Account Info
Log Out
English
Back
Log in to access Online Inquiry
Back to the Top

avatar
103026476 Private ID: 103026476
No profile added yet
Follow
    103026476 commented on
    $Sono Group (SEV.US)$ Buying at 53, there should be no problem, right?
    Translated
    13
    $Lucid Group (LCID.US)$
    Yes, as everyone wishes up☝️
    Translated
    $Apple (AAPL.US)$
    I recently entered into AAPL after it broke out 150 resistance and on friday closed above the 150 resistance turned support.
    I am looking at AAPL breaking into new highs by the end of the month and my take profit will be at 161.4 to 164.2 price point.
    Do trade safe & invest wise!
    4
    If you ever look into these shady companies, you will see how much they are all connected by the same group of people.
    Back in 2017 LTEA and its owners announced they were changing the company into Long Blockchain Corp. They werent going to make Long Island ice teas anymore but instead mine bitcoin. The stock went up 200% and they filed a prospectus and collected a few hundred million dollars, then they did nothing. They let the stock fall for 3 years until it was delisted last year never buying a single piece of blockchain hardware.
    $Meta Materials (MMAT.US)$ and Torchlight recently merged. Before they merged Torchlight filed offerings and collected hundreds of millions of dollars. Then after the merger MMAT filed offerings along with stock options that they filed immediately while the price was up.The took in hundreds of millions.
    The new merger of $Cenntro Electric (NAKD.US)$ and Cenntro automotive is now doing the same thing.
    Last January Long Blockchain corp and $Stran & Company (STRN.US)$ filed for a merger and to be listed on the market. The SEC turned them down due to Long Blockchains previous history as LTEA. So they had to pay a large amount of money and couldnt get any publicity when they IPOed. But they had other ways to get money in the works. Right there in the paperwork where they could convert warrants into shares 1-1. There were other red flags i found like the CEO and the directors owning 70% of the company, which only occurs in SPACs. Then i finally was able to find the board members because someone had deleted most of their history off of the internet. I had to go to the UK news to find the info. And it was what i thought. Walk Street crooks i knew from a long time ago, still at it just playing as a different kind of crook.They were the ones that came out richer from the 2008 crash even tho all their investors lost everything.
    Now you can guess what companies they are on the board of or are part owners. Heres the list: $Cenntro Electric (NAKD.US)$, $Seanergy Maritime (SHIP.US)$, $Meta Materials (MMAT.US)$, $Stran & Company (STRN.US)$  LTEA, LLBC,Cenntro automotive and Torchlight to name a few. None have US residences and all their funds go thru offshore accounts of course. And this is why DD is necessary.
    38
    10
    Hey mooers , today let's learn how to identify stock market trends using moving averages to help add context, support decision making, and complement other forms of analysis.
    Technical analysis of stocks borrows from the law of inertia to understand and describe the relationships between a stock price, buying and selling of the stock, and its motion. In describing motion, investors borrow another physics term, "momentum," which, as in physics, is the quantity of motion. The "forces" acting on a stock are buying and selling. And the "motion" of a stock is usually called a trend.
    Trends can form in three directions: up, down, or sideways. These trends, or ways of describing a stock's motion, are among the technical analysis basics.
    Let's take Apple's chart as an example :
    Trend Analysis for Investors
    As opposed to traders, investors typically hold investments for long periods of time — months or several years. So when it comes to applying trend analysis to investing, it's important to use a chart and time frame that aligns with investing.
    Here's how these two moving averages can help identify trends. When the 5-day moving average is greater than the 20-day moving average, the AAPL is in an uptrend. When the 5-day is less than the 20-day moving average, the AAPL is in a downtrend.
    The idea is to maximize profits when the AAPL is in an uptrend. But when the AAPL is in a downtrend, the idea is to limit losses.
    Identifying trends using technical analysis is not an exact science; it has flaws, and it's not a standalone investing strategy. But technical analysis basics such as trend analysis can help add context, support your decision making, and complement other forms of analysis like fundamental, macroeconomic, and psychological.
    Let's learn about trends and moving averages
    Let's learn about trends and moving averages
    14
    41
    When it comes to trading lingo, it’s a jungle out there, with trading expressions that can be difficult to understand. We’ve rounded up the usual suspects and tamed them into short definitions so you can speculate with confidence. First and foremost, let's say a big thanks to our amazing mooers to contribute so many good ideas by joining the topic #What lingos did you learn along the way? Thank you all!
    Please leave a thumbs-up or share it if you find this useful!
    Basic Terms
    Stonk: an intentional misspelling of stock
    YOLO - You only live once  and refers to people who invest heavily in a certain stock
    HODL - Slang for "hold your position" and resist the urge to sell your holdings.
    Hold the Line - A battle cry for users during volatility in the markets. When stocks favored by the forum began to drop, appeals to “hold the line” became common.
    Falling knife - Refers to a sharp drop, which is commonly used in phrases like, "don't try to catch a falling knife," which can be translated to mean, "wait for the price to bottom out before buying it." 
    Hanging man -  is a bearish candlestick pattern that forms at the end of an uptrend and warns of lower prices to come
    Inverted hammer - a type of candlestick pattern found after a downtrend and is usually taken to be a trend-reversal signal
    Gay Bear - It refers to people who WANT stocks to go down, and are seeking to profit off of the position, as “gay bears.” They are denoted by a picture of an LBGT flag and a bear emoji, or sometimes a strange video clip of dancing animated bears
    I Eat Crayons - More subversive self-deprecation, often used by members of the group to imply that their foolhardy bets, and possible resulting losses, should not be mistaken for formal investment expertise
    Paytience - Used as a reminder that patience generally pays off
    Restricted Shares - Shares only available to company insiders
    Tenbanger - An investment that rises to 10* its purchase price (or has the potential to do so)
    Odd Lot - A trade where the position size is less than the standard lot
    Babysitting - Holding onto a trade, despite losses, in the hope of breaking even or making a profit if the market turns around
    Dark Pools - Liquidity that exists between institutions on private exchanges, and is not available to the public
    Dip - The rapid decrease in the value of a coin or stock, or an entire market
    Fiat - Currency issued by the government, e.g. US dollar
    Circuit breakers - temporary measures that halt trading to curb panic-selling on stock exchanges
    Animals in Trading
    Bulls - an upward trending market, a cycle of growth; the optimists who often go long
    Bears - a depressed and/or downward-trending market; the bearish trader or investor is pessimistic
    Stags - a short-term speculator, usually refers to a day trader, the opportunists
    Wolves - the unethical stock market wunderkinds famous for unscrupulous success
    Rabbits - the scalpers who buy shares for very short periods of time, ranging from a couple of weeks to intra-day buying and selling
    Turtles - the long-term trader, trend-following trader
    Pigs - the slaughtered, high-risk investors who is greedy, having forgotten their original investment strategy to focus on securing unrealistic future gains.
    Ostrich - the ignorant investors who tend to ignore the bad news and bury their heads in the figurative sand.
    Chicken - the fearful investors that are highly risk-averse and are really afraid to lose any amount. They are driven with so much fear that it sometimes overrides their common sense in making sound investment decisions.
    Sheep - the herd-follower who lacks discipline and whose trading strategy is unfocused and predicated on the suggestions of others.
    Whales - Whales are movers and shakers (whether a trust, bank or even an individual) with such a lot of capital that their buys and sells make waves in the market.
    Bearwhale - Someone with a large position in a particular coin but with a 'bearish' vision.
    Bullwhale - Someone with a large position in a particular coin but with a 'bullish' vision.
    Apes - the meme, favorite strategy: HODL, favorite destination: moon /Moon and favorite mode of transport: rocket
    Black swans - they look beautiful in white. But adding the word “black” – it killed it which resulting in a meaning of a completely unforeseen and unexpected stance
    Grey rhinos - preparing for highly probable events that potentially could have a high impact. They are often neglected, are not random surprises, but occur after a series of warnings and visible evidence.
    Unicorns - startups that have come to be valued at $1 billion or more
    Hawks and doves - the central bank’s decisions regarding interest rates. ‘Hawkish’ are those in favour of raising the interest rate and a tighter monetary policy to curb inflation. A meeker ‘dove’ stance is of the opinion that the central bank should keep interest rates low or flat.
    Popular slang to define market/ investor moves
    Tanking - When a market falls suddenly.
    Short squeeze - When traders who hold short positions are forced to close their trades due to the rapid price increase.
    Long squeeze - the opposite of short squeeze when a market drops significantly and unexpectedly very quickly
    Jigged out - when the market turns against a general trend, forcing traders to close their position.
    Flip - Buying and selling for a quick profit, usually intraday.
    Gamma squeeze - It occurs when the price of a stock surges in a short period of time, often associated with the purchase of call options to drive up the price.
    The dead cat bounce - the last gap rallying movement of a ‘dead market, when a stock’s price rises from depression briefly, only to fall again.
    Crunching - A market's price falling rapidly and going beyond a presumed support level.
    Sell-off (Dumping) - When an abnormal amount of traders are selling a position.
    Buy the dip - Place the trade when the price is down, on the assumption that it will rebound soon enough.
    Pump and dump - A group of investors colluded and bought the same stock at the same time to momentarily drive up the price of the stock and to sell it a short time later to turn them into a profit. Thereafter the price will drop back to the normal level.
    Bottom fishing - Buying or going long on securities after their prices have fallen considerably, expecting they will rise in time.
    Ask slapping - Buying shares at the ask price.
    Choppy - High volatility within a narrow range.
    WSB Special
    To the moon - a rallying cry for certain stocks
    ATH - all time high
    Apes together strong - It's a clique or expression of solidarity with other common investors going for the same goal like buying AMC to the moon.
    Paper hands - It means the investor is quick ot sell a stock at the first sign of trouble.
    Diamond hands - Continuing to hold a stock despite losses, adversity, and volatility, confident that the price will increase.
    DFV - Refers to the aforementioned Reddit user DeepF--kingValue, who posted about making call options for GameStop stock (NYSE:GME) and became the “granddaddy” of the GME stock surge
    ROARING KITTY - The social media pseudonym of Keith Gill, a financial adviser in Massachusetts whose Reddit posts and YouTube video streams helped drive interest in GameStop's stock.
    Bagholder - Someone who holds on to a coin or stock that has dropped in price and hopes it increases to the price where they originally purchased.
    TENDIES - Shorthand for chicken tenders, which WSB uses as slang for profits on a trade.
    Acronym
    DD - Due diligence
    DYODD- Do you own due diligence
    FOMO - Fear of missing out
    FUD - Fear, Uncertainty, and Doubt
    MOASS - mother of all short squeezes
    DYOR - Do your own research
    PAD - Pump and Dump
    NHOD - New High Of Day
    OTM - Out of the money
    ITM - In the money
    FTD - Fail to deliver
    HFT - High frequency trading
    AMA - Ask me Anything
    ATL - All Time Low, when coins or stock breaks its previous lowest price record.
    BTD - Buy the dip
    DCA - Dollar-cost averaging, an investment technique where a fixed sum of money is used to invest in coin or stocks.
    DCB - Dead Cat Bounce, a brief price recovery before a major crash.
    FA - Fundamental Analysis, a method to evaluate an investment by looking at its intrinsic value.
    ETF - Exchange-Traded-Fund, a tradable product that follows the price of an underlying asset.
    JOMO - Joy of Missing Out, refers to someone who is happy for not taking a certain position as the price keep on dropping.
    Lambo - Abbreviation of Lamborghini, used often when the price is going to rise sharply so that one can pay for such car with the winnings.
    LEAPS - long-term equity anticipation security, basically an options that is has a very long expiry (>=1 year).
    PMCC - Poor man covered call. Using a deep in the money call LEAPS to cover the call option instead of the underlying stock (generally lower upfront payment)
    Crypto Special
    2FA (2 Factor Authentication) - A double layer security used to provide double protection to user account.
    51% Attack - A possible attack on blockchain by a group of miners who hold more than 50% of the hash rate.
    Airdrop - A way to distribute coins to end users for free or exchange for performing a small task.
    Altcoin - Any cryptocurrency that is not bitcoin.
    ICO - Initial Coin Offering. Issued to be exchanged on launch. Similar to IPO's.
    Paper Wallet - The public and private keys of the cryptocurrency wallet held on a piece of paper.
    Gas - Fee paid to miners for executing a transaction on the Ethereum blockchain.
    POW - Proof of work, a requirement defined by computer calculation.
    REKT - Used in the crypto community to indicate huge losses.
    SAFU - A term used in cryptocurrency world to mean safe.
    Wholecoiner - Someone who owns 1 full Bitcoin
    Nocoiner - A person who does not possess any cryptocurrency.
    OCD - Obsessive Cryptocurrency Disorder, for people who cannot stop monitoring their cryptocurrency daily.
    Hot Wallet - Storing of crypto coins online, connected to the Internet.
    Cold Wallet - Storing of crypto coins offline.
    DAO - Decentralized Autonomous Organization, whereby it run by itself without any human interventions.
    DEX - Decentralized Exchange, where people can do trading without the need of a middleman.
    Give a thumbs-up to acknowledge mooers' contribution and share this post if you find this useful!
    Cheers!
    23
    52
No more