You know it's coming, too. I imagine we'll be more in line with the rate our neighbors to the north pay (50%). Just a matter of when.
Cloud said:
You know it's coming, too. I imagine we'll be more in line with the rate our neighbors to the north pay (50%). Just a matter of when.
I'd go long all bank stocks if this was the case.Cloud said:
You know it's coming, too. I imagine we'll be more in line with the rate our neighbors to the north pay (50%). Just a matter of when.
Mostly Foggy Recollection said:
Anyone with half a brain can see the fiscal cliff on the horizon.... The '20s were never going to be a great decade for Americans due to the last 20 years. It lasted this long because our Central Bank wasn't as ****ty as other CBs. I posted this on another thread on Hop's board, but D.C. and our politicians are like a Doctor, a real ****ty one, but I digress....
The Country is the patient. Country comes in and has blood work and scans done. It comes back as cancer. Doctor asks if there are any symptoms. Country says, "yeah, nausea". So, instead of sending the Country to an oncologist, the doctor (D.C.) prescribes phenergan and sends the country on it's way to die. And there is D.C. in a nutshell. Treat the symptom, not the root cause, for short-term happiness (and votes) while the cancer spreads and grows and the core health of the country circles the drain. Both sides of the political spectrum are guilty of it, albeit one a lot more than the other, but they are both guilty.
The only question now is does the reset this decade happen sooner rather than later?
I'm very thankful I don't live in a city and have land.
Dont care. Net free.Aggies75455 said:
Bitcoin taking it on the chin this morning along with my EBON and NXTD...
Some will, but alot of us millenials get access to so much information that we will take our massive winnings and put it to good use. This thread being a perfect example.Larry J. Holy 81 said:
Market bravado expressed by that young group who throw caution to the wind,....not to worry, they'll get their turn in the barrel. It's just part of the tuition cost. There wouldn't be card sharks if suckers weren't born every minute.
SINO doesn't care. It is holding up nicely.Rice and Fries said:Dont care. Net free.Aggies75455 said:
Bitcoin taking it on the chin this morning along with my EBON and NXTD...
exactly! sold some MARA last week, wreck it! I'll buy the dip.Rice and Fries said:Dont care. Net free.Aggies75455 said:
Bitcoin taking it on the chin this morning along with my EBON and NXTD...
Cloud said:
You know it's coming, too. I imagine we'll be more in line with the rate our neighbors to the north pay (50%). Just a matter of when.
Thank god for us GenXers.59 South said:
Catching up on this thread like...
And easy there on us late 30s / early 40s folks. We left the nest at the peak of the dotcom bubble, fought like hell to get jobs due to the fallout in the early/mid 2000s, and then got effin wrecked in our mid to late 20s in the financial crisis. So just stop it.
Don't be jealous that we have hit the jackpot in our earlyish prime earnings years through our 30s and were smart enough to realize it and capitalize. And don't underestimate our wit and access to real time data that will be used to protect what we've earned. Yea, I'm definitely on the brink of the old man transition
Ah, ATP has always been glitchy for me so I use TOS to chart and always enter my trades through the Fidelity website.Bob Knights Liver said:
This is normal. On the ATP software they show them as a single trade but on the website they show each leg separately.
Bob Knights Liver said:
Quick look at $UWMC again - they reported Q4 EPS of $0.49? Is that right? Annualized that's P/E of 4 and isn't Q2 and Q3 generally the best quarters for mortgages? Is there something I'm missing?
Checked there and it's got them setup with 1 as a covered call, and 1 as a long call.Rydyn said:
I use Fidelity but use the ATP Desktop app.
Looking at the website, try "Option Summary" under the account heading and then "Group by Strategy".
No kidding. If I was being honest on my resume, I'd probably just put "professional generational gap translator" for the past 5-7 years or so. I've been in several cringe worthy work meetings and town halls the past few years where both sides are equally cringey.AggieChemist said:
Thank god for us GenXers.
The we're the stability in the world between the boomers and whatever the kids these days are.
Yes, there will always be a few outliers. I write from the experience of exiting the dotcom bubble at the top and realized that type of exit move is not likely to happen again. My risk profile changed accordingly to maintain and grow a gift.historyrepeats said:Some will, but alot of us millenials get access to so much information that we will take our massive winnings and put it to good use. This thread being a perfect example.Larry J. Holy 81 said:
Market bravado expressed by that young group who throw caution to the wind,....not to worry, they'll get their turn in the barrel. It's just part of the tuition cost. There wouldn't be card sharks if suckers weren't born every minute.