God I wish I could filter that weeboo faggot posting chink whores
Brandon Jones
From the last thread: >Unloading into to what, I don't know but that asset bubble will probably pop too. This is a huge point. Markets are make believe and inflated, real estate has been inflating in its own wild bubble for a decade, the fed is furiously trying to keep bond yields low to prevent a torrent of money rushing into them from the market and wiping out every 401k and pension in existence.
The only undervalued sector is commodities. Even equities are overpriced. Are we going to get to watch the lowest traders on the totem poll shooting it out on Wall Street to claim delivery of physical gold?
australia at the moment >HEY GUYS! DON'T FORGET ABOUT US!!! WE TOTALLY HAVE PROBLEMS TOO!!! NOT MADE UP AT ALL. PLEASE DON'T MIND US PRINTING SOME FREE MONEY FOR CEOS. TOTALLY REAL ECONOMIC PROBLEMS HERE GUYS DON'T MIND THE ONLY 4K CORONA CASES
Jacob James
just ignore him.
almost bed time gotta get up early and sell all my positions before the crash. goodnight.
Markets are closed Wednesday for George Floyd Day.
Anthony Cook
> Look up WUHN on RH, not there > Look up WUHN on WeBull, shows it, penny stock with massive losses called Wuhan General, not supported for trading > Lose 100% instantly Hopefully that saves someone a few seconds and some money
Blake Carter
Waiting for a dip is painful....I guess I'll load up on VIX and hope this Beijing thing becomes out of control.
Austin Fisher
Wait really?
Jordan Russell
Guys, random question.
If the stock reaches bottom at one penny, wouldnt it be clever to buy a shitton of it?
it can not go any lower right? if it goes up to 2 pennies, you doubled your money.
This makes no sense, what is the catch?
Justin King
if anything that would would on friday for june tnth, but no one cares about niggers
Futures are greeen! Whos gonna make some money tomorrow!
Xavier Jones
no markets are open
Ian Johnson
This is an exact copy of that Twitter pay but I'll bite. Someone has to buy those shares at .02, who is going to do that?
Justin Martin
i suspect it'll crab tomorrow
Ryder Roberts
By recognizing the higher-level consequences nature optimizes for, I've come to see that people who overweigh the first-order consequences of their decisions and ignore the effects of second- and subsequent-order consequences rarely reach their goals. This is because first-order consequences often have opposite desirabilities from second-order consequences, resulting in big mistakes in decision making. For example, the first-order consequences of exercise (pain and time spent) are commonly considered undesirable, while the second-order consequences (better health and more attractive appearance) are desirable. Similarly, food that tastes good is often bad for you and vice versa.
Quite often the first-order consequences are the temptations that cost us what we really want, and sometimes they are the barriers that stand in our way. It's almost as though nature sorts us by throwing us trick choices that have both types of consequences and penalizing those who make their decisions on the basis of the first-order consequences alone.
By contrast, people who choose what they really want, and avoid the temptations and get over the pains that drive them away from what they really want, are much more likely to have successful lives.