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What I'm not a fan of its stock valuation. Warren Buffett agrees, hell even Elon himself agrees. As of the last trading day. Tesla is officially worth more than BMW, Mercedes, the entire VW group, GM and Ford combined. BMW and Mercedes each deliver approximately 2.5 millions car in 2019. VW group did approx 10 mill cars in 2019. GM did 2 millions or so in 2019. Ford did around 2 million in delivery too in 2019. Thats a combine 19 mil or so cars delivery by these giants in the industry. Tesla delivered 360k ish cars in 2019 but is worth all of the above combined in valuation. They are the king of the EV space, what does that say about the space currently then? That is still minuscule compare to the entire car industry. Not to mentioned TSLA has only been profitable recently (two consecutive quarters iirc, need one more to qualify for sp500 per their "leaked" email) There is no doubt what TSLA have done is spectacular to say the least. But its current evaluation implies that TSLA is already the king of automotive space and that it will continues to 100x its production and demand year after year to match the valuation it offers to its stockholder. If it maintains its same valuation that is AND for EV cars to completely overtake traditional engines. Which we know it won't with the way its going, its just going to continue to balloon while its real value struggles to keep up Stock is forward looking is a relatively new phrase when it comes to investing, the phrase get thrown around with no repercussion as the market just goes up and up. This is not just isolated to TSLA, there are so many tickers that were and still is massively overvalued and price to perfection and beyond. We need a justification for the valuation and forward looking is the best way to justify it. By the same analogy, Yahoo.com was the most forward looking stock during dot com era. It looked like it dominated the space it was in. It too commanded a valuation that is so forward looking, you would think we would all be using nothing by Yahoo.com 20 years after the dot com burst. I'm not discounting Elon and what Tesla brings to the future. But how much of its current valuation that is based on speculation and how much is based on real investment? On some day, You can find more volume in TSLA's way out the money (we are talking $500-$1000 out the money on weekly expiration) option contract than on its actual equities. These contracts sometimes cost as much or even more than the actual price of 1 share of the stock. The speculation that goes on in TSLA alone put the biggest casino operator in shame. As a shareholder thou, honestly as long as the general market maintains the "forward looking overvaluesness" you have nothing to worry about. We live in a market where result doesn't matter as much as the movement of the equity. The state of the market (not just TSLA mind you) will make any fundamental/value investor question their own beliefs. But I digress, I haven't done any fundamental analysis on the stuff I've invested in lately. The market clearly doesn't care about this. This is a market where the greatest investor of all times is underperforming barstool and robinhooders. SP500 is also actively filtering out what they considers to be underperforming tickers for a predominately tech dominated tickers with the same questionable PE and valuation. I wouldn't be surprise if in a few year sp500 consist of nothing but Tech and Tesla. I just wonder if there will ever be a time when we look back to this like the same way we look back to the 2000 and say yea, this is insane. |
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I'd chime in the part on fundamentals and how I see it. As a person who graduated with a degree in Economics, too often, I try to analyze everything with fundamental economic theories. This goes back when I just graduated in 2006 where I thought the Vancouver housing market didn't make any fundamental sense, conventionally speaking, and hence I didn't get into the market that grew all the way until the later part of 2016. Looking back retrospectively, I think there was no flaw in my analysis based on what I learned and all the laws and concepts in economics that I learned still held. There was one single problem... more precisely, a variable that I did not take into account as it wasn't the historical market behavior that I learned: the Fed (and all the central banks really). At the time, with the 2008 financial meltdown, the US took the approach of protecting the part that was absolutely essential to prevent a systematic meltdown, and in doing so, it pumped billions of dollars in the market. Don't get me wrong, US Feds took the rightful approach. They allowed the bubble to deflate as soon as possible, however, to prop up the market, they continued the same practice long after the correction took place and the market had absorbed the impact. This created a huge inflow of liquidity into the market. US went mostly into the stock market, while Canada, because RE accounts for such a massive portion of our economy, our gov't and BoC kept the bubble going. Which led us to today. The Fed, prior to the Covid19 meltdown eased quite a bit of its pumping practice as the economy was reaching to a healthy state (relatively speaking). With the Covid19, and being an election year, they had no choice but to return to the old practice of injecting huge liquidity into the market. All that money has to go somewhere. And it continued to pump into stock market as RE is no longer perceived as a safe investment that can offer great returns. In short, I agree with what you said... there are a lot of speculation, FOMO or whatever going on in the stock market, but I also believe that as far as asset goes, the increase won't stop until the Fed starts easing on the practice. So, I'm just going to ride the wave and continue to hold. I suspect that Tesla will easily reach $2000 a share and more if Fed continues its practice plus SP500 inclusion as there isn't a fundamental problem with Tesla, the only thing is that there are a lot of speculation in its SP that goes beyond fundamentals. One can go as far as swapping Tesla from that last sentence with any company that has no fundamental problems. Their SP would ride to ATH after ATHs. This would only begin to scale back once the Fed stops its practice. Because fundamentals can't compete with the pocket of Fed. |
too complex. just buy what's going up, and short what's going down. if you're not sure, don't do anything. |
And let the wave continue... :fuckthatshit: |
late to the party but i bought $15k worth of tesla stocks today lol. someone pray for me i made the right decision |
TSLA is mental wow |
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At this rate, TSLA will single-handedly bring SPY up to ATH once it breaks in. |
FOMO hitting hard :alone: |
everyone is riding the wave on tesla for the pump and dump IMO. realistically its not like everyone cares to buy that brand of car when you're reaching super car prices. |
What is the cheapest brokerage that charges a flat fee? Questrade is a rip off! Why don't we have commission free brokerage in Canada? Fucking BS |
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"Free" commission = we will front run your trades and you will pay more in your price for your securities. I'd prefer to pay $5 anyday. -Mark |
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I've always used CIBC and they seem pretty reasonable. $7.99CAD/USD depending on currency. I can transfer money into my trading account and use the funds right away. Never had a ticker not available unlike some of my friends using Wealthsimple. OTC trades can be done over the phone for an extra fee. |
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i pray for u |
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just use IB. unless you're a huge trader. you're typically only gonna be paying a buck per trade. IB is the largest firm in the world too. I dunno why anyone would use anything else unless they wanna pay more comissions. |
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Fuck that shit, I need a brokerage that charge a flat fee. Just got charged $23 on 1 trade in Questrade.:badpokerface: I thought TD with $10 flat is bad enough. |
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Second what Ulic said. IB is going to be hands down the cheapest in Canada if you do at least few trade a month. They also have the industry cheapest margin rate and one of the best in order filling. IIRC you can even have your TFSA there. |
i just use BMO, $9/trade i don't trade daily or even weekly so not a big deal for me. also has mine and my wife's TFSA and it's easy to transfer money into |
Everything Chinese is popping these few week. Their tech sector is still relatively undervalue compare to the rest of the world. AMZN is trading at a 135 pe ratio while BABA is trading at 35ish PE with 10x the market audience/ reach as AMZN. China is also coming out of a multi year bear market with an actual economy recovery to back up the bull case. This combine with mainstream media's daily bombardment on China doom and gloom is playing out kind of like the few month after covid crash where everywhere you look at all you can see is bear case for the market from the media while institution is quietly scooping up equities Long everything China, especially the tech sector. BABA is also suppose to have a split before July 15. |
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Interactive Brokers has a really low commission rate. I suggest QuestTrade to a majority of friends because it's free to buy ETF so for passive investing it's perfect. Then I suggest WealthTrade for all our speculative / WSB type of trades. I believe both these sites have referral programs which help even out the commission costs. |
^No, I'm buying regular stocks. |
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