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plato1976

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  1. I want to point out that it's not the quarantine at home as we understand. It's a quarantine that happens at specified buildings (transported by the government bus). First hand information as I can see from my wechat groups (relatives living in china broadcasting real time progress. )
  2. Before the pandemic Overstock was traded below 10 and now it's still above 20 after the crash, what significantly changed during the pandemic as far as Overstock's business is concerned?
  3. How about Europe? I don't treat it as EM and I do think it concerns the U.S. Gov geopolitically, if not the Fed itself
  4. Does anyone know if this mentioned "MicroStrategy’s 0.75% convertible bond" trades publicly? Where can I check this information Thanks!
  5. not sure how many have thought about hedging the profits It's fair to say the market is at least fairly valued. Let's say the long term rate will be permanently stuck below 1% for 10y and if we add 3% risk premium we get 25pe as reasonable for the market. Good bluechips with strong moat can have some premium and this put a cap at 30pe for bluechip with a little bit growth prospect (sth like Apple). Apple is already above 30 now. And this applies to most other new era bluechips It's also fair to say that without the liquidity the market would have been gone that high. Both liquidity and long term rate are close to the extreme they can get (they can certainly go more crazy - rate can go to 0 or slightly negative, but I see that as the last leg). I am reluctant to sell my positions for two reasons: 1) most have good moat and in the long run they will still compound 2) most importantly, I don't want to incur the tax So this leaves me with the only option. To begin to hedge. But I cannot find a good hedge here. Most leap puts are very expensive now (just check tesla puts...) I don't want to short anything in a straight way. I am actually thinking, if the main reason of this bull market is liquidity, is there a cheap way to hedge against the eventual liquidity ramping off? (I don't want to bet against the long term rate, imo the long term rate may just be stuck at a low level for a long time)
  6. why the insurance business is very well positioned? low interest rate in general impairs the insurance business in overall
  7. what's berkshire insurance's exposure to the pandemic? I think geico is immune to it, but re-insurance can take a hit? but how?
  8. I can see more and more residential and companies are shifting to install solar panels to supply electricity for themselves. Many of them gain "energy independence" Won't this impact traditional utility business ? Not sure if there is a quantification of this impact
  9. The heated up discussion about WFC and the increased number of ppl buying WFC here scared sh*t out of me
  10. this does look like a value trap to me at this point (together with most other big banks)
  11. Isn’t the portfolio going down further? Banks are sliding day after day, trumping the apple gain
  12. As I said, most likely he bought nothing material
  13. Bank has been weak since the market low, and WFC was esp. weak. High probability there is another leg down from this level
  14. In other words it's a financial discipline issue. Is there any FCF focused energy company ? This is the small bet I've made with XOM. <5% position but I would like to build to a 5% position in the next month or so. How do you value XOM? XOM doesn’t look cheap to me, except they go back to peak earnings in 2012 or so. It’s just plain overvalued. So many better options out there (not in energy though) That’s the problem, I am not sure the model works at any crude price. Even the majors had problem living within their ash flows at $80-100/brl. The costs have shown a lot of elasticity , both on the way up, as well as on the way doen. Based on FCF, the majors were never cheap. You have to assume that the future is different than the past in order to be successful and more than just a higher crude price is needed. Labor cost, day rate inflation. Marginal projects getting approved. It’s what happens in industries that like to play on the margin. Typically in the past there was a delay due to long project lead times, but when shale started to dominate, the costs and the prices track each other closer.
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