Since you want it, just buy it. That's supply and demand and what drives the price up or down. Buy the common stock DWAC first to play with. If you have never played in the stock market, many swings will scare you. There is nothing like putting real money on an investment and watching price travel up and down all day. Your investment may drop 10% a day for five days in a row. The lesson to learn is how to stick to your strategy and not let others' strategies affect your judgement.
They're all related to the Trump SPAC, yes. The common stock DWAC is your traditional "company" share . DWACW is a warrant derivative and it's more of a listing via the exchange. These come from options which are a "bet" that the price of a stock will be a certain value at their expiration. To make that kind of bet with other investors, it's similar to buying a ticket or document from Nasdaq itself, stating your claim of price target by when. It's tied to the original SPAC entity in that it can track along with its price (DWAC goes up, DWACW goes up too) but it is not given out by the company. At least to my knowledge. The last ticker, DWACU, is apparently a Unit and I actually don't know what that is!
Since you want it, just buy it. That's supply and demand and what drives the price up or down. Buy the common stock DWAC first to play with. If you have never played in the stock market, many swings will scare you. There is nothing like putting real money on an investment and watching price travel up and down all day. Your investment may drop 10% a day for five days in a row. The lesson to learn is how to stick to your strategy and not let others' strategies affect your judgement.
They're all related to the Trump SPAC, yes. The common stock DWAC is your traditional "company" share . DWACW is a warrant derivative and it's more of a listing via the exchange. These come from options which are a "bet" that the price of a stock will be a certain value at their expiration. To make that kind of bet with other investors, it's similar to buying a ticket or document from Nasdaq itself, stating your claim of price target by when. It's tied to the original SPAC entity in that it can track along with its price (DWAC goes up, DWACW goes up too) but it is not given out by the company. At least to my knowledge. The last ticker, DWACU, is apparently a Unit and I actually don't know what that is!