Robbie Showen
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$Lockheed Martin (LMT.US)$ My LMT is still in the red, no matter how good the news
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Robbie Showen
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$Robinhood (HOOD.US)$ Cathie: I got this.
(catches falling knife).
DIY 101: never buy before the lockup expiry.
(catches falling knife).
DIY 101: never buy before the lockup expiry.
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Robbie Showen
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$Ford Motor (F.US)$ I have calls written against my shares at various strikes and dates, the strikes are from $17 to $25, just waiting for time premium to drain out on the the $17s. However, these aren't recommendations for anyone else. I was buying shares under $5/share, so these are the right sale prices for me, not necessarily anyone else.
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Robbie Showen
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$Moderna (MRNA.US)$ At a White House press conference, Fauci said the person was vaccinated but is unclear if the patient had a COVID-19 booster shot.
So, patient was vaccinated and is now in quarantine. I am confused, why are we mandating vaccinations? To stop what?
So, patient was vaccinated and is now in quarantine. I am confused, why are we mandating vaccinations? To stop what?
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Robbie Showen
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$Zoom Communications (ZM.US)$ shares are dropping 3.5% to $203.94 as $Microsoft (MSFT.US)$ unveiled a standalone version of Teams for small businesses.
Microsoft Team Essentials will cost $4 per user per month and get access to core features of Teams, without having to also subscribe to Office, The Verge notes.
In comparison, Zoom has a small business plan that costs $19.99 per month per license. Zoom Pro, which the company says is "great for small teams," costs $14.99 per month per license.
Small businesses previously had to pick a Microsoft 365 Business Basic plan, which cost $5 per month per user, or other platforms, such as Slack - owned by $Salesforce (CRM.US)$, Google Workspace $Alphabet-A (GOOGL.US)$, Workplace from $Meta Platforms (FB.US)$ or others.
The standalone version of Microsoft Teams Essentials has a simpler chat interface and focuses on meetings and video calls, Jared Spataro, head of Microsoft 365, told the news outlet.
Microsoft Teams Essentials has 10GB of OneDrive storage, whereas Business Basic has 1TB worth of storage. Essentials also does not have the ability to record meetings, provide transcripts, translation, separate rooms or channels and other functions that the more expensive plan has.
Last month, Zoom's shares plunged after the company reported fiscal third-quarter results that disappointed Wall Street and acknowledged that it would face headwinds in 2022 as more employees return to offices around the globe.
Microsoft Team Essentials will cost $4 per user per month and get access to core features of Teams, without having to also subscribe to Office, The Verge notes.
In comparison, Zoom has a small business plan that costs $19.99 per month per license. Zoom Pro, which the company says is "great for small teams," costs $14.99 per month per license.
Small businesses previously had to pick a Microsoft 365 Business Basic plan, which cost $5 per month per user, or other platforms, such as Slack - owned by $Salesforce (CRM.US)$, Google Workspace $Alphabet-A (GOOGL.US)$, Workplace from $Meta Platforms (FB.US)$ or others.
The standalone version of Microsoft Teams Essentials has a simpler chat interface and focuses on meetings and video calls, Jared Spataro, head of Microsoft 365, told the news outlet.
Microsoft Teams Essentials has 10GB of OneDrive storage, whereas Business Basic has 1TB worth of storage. Essentials also does not have the ability to record meetings, provide transcripts, translation, separate rooms or channels and other functions that the more expensive plan has.
Last month, Zoom's shares plunged after the company reported fiscal third-quarter results that disappointed Wall Street and acknowledged that it would face headwinds in 2022 as more employees return to offices around the globe.
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Robbie Showen
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$Berkshire Hathaway-A (BRK.A.US)$ should be sold to $Blackrock (BLK.US)$ or someone that knows what they are doing.
Berkshire sells OOTM Calls on their stock for income.
It's a different world today.
Berkshire sells OOTM Calls on their stock for income.
It's a different world today.
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Robbie Showen
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$American Airlines (AAL.US)$ $Airbnb (ABNB.US)$ $TripAdvisor (TRIP.US)$ These travel companies better take a stand against government global tyranny or they will go bankrupt. They have lost much power and capital since February 2020 but they can still band together and refuse to comply with malicious and evil attacks on their civil liberties and existence. Covid restrictions especially affect lower income people who the people on cnn seem gleeful and desperate to CRUSH
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Robbie Showen
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$Salesforce (CRM.US)$ shares slumped as much as 6% in after-hours trading, Tuesday, as the cloud-based business software company gave a fourth-quarter outlook that proved an immediate disappointment on Wall Street.
Salesforce said that for its fourth quarter, it expects to earn between 72 cents and 73 cents a share, excluding one-time items, on revenue in a range of $7.22 billion to $7.23 billion. Those forecasts fell short of analysts' estimates for earnings of 82 cents a share on $7.24 billion.
The outlook came along with Salesforce touting its third-quarter results and announcing some changes in it executive ranks and board room.
Salesforce reported a third-quarter profit of $1.27 a share, excluding one-time items, on $6.86 billion, compared to earnings of $1.72 a share, on $5.42 billion in sales in the same period a year ago. Analysts had forecast Salesforce to earn 92 cents a share on $6.8 billion in revenue.
It was Salesforce's first full quarterly report since completing its $27.7 billion acquisition of Slack Technologies. While Salesforce didn't break out contributions from Slack, Chief Financial Officer Amy Weaver said "we are pleased with Slack’s representation in our largest deals."
The company's results were highlighted by its subscription revenue, which rose 25% from a year ago, to $6.38 billion. Professional services and other revenues total $480 million, an increase of 45% from last year's third quarter.
Separately, Salesforce said company president Bret Taylor will become its co-Chief Executive and serve alongside current CEO Marc Benioff. Taylor was also named to Salesforce's board of directors along with $Williams-Sonoma (WSM.US)$ CEO Laura Alber, and former United Airlines (NASDAQ:UAL) $United Airlines (UAL.US)$ CEO Oscar Munoz.
Salesforce said that for its fourth quarter, it expects to earn between 72 cents and 73 cents a share, excluding one-time items, on revenue in a range of $7.22 billion to $7.23 billion. Those forecasts fell short of analysts' estimates for earnings of 82 cents a share on $7.24 billion.
The outlook came along with Salesforce touting its third-quarter results and announcing some changes in it executive ranks and board room.
Salesforce reported a third-quarter profit of $1.27 a share, excluding one-time items, on $6.86 billion, compared to earnings of $1.72 a share, on $5.42 billion in sales in the same period a year ago. Analysts had forecast Salesforce to earn 92 cents a share on $6.8 billion in revenue.
It was Salesforce's first full quarterly report since completing its $27.7 billion acquisition of Slack Technologies. While Salesforce didn't break out contributions from Slack, Chief Financial Officer Amy Weaver said "we are pleased with Slack’s representation in our largest deals."
The company's results were highlighted by its subscription revenue, which rose 25% from a year ago, to $6.38 billion. Professional services and other revenues total $480 million, an increase of 45% from last year's third quarter.
Separately, Salesforce said company president Bret Taylor will become its co-Chief Executive and serve alongside current CEO Marc Benioff. Taylor was also named to Salesforce's board of directors along with $Williams-Sonoma (WSM.US)$ CEO Laura Alber, and former United Airlines (NASDAQ:UAL) $United Airlines (UAL.US)$ CEO Oscar Munoz.
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Robbie Showen
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$Lucid Group (LCID.US)$ Apple should buy Lucid, with it, software expertise will arrive. They both will be a great competition to TSLA
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Robbie Showen
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Robbie Showen : average down on your cost basis