Boomers are worth $75 trillion, which dwarfs the $2 trillion COVID injection. As they retire/pass away the market is poised for a huge rally

The article I swiped this from suggests we can't have a prolonged recession because this 75 trillion is coming back into the economy in the next 20 years as the majority of Boomers retire or pass. The US government injected 2 trillion into the economy during Covid and it sparked an incredible market rally. That figure is absolutely dwarfed by Baby Boomer savings. *For reference, there are 76 million Boomers and 73 million Millennials.

Which tech stocks should a 21-year old buy for long term hold?

I’m currently college student pursuing a tech degree. I’m currently working as an intern at a big tech company and my parents have generously proposed to me that they’ll $2000 dollars of my own money if I buy tech stocks at the end of my internship. I was thinking about just investing into the big 4 reliable tech companies(Apple, Amazon, Microsoft and Google) mostly due to my own research with AI and how I think that all 4 will capitalize the most on AI in the n

Reinvesting into losers?

A year or so ago I met with wealth advisors who promptly sold some of my tech stocks and funds. I am 68, and was about 80% invested in tech. Fortunately I hung onto my best, QQQ and FSELX, that I’ve had since 1999. Most of them heavily duplicated each other after a couple of decades, so it made sense to sell off a couple.I get that it’s risky for me to be so heavily in tech at my age. But they bought some bonds (DODIX, JMSIX) and others that immediately went red

Goldman in talks to offload Apple credit card, savings products to American Express

https://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/30/goldman-in-talks-to-offload-apple-financial-products-to-american-express-source.html

Goldman Sachs is in talks to offload its Apple credit card and high-yield savings account products to American Express, a source told CNBC’s Leslie Picker. The talks come amid a broader retreat by Goldman from i

Wall Street Week Ahead for the trading week beginning July 3rd, 2023

Good Friday evening to all of you here on r/stocks! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week, month, quarter and H2 ahead. :)

Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning July 3rd, 2023.

S&P 500 rises on Friday to close out big first half, Nasdaq posts best start to a year in 4 decades: Live upda

put it all on RAD?

only $82,156,000 to buy all the 54.05M(according to WSJ) public shares of the most undervalued company on the listing right now. I'm finna go buy a stupid power ball ticket.

RAD will be the biggest pharmacy in 5-10 yrs after teaming up with AMZN last month.

They also have a market cap of 86.9M(according to rhood) and they're currently valued at $1.52 each. Once they get their debt taken care of and get all the legalities of sending scripts

Industry Research

This is a discussion question about ur opinion on retail market research and ethical boundaries.

Context: basically i am doing research on profile energy and they gave 80% market share of their primary oil and gas market largely due to the superiority of their tech and how niche their sub-segment of a sub-segment is and so their products cost a premium to the 3 competitors they have. In order to get a good view of the tech superiority i requested a quote

What Acquisitions and Mergers are waiting for regulatory approval for the stock to pop?

I jumped ship on Microsoft’s Acquisition of Activision with a small bump. MSFT offered 95/share, but has headwinds enough I decided the risk of the FTC blocking it was too much. It’s an interesting style of play to me.

Are there any other similar, all-cash deals going on where regulatory pressure is holding back the stock price?

submitted by /u/Ekublai
Does the Stock Market typically do better on Fridays?

I, like many, get paid on a Friday. I typically like to take a portion of my paycheck and buy stocks. I'm not sure if it's just a coincidence or what not, but I often notice the major indices going up quite a bit on the day I receive my direct deposit, which is kind of annoying because it means I get less stock for my buck so to speak.

I generally don't make much of it (as "it just happens") and I don't try and time the market, b


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