Let's share some stock tips.
I'm currently invested big in CSBR, and i believe it's still money to be made as it is currently undervalued. How is the oil market in US atm? In europe it is still a little high risk, though they invested and bought many new fields for a low price. Oil in EU is good long term i believe.
How do you invest in oil? Which apps do you use?
Which EU country are you from? (UK here)
>>1720295
I'm from Norway and by investing in oil i mean investing in oil and energy stocks. For instance our biggest player Statoil owns most of the Norwegian oilfields and they bought many new ones for cheap while the price was low. Another growing business is the salmon industry.
today I took a huge risk and bough 1500 shares of DRYS. it could offer a really good profit in year or too but it's a terrible risk
Here is a good stock tip:
Avoid stocks at these valuations.
>>1720407
So not invest after new years eve?
>>1720407
Retard alert
>>1720436
lol okay. We'll see who's the retard when analyst EPS estimates fall over the year (they always do), and the market is trading at a record forward PE.
>>1720438
>Record consumer confidence
>Increasing wages
>Higher interest rates and steepening curve
>Full Republican government that wants to cut trades across the board
OK nerd, earnings definitely can't catch up, oh so much going against them :^)
>>1720436
You're the one with mental challenges if you can't see how horrendously overvalued the broad stock market is right now.
Staying out for a while is good advice - wait for the coming crash, then start buying when it looks like the bottom is in. Simple. I sold all my stocks at the end of November 2016 - sure I might miss a blow-off top of another couple of percent, but that's better than trying to squeeze out the same door as the suckers who just bought at the top.
>>1720448
Plus Trump is going full Keynesian economics lowering taxes, increasing buying power.
>>1720475
You're the retard who doesn't know anything about stock valuations since you keep arguing about current values with no knowledge of any of the basic things I pointed out earlier.
>>1720529
>since you keep arguing about current values
wat, that was my first post in this thread you bellend.
>>1720448
> Higher interest rates and steepening curve
Yeah, higher rates on a competing financial product (bonds) are definitely going to entice people to buy stocks. Are you fucking retarded? The only stocks helped by this are the banks, which have already made an enormous move since the election. Everything is already priced in and then some.
That alone is enough to sink your bull case. There is absolutely no way that the S&P makes the analyst-estimated $132.89 in 2017 earnings (vs. $126.89 in CY2016, meaning +4.73% yoy growth) AND maintains anything close to its current PE. I'm not saying the market is due for some -20% disaster, but you're taking a lot of risk for what will probably be less than a 5% return maximum.
>>1720810
>More money being created by banks only helps the banks
Wew lad. You realize we're having liquidity issues on a macro level because banks are lending due to the flat curve, yes? It's been causing low systemic growth across the entire country? Come on now my dude.
>>1720475
>Trying to time the market
Pleb detected.