First of all, thank you for reading and replying. I positively do not know what I am asking. Replying with a link is fine, no need to type it out. If you do write back, I will read everything. No checks for spelling or grammar will ever come from me. I just need brain food.
I placed my questions up front. Some people are not into why a question is asked.
The market opened to triple digit losses, and will recover slowly in the next few hours. Any finance channel or web site has their opposing angle on why the drop and why the recovery.
What part of hype on multiples of real PE eventually works out to make the company show a profit regardless? I am asking if you know of a current tesla that is now profitable without debt.
Where can I see the divide, in real-time if available, between computers and manual trading by people?
Dark markets, trading of books for up to 24 hours? This sounds like lessor casinos and card rooms. Except that there be whales in the dark markets? What are your views on this market?
Is it possible that computer trading applies some sort of discount to a purchase, because there is no hands on transaction and communication?
Again, thank you for you time. I am really interested in this. It's a nice break for world news.
Level setting my view of the world.
I read news from outside the USA because it is a better view. I do read small town USA newspapers online.
Almost 80% of Americans say they live from paycheck to paycheck
While jobs are booming, they are whimpering in at contract workers with no job security or affordable family health benefits, and part-time workers within businesses that cannot afford full-time or benefits.
I do not see the same "America is doing great" as I do watching or listening to any market reports. Most people saying this are dressed in suits costing more than a weekly paycheck.
The typical American worker now earns around $44,500 a year, not much more than what the typical worker earned in 40 years ago (1978), adjusted for inflation.
Although the US economy continues to grow, most of the gains have been going to a relatively few top executives of large companies and those that finance them into debt. Corporations will lay off workers instead of lowering top org pay and bonuses that are nowhere near any resemblance of the bulk of their employee's pay. Corporations are beholden to debt and stockholders.
Think Toys r Us, debt payments from adding cash for stockholder dividend payments and mergers acquiring and breaking up smaller companies for their cash. Nothing to do with toys or the business of toys and they couldn't merger or borrow again to make the debt payment and pay dividends.
With this dreary view of the world, I am confused about why anyone would buy into hype x times some multiples of basic business facts such as PE. It appears to me that so much money is in the market, that this is the only way to trade more cash?
These are my analogies for this thought:
Apple, made in China, the same China that steals tech as a matter of culture. Tech is seen as opportunity for everyone. Tech for one is not understood. Apple is near a trillion in market cap. China can nationalize companies of they get pissed enough.
Tesla operates in huge debt. Debt that would finance hundreds of other companies. The injury rate is higher than any other company in this industry. They keep it down with OSHA by not counting contract employees. Tesla seems t be run by a not so nice person, which nobody reflects to his business running deep in the red. He recently asked for payments returned to show a larger cash balance. Tesla is up today with all of this knowledge in the market.
Is this like Vegas? If you have a little cash, you go to one table, tons af cash, a higher limit table. Same game, same odds. On the books, the casino reports one game, money in money out.
The little player (the middle class) can lose more and not recover, yet return over and over like insanity. The whale player (corporations) can also get into trouble, and be able to negotiate payment. Whales can get banned, black-booked to lessor casinos and hidden card games. Smaller players already go here.
Investing in the markets; If you have a little cash, you hands on trade from a pc or use a broker. If you have tons of cash, you invest in multiples using computers to keep the pile working and own a brokerage. If the little guy loses, he is wiped out and able to return over and over. If the bigger player loses, he jumps into IVX and uses the computers with discounts on volume to balance his trades in milliseconds of recovery. People here can eventually get banned to lower forms of making money or use dark markets.
Ok, thanks for getting my view on why those questions are important to me.
Submitted August 02, 2018 at 11:22AM by SwineZero https://ift.tt/2vcPWu2
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