Wonder if we will get some profit taking before the holiday weekend.
Wealth gained hastily will dwindle. but whoever gathers little by little will increase it.
Proverbs 13:11
Proverbs 13:11
Yesterday, #ES_F broke its down-trend line from March, giving bulls the 1st technical setup for relief run. 4040 was my 1st target, basing above
— Adam Mancini (@AdamMancini4) May 27, 2022
Plan: As long as 4035 holds, 4095-4105 = target. Pullback zone. 4035 fails, we sell to 4015, 3965-55. Breakout fails, deep sell below https://t.co/pyh7e02QKg
US Personal Income rose less than expected
— jeroen blokland (@jsblokland) May 27, 2022
US Personal Spending rose more than expected
US real wage growth is deeply negative
How can this be?
US consumers are depleting their savings at warp speed. Savings ratio down to 4.4%, the lowest level since 2008.
NOT sustainable. pic.twitter.com/4FMKGHF7Id
BrokeAssAggie said:
Looking to short TSLA. Will wait 15 min or so.
Didn't Musk announce yesterday or day before that the new Twitter deal wouldn't put TSLA stock as margin anymore. Seems like it takes off some of the potential political pressure to tank that stock.BrokeAssAggie said:
Looking to short TSLA. Will wait 15 min or so.
maroonbleeder said:
Farmer,
Thanks for posting that. So if the general consensus Is that oil prices will continue skyrocketing and food prices will continue to go up throughout the year due to diminished wheat exports and really high fertilizer prices, how do we capitalize/protect ourselves? If some level of global famine / Arab spring type situation unfolds next year, what moves can I make now?
1. O&G exposure
2. Domestic fertilizer companies like UAN
3. Agricultural companies?
4. Stockpile food?
Other ideas? I know I'm going to look back and ask myself how I missed some obvious investment.
I bought into WEAT fund earlier in the week.Farmer @ Johnsongrass, TX said:
XOM I think will take a breather and backtrack to $92-$88. I'll reload if it does. ... Assuming my Calls get exercised today. Earlier projections, by end of year I thought XOM at $105 (inside range high) to $120 (outside range high). Looks like there's a good chance to see the outside range high.
As for Ukraine, if you are invested in the WEAT fund, this info input translates to a hold. It's Bullish info. Moving forward,...if you've never seen people react when they are hungry (I don't mean missing a meal - I mean a few days without food) this lockdown on grains could escalate crises around the world for those that depend on imported grains for sustenance.
That was a bad ideaBrokeAssAggie said:
Looking to short TSLA. Will wait 15 min or so.
Wrong mindset.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Taking more TQQQ profits today. Trailing stop at 1.5%.
My one regret is I didn't go in harder with all my available cash last week.
We're right at the 38.2% now. This could be a roadblockwanderer said:
From 3/29 high to 5/20 low, 38.2% is ~411.70, 50% is ~421.30
$30,000 Millionaire said:That was a bad ideaBrokeAssAggie said:
Looking to short TSLA. Will wait 15 min or so.
Good questions. That's a lot to unpack. I don't have definitive answers. Here are some random-ish thoughts below.maroonbleeder said:
Farmer,
Thanks for posting that. So if the general consensus Is that oil prices will continue skyrocketing and food prices will continue to go up throughout the year due to diminished wheat exports and really high fertilizer prices, how do we capitalize/protect ourselves? If some level of global famine / Arab spring type situation unfolds next year, what moves can I make now?
1. O&G exposure
2. Domestic fertilizer companies like UAN
3. Agricultural companies?
4. Stockpile food?
Other ideas? I know I'm going to look back and ask myself how I missed some obvious investment.
I admit it's a glass half empty mindset.$30,000 Millionaire said:Wrong mindset.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Taking more TQQQ profits today. Trailing stop at 1.5%.
My one regret is I didn't go in harder with all my available cash last week.
yeah here... bought verticals around 2.50, sold around 70% gain, should've held one for expiration, it would be 4x.Ragoo said:
Remember that time I bought TSLA calls for $3 and sold for $4.60 only to see them rise to $43?
Ragoo said:
Remember that time I bought TSLA calls for $3 and sold for $4.60 only to see them rise to $43?
I was in and out in 13 minutes. At the time it felt like a perfectly executed trade and it achieved my goal in the trade. For that I am happy. The what if is a kick in the nuts though.texagbeliever said:Ragoo said:
Remember that time I bought TSLA calls for $3 and sold for $4.60 only to see them rise to $43?
Anyone who bought calls and sold them before 12 yesterday is thinking the exact same thing.
$30,000 Millionaire said:
By the way did all of you guys that said you were going to buy in the 3800s do it or did you chicken out?
Not saying that's a good or bad move, just found it funny you got out of risky stocks to get into 3x leveraged positions.Philip J Fry said:$30,000 Millionaire said:
By the way did all of you guys that said you were going to buy in the 3800s do it or did you chicken out?
In my 401K, I sold all my riskier stock moves (including WWR) and put it all on UPRO and TQQQ. Bought in anytime we were near 4000 or below.
The what if mentality is normally what leads to a kick in the nuts for me...Ragoo said:I was in and out in 13 minutes. At the time it felt like a perfectly executed trade and it achieved my goal in the trade. For that I am happy. The what if is a kick in the nuts though.texagbeliever said:Ragoo said:
Remember that time I bought TSLA calls for $3 and sold for $4.60 only to see them rise to $43?
Anyone who bought calls and sold them before 12 yesterday is thinking the exact same thing.
Philip J Fry said:$30,000 Millionaire said:
By the way did all of you guys that said you were going to buy in the 3800s do it or did you chicken out?
In my 401K, I sold all my riskier stock moves (including WWR) and put it all on UPRO and TQQQ. Bought in anytime we were near 4000 or below.