Yahoo Sports reporter Pete Thamel joins Yahoo Finance Live to break down the potential scenarios for collegiate sports amid COVID-19.
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On Friday the S&P/ASX 200 Index (ASX: XJO) finished the week on a high. The benchmark index climbed 0.5% to 5,391.1 points.
Will the market be able to build on this on Monday? Here are five things to watch:
The ASX 200 looks set to continue its positive form on Monday. Current SPI futures are pointing to a 3 point gain at the open. This follows a strong end to the week on Wall Street despite record U.S. job losses. On Friday the Dow Jones rose 1.9%, the S&P 500 climbed 1.7%, and the Nasdaq index pushed 1.6% higher.
Energy producers including Santos Ltd (ASX: STO) and Woodside Petroleum Limited (ASX: WPL) could be on the rise today after oil prices jumped higher on Friday night. According to Bloomberg, the WTI crude oil price rose 5% to US$24.74 a barrel and the Brent crude oil price jumped 5.15% to US$30.97 a barrel.
Gold miners including Newcrest Mining Limited (ASX: NCM) and Northern Star Resources Ltd (ASX: NST) could come under pressure today after the gold price tumbled lower. According to CNBC, the spot gold price fell 0.7% to US$1,713.90 an ounce after improving investor sentiment led to a switch to risk on assets.
The Macquarie Group Ltd (ASX: MQG) share price could be close to peaking according to analysts at Goldman Sachs. Following the release of its full year results last week, the broker has retained its neutral rating and put a $127.32 price target on the investment bank’s shares. It notes that Macquarie has a strong balance sheet, but expects a lot of uncertainty in FY 2021.
The Graincorp Ltd (ASX: GNC) share price will be on watch this morning after China threatened to slap an 80% import tax on Australian barley. China claims that the Australian government is subsidising farmers and allowing them to dump barley into China at cheaper prices than those offered by Chinese farmers.
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NEXCF – Nextech AR Solutions
Earnings report coming May 14th — Been following NEXCF for a while now and I expect some big numbers coming up. Some real good company news also…
*Steady flow of new acquisitions and partnerships.
*Steady and gradual growth the last few earnings reports.
*The CEO keeps buying shares and just purchased close to one million shares the other day.
Link: https://stockdaymedia.com/nextech-to-release-q1-earnings-on-may-14th-2020/
submitted by /u/greg_718
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh984r/big_week_coming_up_for_nexcf/
Drugmaker Eli Lilly & Co (LLY) said the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved its drug for lung and thyroid cancer treatmentThe drug selpercatinib, which will be sold under the name of Retevmo, was approved under the FDA's Accelerated Approval regulations based on Phase 1/2 trial's endpoints of objective response rate and duration of response.Selpercatinib is used as an inhibitor for patients with advanced RET-driven lung and thyroid cancers. RET is a genetic mutation which leads to uncontrolled cell growth. The mutations have been found in about 2% of lung cancers and 10%-20% of papillary thyroid cancers."We are extremely proud of how quickly the combined Loxo Oncology and Lilly Oncology teams brought Retevmo to patients, further demonstrating our commitment to delivering life-changing medicines to people living with cancer," said Anne White, president of Lilly Oncology. "Retevmo entered clinical trials in May of 2017 and is now approved less than three years later, representing the most rapid timeline in the development of an oncology medicine with multiple indications.”Shares in Eli Lilly have been on a winning streak since March 23, advancing 29% to $153.51 as of Friday.Vamil Divan, analyst at Mizuho Securities at the end of last month maintained his Hold rating on the stock, while raising the price target to $155 from $148, saying that the investor bias towards safer, higher quality names will likely continue to support the shares.“We believe the underlying fundamentals for the company remain strong,” Divan wrote in a note to investors. “Lilly's current valuation appears stretched to us relative to its large cap biopharma peers so we maintain our Neutral rating.”TipRanks data shows that Wall Street analysts are evenly divided on Eli Lilly’s stock between 5 Buys and 5 Holds adding up to a Moderate Buy consensus rating. The $161.20 average price target indicates upside potential of 5% in the coming 12 months. (See Eli Lilly’s stock analysis on TipRanks).Related News: AstraZeneca-Merck Ovarian Cancer Treatment Gets FDA Approval Quidel’s Rapid Covid-19 Antigen Test Scores Emergency FDA Approval Tesla’s Elon Musk Takes Legal Action to Fight Reopening of California Car Plant More recent articles from Smarter Analyst: * Uber Puts Hopes on Food Delivery Momentum After $2.9 Billion Loss * ON Semiconductor Quarterly Earnings Miss, Sees Orders Coming Back * 3 "Strong Buy" Penny Stocks with Massive Upside Ahead * Chipotle Enters Into New $600M Credit Facility
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Saw this post earlier today by u/laminin1, and started a reply that got a little lengthy, so I went ahead and made it a separate post.
So first of all, I am far from an expert on this, but I have been doing a lot of research on the FED and the money supply. As part of a bigger project that I'm working on (that I might present on here some day) I have accumulated some good information on this specific topic. I will present some of this and then share my 2 cents based on what I've learned so far.
As I started out, one of the first things I wanted to know was how the FEDs balance sheet stacked up in comparison to the major dollar denominated areas of the economy. Here's what I found:
Cryptos: $.16T
M0 Money (physical cash): $1.84T
FED Balance Sheet: $6T (up from about $4T before CV)
Gold: $7T
Dollar Denominated Debt (outside of US): $11T
US 2019 GDP: $21T
US Housing Market: $30T
M1 Money (M0+savings/checking deposits): $37T
US Private and Public Debt: $52T
Stock Market: $74T
M2 Money Supply (M0+M1+other liquid assets): $90T
Derivatives: $1,200T
Along the way, I learned quite a bit, and have (3) points I'd like to share. Again, these are just my opinions, so hopefully some smarter folks can correct or add to what I've laid out. I'm much more interested in discussing/learning than persuading or being right, so please feel free to pick my points apart.
FED bucks – While $2T of extra dollars in the economy is an astounding number and is certainly unprecedented, I don't think it (directly) affects the stock market as much as I thought before I started reading up about this. For one, while it's impossible to know exactly how much, I think the percentage of FED generated dollars that trickled into the market is rather small (though admittedly, this gets extremely complicated and tough to cover why in a single post). Secondly, even if every single dollar somehow made it into the market, $2T is still only a smaller percentage of the total market cap and would not come close to making up all of the massive retracement we've seen since the March lows. I think that ultimately the optimism the fed purchases create are much more of a factor on the stock market than the actual dollars themselves.
Deflation – If the economy remains in recession for an extended period of time, there is much more outstanding US dollar denominated debt at risk of defaulting than the FED would ever be able to responsibly inject (at least when they still followed the rules of the federal reserve act). The other problem is, even if they do set the printers into overdrive to perfectly match the rate of deflation, the ability to get the right amount of dollars in the right places, is a nearly impossible task. As we've seen with the stimulus packages so far, the government is extremely inept at effectively allocating resources correctly. To fully stop the massive wave of defaults we have coming, we would need a cooperative government, along with the fed, fairly distributing trillions and trillions of dollars with such precision that we got it correct, right down the individual debtor. We have protections in place that restrain the gov and FED from manipulating our economy too much in this manner. This is a good thing, but there really aren't existing processes that would allow for the selective distribution on a massive (yet precise) scale this would require. I could probably do an entire separate post on the money cycle and how money gets into and flows through the economy, but just suffice it to say it is an extremely convoluted, corrupt, and inefficient process. Another problem is, as shown above, nearly $11T of that debt is outside of the US. These economies are mostly all in worse shape than the US and it will be very challenging for them to get their hands on the dollars they need to service their debts as their economies shrink (lookup Milkshake Theory if you are interested in more information on this). The potential for all this massive deleveraging (reduced dollar supply as debors default) and an increase in demand for dollars should drive the dollar up vs other assets (deflation). I think the reason we haven't seen it so far is this will take months and even years to fully play out. Even though savings levels across the board are extremely low (personal, corp, gov, etc), these institutions aren't going to default after just a month or two of a receding economy.
Nowhere else to go with money – So why does the stock market keep going up then? The best conclusion I've been able to reach is, compared to other options the stock market is just as good (or just as bad) as anything else and people still have money on hand that they need to do something with. Yeah, the stock market is in a bubble, but so are many other investment options. I think the big institutions know that deflation is ultimately on the horizon, but as mentioned above, it will take a long time for the deleveraging to play out and while everyone is still flush with cash, there are gains to be made on the bullish short-sightedness. They will be converting to cash as they sell out at these high retracement levels, but again this isn't going to necessarily happen overnight. I think the average retail investor (myself included) expects these moves downward to come more quickly because of how fast and extreme the first move down was. However, if you look back in history, past bear markets played out much slower and longer than that. While the market could tank again next week, it could be also be several months or more.
So based on this, my strategy for the rest of the year is to hold mostly cash, a little gold and silver (as a safety measure), and I do have some active shorts on (in hinds sight I probably would have gotten into these after some more decidedly downward action, but am fine holding in the meantime). I don't know if this will all play out, but I do not feel comfortable buying in at these prices and am completely fine missing out (on what I believe) to be short term gains of the bull market hysteria I've been seeing.
Anyway, sorry for the long post, but hopefully someone gets something out of it. Looking forward to reading the replies.
submitted by /u/Iamthespiderbro
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh8ngz/feds_effect_on_the_stock_market/
Intel Corp is in discussions with the United States Department of Defense over improving domestic sources for microelectronics and related technology, Intel spokesman William Moss said in an emailed statement. “Intel is well positioned to work with the U.S. government to operate a U.S.-owned commercial foundry and supply a broad range of secure microelectronics”, the statement added.
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There’s so much noise out there and every “legitimate” news source just uses catchy headlines for more clicks. I often visit CNBC to atleast get a general sense of the current narrative. But are there any “real” financial news sources that merely produce global headlines without bias?
submitted by /u/saintandy
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh6nd6/where_does_everyone_get_their_news/
With a massive downturn in consumer spending because of the pandemic, deflation on a bunch of goods is likely .. right?
But there's also a supply side shock essentially doing the opposite in certain areas of the economy.
Also, "printing" tends to benefit the wealthy and usually increases inequality.. but we have an unusual occurance of cheques going out to regular people that might possibly go on for a little while.
How does all the above play out inflation wise?? What are your expectations for money going directly to people going forward?
submitted by /u/youvebeenjammed
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh6e6n/my_confusion_about_inflation_expectations/
Hello everyone, I have been looking for cheap good stocks for a long time and also found some branches.
The following stocks are very interesting and the probability of going out here as the winner is significantly greater than going out as the loser.
LONG-TERM AND SECURE
Look at WPX; NWS; AYTU; 3CP; IJ8; AIM; VBI; NNDM; KTOV; GE
Take a closer look at these companies and look into the future 🙂
submitted by /u/RRAIDD
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh5l8g/if_you_are_looking_for_a_long_term/
The trading pattern could be (for tech) a V shape recovery like in 2018 but not as for the other sectors. The tech sector really loves free money and low fed funds rates but XLF and XOP don’t favor this as well as low oil prices. XRT will really start to dip as turnout becomes underwhelming due to Covid fear the people were fed and lack of disposable income as 33 million have filed for unemployment. The QE ♾ could help finance tech but it would not save the economy if people don’t want to spend their money. What do you guys think?
submitted by /u/MonigMedia
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source https://www.reddit.com/r/StockMarket/comments/gh5k8w/is_this_really_just_a_dead_cat_bounce/