, and so forth, shall become the
property of the state. The estates shall be cultivated on a large scale and with the most up-to-date
scientific devices in the interests of the whole of society.
8. Mortgages on peasant lands shall be declared the property of the state. Interest on such
mortgages shall be paid by the peasants to the state.
9. In localities where the tenant system is developed, the land rent or the quit-rent shall be paid to
the state as a tax.
The measures specified in Nos. 6, 7, 8 and 9 are to be adopted in order to reduce the communal
and other burdens hitherto imposed upon the peasants and small tenant farmers without curtailing
the means available for defraying state expenses and without imperilling production.
The landowner in the strict sense, who is neither a peasant nor a tenant farmer, has no share in
production. Consumption on his part is, therefore, nothing but abuse.
10. A state bank, whose paper issues are legal tender, shall replace all private banks.
This measure will make it possible to regulate the credit system in the interest of the people as a
whole, and will thus undermine the dominion of the big financial magnates. Further, by gradually
substituting paper money for gold and silver coin, the universal means of exchange (that
indispensable prerequisite of bourgeois trade and commerce) will be cheapened, and gold and
silver will be set free for use in foreign trade. Finally, this measure is necessary in order to bind
the interests of the conservative bourgeoisie to the Government.

>> No.13491452

>>13491308
Good old pnd. I guess some unwitting boomers are still holding the wrong bag

>> No.13491459
File: 2.99 MB, 720x404, 1527587139831.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491459

So I guess we just wait around til Powell does his thing? Is the market really this afraid of the Fed right now?

Gay shit.

>> No.13491460 [DELETED] 

>>13491448
11. All the means of transport, railways, canals, steamships, roads, the posts etc. shall be taken
over by the state. They shall become the property of the state and shall be placed free at the
disposal of the impecunious classes.
12. All civil servants shall receive the same salary, the only exception being that civil servants
who have a family to support and who therefore have greater requirements, shall receive a higher
salary.
13. Complete separation of Church and State. The clergy of every denomination shall be paid
only by the voluntary contributions of their congregations.
14. The right of inheritance to be curtailed.
15. The introduction of steeply graduated taxes, and the abolition of taxes on articles of
consumption.
16. Inauguration of national workshops. The state guarantees a livelihood to all workers and
provides for those who are incapacitated for work.
17. Universal and free education of the people.
It is to the interest of the German proletariat, the petty bourgeoisie and the small peasants to
support these demands with all possible energy. Only by the realisation of these demands will the
millions in Germany, who have hitherto been exploited by a handful of persons and whom the
exploiters would like to keep in further subjection, win the rights and attain to that power to
which they are entitled as the producers of all wealth.

>> No.13491475

>>13491301
Why even bother wearing a bathing suit

>> No.13491476
File: 1.75 MB, 1024x1379, original___sonic_super_digest_7_cover_by_elesis_knight-d7nvg0f[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491476

>>13491437
If they were actually decent traders and had a system that produced consistent money, they wouldn't need to sell these things. Also, they would never give their actual personal strategies in these materials. It is basically a risk-free way for them to make money: sell you beginner, vague education, that makes you confident to enter the risk-arena of the stock market. They take on no risk by selling a product to you.

Here's what I recommend for Youtubers:

https://www.youtube.com/user/FidelityInvestments/playlists
https://www.youtube.com/user/YourTradingCoach/playlists
https://www.youtube.com/user/tradersfly/playlists
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCFLJzFo4dMSN3NZQ9O50FRQ/videos
^ Good YT chans for video basics on trading


https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCK-aOjEvZNJl3HINja0gAiQ/videos
^ For more advanced technical strategies

https://www.youtube.com/user/TraderUserGroup/videos
^ Weekly market round ups

https://www.youtube.com/user/DaytradeWarrior/playlists
^ A lot of day trading knowledge, but also much knowledge that can be applied to non-day traders as well, Warrior Trading channel has taught me a lot about technical market terms and aspects

https://www.youtube.com/user/madaztrader/featured
^ Mainly day trading strats

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC8gjB1PSXv_oAUSAQ16S0fA/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnMn36GT_H0X-w5_ckLtlgQ/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVJalJNQWimC2zWrIHR_bSQ/videos
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCp6aBHRM6ZS_kLeC57HV4kg
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLJiSMXJ9K-1AOTqIqdXJgQ
^General market and investing knowledge channels

>> No.13491479

Have the gods finally responded to my plea?

>> No.13491493 [DELETED] 

The “Paris Commune” was composed by Karl Marx as an address to the General Council of the
International, and included in a book, “The Civil War in France,” with the aim of distributing to
workers of all countries a clear understanding of the character and world-wide significance of the
heroic struggle of the Communards and their historical experience to learn from. The book was widely
circulated by 1872 it was translated into several languages and published throughout Europe and the
United States.
The first address was delivered on July 23rd, 1870, five days after the beginning of the Franco-
Prussian War. The second address, delivered on September 9, 1870, gave a historical overview of the
events a week after the army of Bonaparte was defeated. The third address, delivered on May 30,
1871, two days after the defeat of the Paris Commune – detailed the significance and the underlining
causes of the first workers government ever created.
The Civil War in France was originally published by Marx as only the third address, only the first
half of which is reproduced here. In 1891, on the 20th anniversary of the Paris Commune, Engels
put together a new collection of the work. Engels decided to include the first two addresses that
Marx made to the International.
The Address is included here because it can be regarded as an amendment to the Manifesto,
clarifying a number of issues relating to the state based on the experience of the Commune

>> No.13491502 [DELETED] 

On the dawn of March 18, Paris arose to the thunder-burst of “Vive la Commune!” What is the
Commune, that sphinx so tantalizing to the bourgeois mind?
“The proletarians of Paris,” said the Central Committee in its manifesto of March 18, “amidst the
failures and treasons of the ruling classes, have understood that the hour has struck for them to
save the situation by taking into their own hands the direction of public affairs.... They have
understood that it is their imperious duty, and their absolute right, to render themselves masters of
their own destinies, by seizing upon the governmental power.”
But the working class cannot simply lay hold of the ready-made state machinery, and wield
it for its own purposes.
The centralized state power, with its ubiquitous organs of standing army, police, bureaucracy,
clergy, and judicature – organs wrought after the plan of a systematic and hierarchic division of
labor – originates from the days of absolute monarchy, serving nascent bourgeois society as a
mighty weapon in its struggle against feudalism. Still, its development remained clogged by all
manner of medieval rubbish, seignorial rights, local privileges, municipal and guild monopolies,
and provincial constitutions. The gigantic broom of the French Revolution of the 18th century
swept away all these relics of bygone times, thus clearing simultaneously the social soil of its last
hindrances to the superstructure of the modern state edifice raised under the First Empire, itself
the offspring of the coalition wars of old semi-feudal Europe against modern Franc

>> No.13491509

>>13490541
Mhhh so just good for now? I just threw $100 at it a monday

>> No.13491512 [DELETED] 

>>13491493
uring the subsequent regimes, the government, placed under parliamentary control – that is,
under the direct control of the propertied classes – became not only a hotbed of huge national
debts and crushing taxes; with its irresistible allurements of place, pelf, and patronage, it became
not only the bone of contention between the rival factions and adventurers of the ruling classes;
but its political character changed simultaneously with the economic changes of society. At the
same pace at which the progress of modern industry developed, widened, intensified the class
antagonism between capital and labor, the state power assumed more and more the character of
the national power of capital over labor, of a public force organized for social enslavement, of an
engine of class despotism.
After every revolution marking a progressive phase in the class struggle, the purely repressive
character of the state power stands out in bolder and bolder relief. The Revolution of 1830,
resulting in the transfer of government from the landlords to the capitalists, transferred it from the
more remote to the more direct antagonists of the working men. The bourgeois republicans, who,
in the name of the February Revolution, took the state power, used it for the June [1848]
massacres, in order to convince the working class that “social” republic means the republic
entrusting their social subjection, and in order to convince the royalist bulk of the bourgeois and
landlord class that they might safely leave the cares and emoluments of government to the
bourgeois “republicans.”

>> No.13491536
File: 2.26 MB, 426x234, Im above this shit.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491536

What happened to AMD?

>> No.13491541
File: 64 KB, 749x1069, 1513991868716.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491541

LCI building up before the melt up

>> No.13491564

USO is recovering, I'm glad I "bought the failed dip"

>> No.13491567

>>13491459
15 minutes until circuit breakers are tripped :). Powell is about to destroy the market.

>> No.13491572

>>13491395
>WELL
I posted about this one a few times! Never took a position and forgot to keep an eye on it. How has it been doing for you?

>> No.13491578
File: 47 KB, 480x480, 1551250199998.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491578

>>13491541
The moon is made of cheese. We will go there.

>> No.13491580

>>13491567
I thought the rate was in a good spot? Remember the dot plot?

>> No.13491588

if the feds raise interest rates should i panic sell?

>> No.13491592
File: 2.69 MB, 307x292, 1520282909114.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491592

>>13491578
>The moon is made of cheese

>> No.13491594
File: 49 KB, 250x357, 1556479121896.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491594

>>13491509
I really don't see this going lower than 2 based on the performance so far today. Considering many are calling for the ATH to hit 9 or 10 dollars, some 20 or 30 cents is chump change. I think this is still a good price point and the only people who sold are retards who didn't even read the reason and FUDfags

>> No.13491611

>>13491594

</sigh> I wish I could masturbate in my office. :'(

>> No.13491616

>>13491592
We'll have so much cheddar once we finish the moon mission, it'll be awesome. We'll only do the best drugs.

>> No.13491634

>>13491616
>We'll only do the best drugs.
and hookers

>> No.13491641

>>13491588
Why would you panic sell over a little hike
Maybe think longer term than 1 hike

>> No.13491643

>>13491611
You could always just introduce an intern to your corporate policies.

>> No.13491665
File: 789 KB, 1232x989, xty.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491665

what the fook is going on this thread

>> No.13491666

>>13491616
>>13491634
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_28MWafggX0

>> No.13491686

>>13491665

unbridled faggotry per usual

>> No.13491702

If you're holding LCI put your sell limit as high as you can

>> No.13491707

>>13491666
bro you just got 666 for the second time itt.

>> No.13491740

Tesla 2025 bonds are yielding over 8%.
Good buy?

>> No.13491748

>>13491572
Kinda just holding it right now. Price seems stable as far as real estate goes. Been debating on raising my stake in it for a greater dividend, especially since some of my other positions are flopping I feel. But I'm worried about real estate long term

>> No.13491754
File: 29 KB, 450x370, 1554528335908.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491754

>>13491707
oh shit i didn't even notice... time to stop posting i guess

>> No.13491759
File: 180 KB, 579x411, chrome_uDScL9i6Rq.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491759

oh we bullish

>> No.13491764

BREAKING Federal Reserve leaves key rate unchanged amid mixed economic signals

>> No.13491778
File: 384 KB, 795x426, 1548898012890.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491778

dow 27k lads

>> No.13491780 [DELETED] 

>>13491512
However, after their one heroic exploit of June, the bourgeois republicans had, from the front, to
fall back to the rear of the “Party of Order” – a combination formed by all the rival fractions and
factions of the appropriating classes. The proper form of their joint-stock government was the
parliamentary republic, with Louis Bonaparte for its president. Theirs was a regime of avowed
class terrorism and deliberate insult towards the “vile multitude.”
If the parliamentary republic, as M. Thiers said, “divided them [the different fractions of the
ruling class] least,” it opened an abyss between that class and the whole body of society outside
their spare ranks. The restraints by which their own divisions had under former regimes still
checked the state power, were removed by their union; and in view of the threatening upheaval of
the proletariat, they now used that state power mercilessly and ostentatiously as the national war
engine of capital against labor.
In their uninterrupted crusade against the producing masses, they were, however, bound not only
to invest the executive with continually increased powers of repression, but at the same time to
divest their own parliamentary stronghold – the National Assembly – one by one, of all its own
means of defence against the Executive. The Executive, in the person of Louis Bonaparte, turned
them out. The natural offspring of the “Party of Order” republic was the Second Empire.
The empire, with the coup d’état for its birth certificate, universal suffrage for its sanction, and
the sword for its sceptre, professed to rest upon the peasantry, the large mass of producers not
directly involved in the struggle of capital and labor. It professed to save the working class by
breaking down parliamentarism, and, with it, the undisguised subserviency of government to the
propertied classes..

>> No.13491784

>>13491512
The only good communist is a dead communist

>> No.13491790

>>13491740
HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHA

>> No.13491791

Please all I want is my money back, please YUMA make it to at least .38 next spike, not even asking for a profit.

>> No.13491798 [DELETED] 

>>13491780

In reality, it was the only form of government possible at a time when the bourgeoisie had already
lost, and the working class had not yet acquired, the faculty of ruling the nation. It was acclaimed
throughout the world as the savior of society. Under its sway, bourgeois society, freed from
political cares, attained a development unexpected even by itself. Its industry and commerce
expanded to colossal dimensions; financial swindling celebrated cosmopolitan orgies; the misery
of the masses was set off by a shameless display of gorgeous, meretricious and debased luxury.
The state power, apparently soaring high above society and the very hotbed of all its corruptions.
Its own rottenness, and the rottenness of the society it had saved, were laid bare by the bayonet of
Prussia, herself eagerly bent upon transferring the supreme seat of that regime from Paris to
Berlin. Imperialism is, at the same time, the most prostitute and the ultimate form of the state
power which nascent bourgeois society had commenced to elaborate as a means of its own
emancipation from feudalism, and which full-grown bourgeois society had finally transformed
into a means for the enslavement of labor by capital.
The direct antithesis to the empire was the Commune. The cry of “social republic,” with which
the February [1848] Revolution was ushered in by the Paris proletariat, did but express a vague
aspiration after a republic that was not only to supercede the monarchical form of class rule, but
class rule itself. The Commune was the positive form of that republic

>> No.13491799
File: 213 KB, 786x1100, D5We9Y5UUAAyfF_[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491799

who is this faggot spamming an entire book in this thread

thanks for using a trip at least so i can filter it

>> No.13491816

>>13491798
Better dead than red

>> No.13491818 [DELETED] 

>>13491798
Paris, the central seat of the old governmental power, and, at the same time, the social stronghold
of the French working class, had risen in arms against the attempt of Thiers and the Rurals to
restore and perpetuate that old governmental power bequeathed to them by the empire. Paris
could resist only because, in consequence of the siege, it had got rid of the army, and replaced it
by a National Guard, the bulk of which consisted of working men. This fact was now to be
transformed into an institution. The first decree of the Commune, therefore, was the suppression
of the standing army, and the substitution for it of the armed people.
The Commune was formed of the municipal councillors, chosen by universal suffrage in the
various wards of the town, responsible and revocable at short terms. The majority of its members
were naturally working men, or acknowledged representatives of the working class. The
Commune was to be a working, not a parliamentary body, executive and legislative at the same
time.
Instead of continuing to be the agent of the Central Government, the police was at once stripped
of its political attributes, and turned into the responsible, and at all times revocable, agent of the
Commune. So were the officials of all other branches of the administration. From the members of
the Commune downwards, the public service had to be done at workman’s wage. The vested
interests and the representation allowances of the high dignitaries of state disappeared along with
the high dignitaries themselves. Public functions ceased to be the private property of the tools of
the Central Government. Not only municipal administration, but the whole initiative hitherto
exercised by the state was laid into the hands of the Commune

>> No.13491830

Bunge Still continuing the Ultrabull from the double bottom

>> No.13491837

>>13491512

Communism is gay

>> No.13491838 [DELETED] 
File: 2 KB, 125x75, 76FA8D13-BF79-401C-8DBF-EC19A159B051.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491838

Powell wants us to /make it/

>> No.13491841 [DELETED] 

>>13491816
>>13491818

Having once got rid of the standing army and the police – the physical force elements of the old
government – the Commune was anxious to break the spiritual force of repression, the “parson-
power,” by the disestablishment and disendowment of all churches as proprietary bodies. The
priests were sent back to the recesses of private life, there to feed upon the alms of the faithful in
imitation of their predecessors, the apostles.
The whole of the educational institutions were opened to the people gratuitously, and at the same
time cleared of all interference of church and state. Thus, not only was education made accessible
to all, but science itself freed from the fetters which class prejudice and governmental force had
imposed upon it.
The judicial functionaries were to be divested of that sham independence which had but served to
mask their abject subserviency to all succeeding governments to which, in turn, they had taken,
and broken, the oaths of allegiance. Like the rest of public servants, magistrates and judges were
to be elective, responsible, and revocable.
The Paris Commune was, of course, to serve as a model to all the great industrial centres of
France. The communal regime once established in Paris and the secondary centres, the old
centralized government would in the provinces, too, have to give way to the self-government of
the producers

>> No.13491842

>>13491818
Bro please stop. I can't even report you for spamming, the captcha won't let me. Are you some 4chan mod kinda thing?

>> No.13491843

>>13491594
>down 28%
LMAO. Why can't you admit when you have lost?

>> No.13491845

IOER to 2.35% from 2.4%

>> No.13491852 [DELETED] 

>>13491799
Economic policy has a direct impact on the stock market. This might be hard for you to wrap your head around, but the stock market is part of the economy

>> No.13491858 [DELETED] 

>>13491841
Can you please be quit we’re trying to make money

>> No.13491871

>>13491842
probably is a mod.. mods are fucking faggots here.. like take big dick in ass and mouth at same time type of faggots.

>> No.13491877

>>13491852
ok so how about he fucking pastes this essay in a pastebin and links it ONCE instead of flooding the thread

>> No.13491879

>>13491308
Jackasses buying it off the ticker when they want to buy zoom telecommunications.

>> No.13491882

Finally mods responded to my plea

>> No.13491883

>>13491871
Oh god now the mods are communist can it get any worse

>> No.13491891
File: 16 KB, 240x237, 911.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491891

>>13491843
>hurr durr charts

>> No.13491895
File: 116 KB, 750x1061, DrOrR9bU8AAEMUY[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491895

BASED
A
S
E
D

thank you mods

>> No.13491897

>>13491871
Reminder mods are gods, do not threaten them

>> No.13491902
File: 361 KB, 780x770, 1552928161564.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491902

Even a spammer mod cuck can't stop the golden bull.

>> No.13491910

In the end, his faggotry made us all make it.

>> No.13491914

It's like everybody forgot about the crude report 4 hours ago. Back in the green!

>> No.13491919
File: 88 KB, 680x727, 1556470781783.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491919

>>13491895
>>13491882
Compared to mods of other social media 4chan actually does an okay job
People who constantly complain are the people who would yell at a minimum wage worker about a McChicken

>> No.13491923

>>13491588

Everyone else will

>> No.13491924
File: 11 KB, 216x234, BEFB4998-22E8-43EF-916A-8435298C97FE.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491924

>>13491902
They shorted SPY at 230

>> No.13491933

>>13491891
Shit's not going back up when the FDA said no. That's a long term investment you're looking at now. I'm sure you'll be back in 8 months laughing about your 50% profit after everyone here made 10x that by actually playing the market instead of sitting on a shit investment

>> No.13491936

>>13491759

Nope, death of the dollar confirmed. Interest rates are way too low.

>> No.13491938

>>13491764
This is not a rate cut or QE4

What is everyone getting so excited about?

>> No.13491942

>>13491933
FDA didnt say no, they just delayed things

>> No.13491943

>>13491936
>$2T in infrastructure spending

Buy Bitcoin

>> No.13491950

Quick question, how much will I get fucked in the ass when I file my taxes this year? I used my tax returns (student and part time so I got all my taxes back).

Really don't know about this topic.

>> No.13491951

MED

This stock been good to me
Love making money of fatness

>> No.13491952

>>13491933
See you in August lmao. If you want to just trade ups and downs go sit with the crypto shitters in the rest of the board.

>> No.13491959

>>13491942
Essentially the same thing. And do you know the speed at which the government works? It'll be months before it's undelayed.

>> No.13491963

>>13491950

Are unrealized gains taxed in the US like they are in the EUSSR? Here in the EU they just tell us what our shit is worth and if we don't like it, tough luck. Can't afford the taxes on stuff you've owned for decades? Sell it.

SAYUUUUUUUU

>> No.13491964

>>13491759
>>13491938
Dollar index under 90 when?

>> No.13491966
File: 173 KB, 480x319, 1548137588644.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13491966

>>13491950

>> No.13491970

Can I found a holding company in a country with no income tax, have all my stocks be in that company, and pay no tax on those dividends?

>> No.13491975

>DXY
DXY
>DXY
DXY
>DXY

>> No.13491978

>>13491963
No but some Democrats want them to be.

>> No.13491981

RISE MY LITTLE REDS.

>> No.13491988

>>13491970
How many $ would you be putting into this holding company per year?

>> No.13491993

>>13491978

back to /pol/

>> No.13492001

>>13491978

Kill them. Kill them now. It's really the difference between an oppressive system and outright slavery where the government can bust into your home to check what you have, and set prices when they want to take something from you.

>> No.13492003

>>13491919
Well for the record I did come in here and bitch about that sandwich I got at McDonald's that one time, but it's not like I went and tried to get my money back. It's like when you're ordering from a fast food joint you're already gambling, sometimes you get fucked, other times you get the jackpot, like I got a Rodeo Cheese burger from Burger King with 2 patties and bacon, shit was cash. I advise you to invest in Burger King over the McDonald. Then as I say that and look... Burger King's owned by the fucking Canadians. Meh fuck it, Tim Horton's is probably the best coffee chain and I've been using this Tim Horton's mug for like 7 years now. I'll give them a pass this time. Ticker symbol QSR for some reason. Probably cause they're from Quebec or some shit.

>> No.13492007
File: 54 KB, 629x624, 1556667344884.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492007

>>13491993
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.bloomberg.com/amp/opinion/articles/2019-04-09/democratic-plan-for-unrealized-capital-gains-tax-would-be-a-mess

>> No.13492013

>>13491975
Honestly not that big of a move
Dunno what you’re seeing

>> No.13492020

>>13490562
Trying to catch that DF falling knife was a mistake.

>> No.13492021
File: 84 KB, 499x1039, 560db0e297ce1.image.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492021

Anyone have any good recommendations for a water heater? any brands to avoid?

>> No.13492024

>>13492013
it tells you a lot about money flows

>> No.13492026

>>13490940
any other way we can communicate? like a discord?

>> No.13492034

>>13492007
Why would they want to raise taxes? Don't they understand all this organic and natural growth is because of Trump's tax cuts? It's like they want to fuck everything up and then take your money to fix it, and expect you to become dependent upon their half assed way of fixing their own fuck up.

>> No.13492035

>>13491141
do you have a discord?

>> No.13492045

>>13491970
Hadn't thought of this but I want to know too now

>> No.13492047

>>13492026
he's here like every single day

>> No.13492048

>>13491963
>taxing unrealized gains
Wew. My EU shithole doesnt.

>> No.13492052

holy fuck YUMA actually fucking recovering to the .30.

Thanks based anon for convincing me not to panic sell.

>> No.13492053
File: 670 KB, 800x631, 1549565900194.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492053

>>13492021
>Buying a water heater when you can buy companies that heat people directly

Never gonna make it.

>> No.13492058
File: 31 KB, 744x495, Capture.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492058

Sold for $12.80 yesterday. Damn I love it when I win.

>> No.13492062

>>13492021
Get a WHR they're dope

>> No.13492064

>>13492024
But the move just now (gold, EURUSD or DXY) was small, not super notable compared to other small gaps on the short term charts, not very noticeable on long term charts.
I don’t necessarily see any momentum reversal happening in the short/mid term from this news
Looks to me like just a little bump
I’m curious what you’re reading in it

>> No.13492072

>>13491988
I don't know. My country doesn't tax foreign earned income unlike the US. But I don't know whether that holding company would qualify.

>> No.13492075

>>13492053

LMAO!

>> No.13492082

>>13492034

Yeah, they wrote a book about this. The Protocols of the Elders of Zion. It was written in like 1903 and it describes modern day events eerily well. Muslim scholars bring this book up all the time, it's hilarious.

>> No.13492086

>>13492052

You're welcome.

>Patience is a virtue

>> No.13492087

>>13491320
>>13490808

Anon I would hug you if I saw you in the streets, bought at dip and doubled down on the damn stock, walked away with a fucking profit which was way beyond what I wanted

>> No.13492096

>>13492072
Oooooh you’re not in the US. I was going to suggest a Roth IRA which lets you contribute $6k a year, and doesn’t tax dividends (I THINK).

Not sure what to do in your situation.

>> No.13492101

>>13492082
>Muslim scholars bring up antisemitic trash all the time

yeah not a surprise

>> No.13492102

>>13492087

You're welcome.

>Patience is key

>> No.13492104

>>13490808
This is good advice.

I probably should just exit some of my positions instead of DCAing down.

>> No.13492107

>>13492034
Some of them understand it's a bad idea. But the tax cuts are Trump's so they must not only oppose but reverse them.

Warren wants a wealth tax. And she is running for president. With no real chance but still.

>> No.13492109

>>13492101

Do you know what the word semitism means?

>> No.13492110

>>13492101
>Muslim “scholars” stopped learning new things centuries ago
Gee its almost like their culture is stuck in the dark ages or something...

>> No.13492112

>>13492109
do you know what the word anti-semitism means?

>> No.13492114

>>13492104

Also always have your exit planned before your entry. Knowing where to find the door is a thousand times more important than jumping in the party.

>> No.13492116
File: 224 KB, 1663x791, Pink-Wojak-Crash.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492116

UH GUYS...

>> No.13492126

>>13492034
Literally just summed up the party. I mean I don't really larp as a libertarian as much as I used to but an unrealized capital gains tax to me sounds like legitimate theft.

>> No.13492127

>>13492112

Semitism is jewish influence, in other words power. Political, monetary, societal. Tell me, the wall man. Where is he building his wall?

>> No.13492131
File: 44 KB, 942x306, 1542850354860.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492131

Market wants to be a little bitch today.

>> No.13492147
File: 108 KB, 1092x726, 1497799869871.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492147

>> No.13492148
File: 12 KB, 217x232, 1544476194817.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492148

Wtf

>> No.13492149
File: 555 KB, 616x505, xxer.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492149

>>13490562
Dean shouldnt be more than 0.10% of your portfolio
its the worst food stock of all time

>> No.13492153

>>13492116
>>13492131

Just some profit taking. Chill.

>> No.13492161

Holy fuk I keep winning with YUMA.

>> No.13492165

Stop loss orders are lifesavers

>> No.13492172
File: 85 KB, 601x601, 1425343954999.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492172

>>13492148
My day change just dropped by 60%.

>> No.13492174

>>13492096
I'm considering moving there. But the taxes, honestly are a big turn-off. I wish I could hold all my assets in a tax-free country, and be able to live comfortably anywhere without worrying about taxes

>> No.13492181

>>13492110

Women and gays have no rights in their societies and it's so stable that it's stagnant. HMMMMMMMM

Do you guys like where society is headed? Mandatory tranny delusion police, HR departments everywhere. Feminists teaching your boys they aren't really boys and encouraging girls to be shallow whores who should aspire to barren, marry black and have dogs instead of real love.

>> No.13492185
File: 51 KB, 1500x1126, cool.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492185

>>13492161

>> No.13492192
File: 38 KB, 1024x575, 2dd03f8fdc423c97f7193abe89359a4b9c79bd94r1-1366-768v2_hq[1].jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492192

>>13492064
>>13491975
What's the ticker for the dollar index on ToS?

>> No.13492194
File: 54 KB, 648x487, Total%20Federal%20Spending%20FY%202017[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492194

>>13492126

It's not like the rest of your taxes are spent on useful things. Trump can't even change shit because dems and neocons have spent decades piling on mandatory spending.

>> No.13492195

>>13492192
dxy?

>> No.13492197
File: 618 KB, 1280x574, file.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492197

>>13492192
?

>> No.13492198

This market has autism today

>> No.13492201

>>13492197
yeah wtf is that big ass green candle?

>> No.13492205

>>13492194
Nah I know, from a practical standpoint I hate how much taxes we collect. And that's why I still consider myself libertarian in a real world setting because like these retards need ANYMORE money. But ideally, I think if we trimmed a lot of fat around our spending then we could all have our cake and eat it too.

But Jamal needs his gibs and trump needs the space force so guess I can go fuck myself

>> No.13492212

>>13492198
Powell said "concern" and market tanked. Thank god my SPY puts are saved. Can always count on Uncle Powell to say something stupid and tank the market.

>> No.13492213
File: 33 KB, 848x477, Capture.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492213

Pls help

>> No.13492215

>>13490541
2.29 now. Seriously though how low will it go

>> No.13492216

>>13492197
a dollar spike like that leads to a sell off in fucking everything...

>> No.13492219

>>13492153

retard

>> No.13492222

>>13492216
Tf happened for it to do that

>> No.13492223
File: 13 KB, 480x360, 1556507002304.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492223

>mfw refr

>> No.13492224

>>13492205

That's the thing though, Trump WAS cutting spending like a madman in his early presidency, but then probably saw that it was useless and switched to creating a strong military. Meanwhile states everywhere are reintroducing gold and silver as money.

>> No.13492236
File: 414 KB, 480x287, wrong.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492236

>>13492127
>Semitism is jewish influence

>> No.13492238

>>13492222
something probably minor, like a butterfly in china flapped its wing fucked uply.

>> No.13492259
File: 58 KB, 300x319, ph.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492259

>>13492131
>>13492147
>>13492148

>> No.13492263

>>13492223
It's mooning, I made it.

>> No.13492265

>>13492219

How so? The first ones out took profits, retards like you panic sell for a loss, the stop losses cascade to the bottom and then the market recovers just like it's doing already.

>> No.13492268

>>13492236

Yeah that's what I said. Otherwise it would be named differently, like anti-judaism.

>> No.13492269

>>13492047
oh, thanks for that! guess I'll stay here then.

>> No.13492270

Never seen anything like YUMA today this is straight up some anime comeback shit.

>> No.13492272

>>13492224
>Meanwhile states everywhere are reintroducing gold and silver as money.
no they're not lol

>> No.13492277

>>13491141
what broker do you use investing here?

>> No.13492279

>>13492270
wtf I'm a weeb now.

>> No.13492286
File: 123 KB, 426x287, 2DwF[1].gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492286

>>13492195
First it was /dx then DXY, now neither works in ThinkOrSwim.

>>13492197
I wish some of the Bloomberg features spilled over into ToS

>> No.13492290
File: 1.49 MB, 210x186, 1554890857693.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492290

>>13492026
>any other way we can communicate? like a discord?

>> No.13492291

>>13492272

They're removing the taxes on exchanging metals for currency. Gold has also been classified as the highest class of assets again.

>> No.13492292

>>13492277

Fidelity is patrician's choice.

>> No.13492295
File: 17 KB, 688x369, Capture.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492295

YES YES YES

>> No.13492301

>>13492277
I use Ally. the broker i used before, TradeKing, was purchased by Ally. Ally also has a pretty decent savings account

>> No.13492303
File: 26 KB, 700x670, 1556160156765.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492303

>>13492263
We did it anon

>> No.13492306

Existential despair over life choices and dead-end job kicking in time love it.
>the 15K student loan debt and you came out of college making less than $15 an hour.

>> No.13492308
File: 34 KB, 658x464, 1556679496707.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492308

Got 30 bux in RH account, wut buy? I check my account once a day in the mornings

>> No.13492310

>>13492181
No one likes where society is headed. Everyone knows shits fucked.

I don’t like either of the extreme options you’ve presented, but the middle ground is disappeared, so it’s time for the Fourth Impact.

>>13492194
>science and education are basically nil
>spend more on interest on the national debt than R&D and educating citizens

I FUCKING HATE YOU FUCKING BABYBOOMERS AND YOUR GODDAMN DEBT FETISHISM.

YOUR POLICIES OF PUNISHING PEOPLE FOR SAVING FOR RETIREMENT AND REWARDING PEOPLE FOR SPENDING BEYOND THEIR MEANS IS DISGUSTING AND TOXIC.

>Powell shutting down that feminist trying to take a dig at Stephen Moore
Kek. Very kek, well done PowPow.
>if only Yellen were here...

>> No.13492317

>>13492303
I wish I knew why it was going up. Hopefully some sketchy insider trading ahead of good news, but I'm probably delusional.

>> No.13492321

>>13492306
I'm a community college student right now, afraid to transfer to uni because of the horror stories I see about debts.

Thinking about becoming an Nurse anesthetist instead of a doctor, its cheaper and you get paid around 60-75 per hour.

>> No.13492325
File: 139 KB, 300x300, 1544862333891.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492325

>>13492224
Man 2020 is gonna be a real shit show, isn't it

>> No.13492328

>>13492174
Puerto Rico has a special arrangement whereby their residents are exempt from US Federal taxation, but they have to pay Puerto Rico tax, but Puerto Rico doesn't tax investment income.

>> No.13492332

>>13492321

You can become an aetheist for free, Anon.

>> No.13492338

>>13492301
>Ally also has a pretty decent savings account
Does this work like a traditional bank savings account? Can I take money out as I please? Any requirements to get an account? Currently using Wells Fargo and it's shit.

>> No.13492340
File: 1.98 MB, 250x187, 1547421484212.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492340

Did people convince themselves the rates should be cut? Irrational bullshit market.

>> No.13492341

Man I don't believe that REFR isn't just a pump and dump right now.

Think I'll sell plug in favor of rebuying and just set a stop loss.

>> No.13492342

>>13492328
But Puerto Rico is a shithole

>> No.13492348

>>13492238
Fuck you Danny start shorting the spy again so they flip it

>> No.13492351
File: 43 KB, 646x457, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492351

>>13492306
>15k

Ayy lmao, at least you lucked out with waaaay less debt than the average student, from what I remember. I was in the hole for around 80k and just killed that shit off last year. You'll be alright as long as you strategically manage your funds and keep punching out that debt.

>> No.13492353

>>13492277
Etrade is best trade.

>> No.13492356

>>13492338
its only an online bank. i do believe you can get a debit card but I don't use it. I just do online transfers to my savings. it does take 2 business days (usually) to get money transferred from Ally Savings to my bank account which is the only draw back. But that's what I have a credit card for...to buy me time with 1% cash back

>> No.13492360

>>13492270

>Sell YUMA
>get profit
>It plummets

guess I fucking have anime plot armor or some shit.=

>> No.13492361

>>13492340
Honestly, they should be cut. Look at inflation it is way below the 2% target. Powell refuses to look at data in a logical and factual way. Whenever the data doesn't agree with his preconceived notions he ignores it or makes excuses. Today he said the low inflation is irrelevant because it's transient and he expects it to raise. Notice how he ignores some data and immediately follows others? He is a terrible fed chairman with obvious political bias to hurt Trump. How about when inflation is low he cut rates? When it comes back up he can raise rates then. A 5 year old could do his job.

>> No.13492362

>>13492348
But I've got all my meme dollars in oil and Frontier right now...

>> No.13492364
File: 290 KB, 200x200, tenor[1].gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492364

>>13492308
Save up a bit more mcchicken money and buy a share of SPXL when you can

>> No.13492367

Wow... the LA Times still exists and covers the fed meeting? They even get to ask a question?

>>13492310
Has there ever been a shittier generation than the Baby Boomers?

Maybe those people who burned random villagers as witches?

>> No.13492376
File: 1.90 MB, 316x213, 1540414802383.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492376

>>13492342

>> No.13492377

>>13492356
Interesting. I'm looking on nerd wallet now at other banking options. Had no idea you coould get these kind of interest rates from a savings account (new to all this). I think I'll move my money to one of these banks, only $15k in savings, but still. Thanks anon.

>> No.13492381

INUV

NAO

YVR

>> No.13492383

For everyone talking about their favorite brokers, how many brokers have you actually tried?

I love schwab, but I’ve only used them and RH.

>> No.13492389

>>13492361
I'm not saying he shouldn't. I'm just saying it was silly to expect that he would. He is scared shitless of rocking the boat. There was a 99% chance he would punt for now.

>> No.13492391

>>13492301
is that the one you stick to because you started with it? would you have picked a different one if you had a chance?

>> No.13492395
File: 2.93 MB, 2016x1460, sanic-suicide[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492395

>>13492362
>FTR

>> No.13492396
File: 258 KB, 483x638, image_0.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492396

My only reason for trying to get more money at my job is so I can invest more and chase more stocks. Legitimately my only motivation right now.

Anybody else?

>> No.13492397

>>13492361
>How about when inflation is low he cut rates? When it comes back up he can raise rates then.
I think this is how most reasonable people would approach it, but yer man Jerome seems to have this magic number theory where, when the economy is "normal" he should have the rate set to such and such percent just because. He doesn't just use the rate changes as a tool like he should.

>> No.13492399

>VSTM reports tomorrow after earnings
AAAAAAAAHHHHH WHAT DO I DO NOW?!

>> No.13492403

>>13492360

Hope you exited after you made a profit!

>> No.13492410

>>13492383

etrade
fidelity
sharebuilders
robinhood's scam for pajeets
TDameritrade
some other bullshit from 18 years ago I can't remember...

>> No.13492412

>>13492391
yes and probably, I've heard great things about the JPM "you invest" platform

>> No.13492415

>>13492367
Probably the generation that was born around 1870-80.

>> No.13492423

>>13492367
millennials are worse than baby boomers by far

>> No.13492425

>>13492395
You're going to wish you had bought these fucks for the low low price of $2.

>> No.13492429
File: 116 KB, 300x464, sonic-the-hedgehog-thumbs-up[1].png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492429

>>13492412
I think basically anyone with a JPM/Chase account or credit card account (basically an online login) has the option to open a You Invest account.

I also believe they give you 100 trades free during the first year or something like that. Their visualizations for your portfolio are pretty sleek and nifty too.

>> No.13492430

>>13492403
Yup, went on .25, with 1200 shares, exited at .30 for a 60 dollar profit minu the shitty shares I bought walked away with 30 dollars in profit.

>> No.13492435

>>13492377
if your just using the savings, Ally's savings account is free, FDIC insured and gives 2.2% interest. only bad part is you can't transfer from savings to brokerage (as far as I can tell), but thats a minor inconvenience

>> No.13492441
File: 101 KB, 1600x900, likeaboss.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492441

>>13492430

>> No.13492442
File: 141 KB, 701x376, xf.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492442

the bogs got me on SoyB. It just falls everyday and even dumb Wheat and Corn mooned today. FUCK

>> No.13492446

>>13490173
>if you blindly buy things without understanding how the stock market works or doing any research on the individual stocks you're buying, you will lose money and it will be entirely your fault.
The stock either goes up or down you retarded boomer, it isn't rocket science and anyone who claims they truly know where the stock market is going and the perfect time to buy is lying.

>> No.13492449
File: 24 KB, 419x416, 1554137953321.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492449

WHO HERE /REFR/?

>> No.13492452
File: 100 KB, 1394x677, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492452

>>13492425
I've actively swung them multiple times in the past and it was thrilling but you can't honestly tell me that this looks worth the risk now

>> No.13492462

made a new thread

>>13492458
>>13492458
>>13492458

>> No.13492465
File: 453 KB, 1125x2436, 66B05CFD-7E18-4265-BACE-73AE2F1FB144.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
13492465

>>13492412
is your account under an IRA? I guess not since you can withdraw right. I don't plan on taking any money out till maybe 30 years from now.

>> No.13492486

>>13492425
Why would he regret making a good decision? It looks like they never really recovered from 2008 crash. Do you have an investment thesis? I think they'll keep losing to larger and more successful telcomm companies.

>> No.13492687

>>13492351
It's more a philosophical kind of loathing at my job.