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Spekulatius

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Posts posted by Spekulatius

  1. These 3x ETF’s get killed by volatility if the underlying index goes nowhere and the index just seesaws. It’s going to essentially buy high and sell low all the time due to the inherent 3x  leverage. 

  2. 1 hour ago, SharperDingaan said:

    Not a bad thing; but if you want to get that European travel in .... do it sooner rather than later.

    I booked a vacation during Gulf War I. It was very cheap.

     

    So, if you are cheap, you could get better airfare prices if this escalates. In any case, the Gaza Strip is not in Europe, so it’s not going to affect European travel directly. Flights to Israel, or travel from Europe to India or Gulf States is a different story.

  3. 3 hours ago, whatstheofficerproblem said:

    Thanks for the insight @abyli, but wasn't this the case a few years ago too? Everything you mentioned has been that way since Xi came into power. You were bullish then, what was the nail in the coffin for you? the virus?

    Xi came into power in 2013 but it did only became gradually obvious that Chinese way of checks and balances within the party (via committees and fractions and term limits  ) are replaced with one man Neo Maoist rule.

     

    The Frog is slowly getting boiled, I guess.

     

    I have a few shares of BABA which I intend to hold, but I have a hard time seeing me making a large investment in Chinese equities until something changes for the better.

  4. 10 hours ago, Hektor said:

    https://www.barrons.com/amp/articles/china-growth-forecasts-alibaba-stock-155814f4

     

     

    Chinese growth blew past expectations in the first quarter, but official figures of gross domestic product (GDP) released Tuesday belie wider weakness in the world’s second-largest economy, including persistent pressures from the property sector. 
    Analysts see China’s economic recovery—on which the fortunes of some widely-held stocks rest—as fragile.

     

     

    Alibaba falling seems to be a case of where economic good news is bad news for the stock market. I have heard another economic forecaster talking about the Chinese economy looking stronger than predicted.

     

    Here is the version on Archive:

    https://archive.ph/IRPMZ

  5. On 4/14/2024 at 12:49 AM, changegonnacome said:

    Wow much kudos to Israel….best I can tell from reports their missile defense systems pretty much bested these attacks .

     

    It’s embarrassing for Iran how little by way of damage they were able to inflict here…..and quite foolish in a way to reveal how weak they are relative to Israel’s military capability….hopefully this reality seeps through to the Iranian people so that they might constrain their leaders….it would be insane for that countries leadership to pursue a straight out conflict with Israel….but these sectarian regimes don’t live in anything approximating the real world…they hear god whispering in their ear.

     

     

    My guess is that Iran really didn’t want to do that much damage. They were just forced to “do something” to save face after Israel bombed their assets and are probably glad if this does not escalate.

     

    Not that Iran government are great guys, but I think they want to stay out of the Gaza conflict. They are more rational than many in the west think, but they are also bound by constraints that can force them into a Zugzwang situation.

     

     

  6. As the world reserve currency, the US has to run both fiscal and trade deficits - there simply is no other way to be a reserve currency, because the $ hasn’t end in foreign hands eventually and that via trade deficits.

     

    Its the size of the trade fiscal and trade deficits that is an issue ,not the fact that they exist.

     

    On infrastructure - keep in mind that while states and federal government are not the most efficient in building them (most of the time), they can finance them at a way lower cost of capital than private entities. So that compensates for inefficiencies. Also, tolls are a tax on trade and mobility which are beneficial to economic growth, so that’s also to consider.

     

  7. 2 hours ago, Sweet said:


     

    I think at some point Boeing is a buy but I would be uncomfortable getting in now especially since I don’t think the fallout is over.  Wider changes are required and it’s going to be a while.

     

    Starbucks has long interested me, I was tempted by it recently but passed on it.  I think there is greater profit margins through cost cutting - they are building out a lot of stores right now.  Not sure how much they can expand.  Great business but some of the sheen has come off recently.

     

    Don’t know anything about Brown-Forman, currently looking at it, and I’ve no interest in Charter.

    He forgot about $UNH

  8. 1 hour ago, Luca said:

    Honestly thats a really solid deal. And yeah, MC D got way to expensive...

    You need to abuse the McDonalds app to get deals and order the right way and it still works. My son became an expert with this.

  9. 7 hours ago, hillfronter83 said:

    No idea. Can't find any news or disclosure. Someone dumped 280m shares (about 1000 times average daily volume or 10% of shares outstanding) in about 10 minutes yesterday before closing bell.

    The infamous HK dump. This happened a few time with Hk stonks which often have issues that the public later learns about.

  10. You can get lousy index performance when a few stocks start to dominate the index and those stocks start to perform badly. On this case, the average stock in the market may do quite well, but the market cap weighted index would underperform an equal weighted index. A classical example is Canada where Nortel became close to half the index at its peak and then subsequently went to zero. It caused a severe underperformance of the Canadian stock market for quite some time.

    Another example is the UK stock market with its heavy weighting of financials which imploded during the GFC and did not perform that well years later.

  11. 2 hours ago, brobro777 said:

    MO did CAGR 21%+ from Jan 2000 to Dec 2012 I think, div reinvested

     

    And has badly underperformed since 2016. No guarantees.

     

    The period from 1998 to 2112 was an interesting one as different sources boomed and busted at different times. 2000-2002 was foremost a tech crash but utilized got hit badly too (Enron etc). 2008-2009 was a financial crash where pretty much everything crashed, but tech recovered well, while banks never got their multiples back from before and many bank stocks were diluted at the bottom (Citigroup), so they could not recover.

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