My bad. I would consider shooting the dangerous animal in the head or the heart to be sure it isn't dangerous anymore. The number of legs is irrelevant.
Had the exact same conversation with my husband last night. The sick and crooked follow their own ways. We were researching candidates and my trust at what any of them say is at an all-time low.
151
Nov 14, 2017 12:51:10 PM EST
Q !ITPb.qbhqo
How do you capture a very dangerous animal?
Do you attack it from the FRONT?
Do you walk through the FRONT door?
Do you signal ahead of time you will be attacking?
How do you distinguish between good and bad?
That's not how this works really. I own a lot of stock, I have since the 80s. I'm on three boards and advise two others due to my experience.
This poster doesn't have a basic understanding of dividends. I get about 250k a year in dividends from my stock holdings.
So, let's use Twitter as an example. If I sell now, I get the 90k mentioned above, cool - but that is it, I don't make any more money! But, if I hold out and don't sell, I'll make 30k a year for a decade, and that will go up every single year as my holdings increase or inflation/rates go up.
But, let's say we only have capital appreciation to deal with. Elon offered $54.20 per share, but chances are you paid more for that because Twitter is in a slump now, but at their highest they were at $75 a share, and are at $45 now. It wouldn't be hard to get above that pretty quickly with the economy recovering.
If I were a shareholder, I'd want to hold out and make more money either way.
Also, to assume a purchase point of $24 means they bought Twitter around the lowest it's ever been during the split when they were limiting purchase because they were in the process of buying out Jack.
The reality is most Twitter shareholders bought between $45 and $50, so $4 gain per share isn't really worthwhile. Now, it would be for the average person, but someone who owns enough Twitter to make a profit offer a $4 per share jump has enough money that it's not a big profit.
A very good example of this is Lennar. I bought a fuck ton of Lennar in 2008 during the crash because I knew it would all come back eventually. I held and held and decided last year to cash out to use it to build my new farm. I sold at $105 a share, plenty of money to build my house. That was a worthwhile hold.
That sounds great if there was not a possibility of a Stock Market Crash. So many of you pretend it could never happen to you. Maybe this will be the event that triggers Suicide weekend.
We're all exposed to this kind of tweets and posts but the brutal thuth is: majority of the votes decide.
Even if it goes to the court and the court decides that the board should give the investors a vote - the small invesors are only 13%. The rest are Vanguard, BlackRock, etc. Check finance.yahoo.com. I posted link 10 times and people keep posting this "hopium".
It's designed to distract us. After months of court proceedings board will ask investors to code and 83% (large investors) will decide in 5 mins: same as the board. We just lose time. The outcome is known upfront.
Elon is in control. He won’t let the shareholders suffer... hang on to stock. Buy more.. u got at least 10 pts coming and a whole lot more. He will make it better, as share price will show, his only intention..... he stated cares not for economic reasons. And make it better he will. Elon gets what he wants.. good for us...he is a good guy
I think Elon is too smart to buy Twitter. It's already dying, nobody is going there and nobody who left will be going back. They won't earn a second chance, not even with the old 'Under New Management' ploy. I am sure this is a troll, to show exactly what it showed to shareholders; and if he (or anyone else) bought it, it would be because they have money to burn and carnage to wreak over a losing platform that boldly betrayed its audience, its investors, and its country of origin. Just remember, we're all going to Truth Social; it's better, and patriots have invested - don't let yourself get too caught up in these trivialities of that old, suicidal Twitter thingy.
My bad. I would consider shooting the dangerous animal in the head or the heart to be sure it isn't dangerous anymore. The number of legs is irrelevant.
Had the exact same conversation with my husband last night. The sick and crooked follow their own ways. We were researching candidates and my trust at what any of them say is at an all-time low.
Oh cool so this will play out in court til 2027 and censorship will keep increasing
151 Nov 14, 2017 12:51:10 PM EST Q !ITPb.qbhqo How do you capture a very dangerous animal? Do you attack it from the FRONT? Do you walk through the FRONT door? Do you signal ahead of time you will be attacking? How do you distinguish between good and bad?
I would have said "bait."
Interesting angle...
I'd been thinking that the "dangerous animal" was referring to the US military brass trapped in the depths of Mariupol Ukraine.
Kek!!! 😂
That's not how this works really. I own a lot of stock, I have since the 80s. I'm on three boards and advise two others due to my experience.
This poster doesn't have a basic understanding of dividends. I get about 250k a year in dividends from my stock holdings.
So, let's use Twitter as an example. If I sell now, I get the 90k mentioned above, cool - but that is it, I don't make any more money! But, if I hold out and don't sell, I'll make 30k a year for a decade, and that will go up every single year as my holdings increase or inflation/rates go up.
But, let's say we only have capital appreciation to deal with. Elon offered $54.20 per share, but chances are you paid more for that because Twitter is in a slump now, but at their highest they were at $75 a share, and are at $45 now. It wouldn't be hard to get above that pretty quickly with the economy recovering.
If I were a shareholder, I'd want to hold out and make more money either way.
Thank you, this expectation that Twitters value would just fall to zero is unrealistic. That only happens really with liquidation.
Also, to assume a purchase point of $24 means they bought Twitter around the lowest it's ever been during the split when they were limiting purchase because they were in the process of buying out Jack.
The reality is most Twitter shareholders bought between $45 and $50, so $4 gain per share isn't really worthwhile. Now, it would be for the average person, but someone who owns enough Twitter to make a profit offer a $4 per share jump has enough money that it's not a big profit.
A very good example of this is Lennar. I bought a fuck ton of Lennar in 2008 during the crash because I knew it would all come back eventually. I held and held and decided last year to cash out to use it to build my new farm. I sold at $105 a share, plenty of money to build my house. That was a worthwhile hold.
That sounds great if there was not a possibility of a Stock Market Crash. So many of you pretend it could never happen to you. Maybe this will be the event that triggers Suicide weekend.
What kind of dividends can you get when the share price has gone up 18 cents total since its IPO and the company has shit for profits?
I was explaining how people make money from stocks.
One more proof that this is a distraction.
We're all exposed to this kind of tweets and posts but the brutal thuth is: majority of the votes decide.
Even if it goes to the court and the court decides that the board should give the investors a vote - the small invesors are only 13%. The rest are Vanguard, BlackRock, etc. Check finance.yahoo.com. I posted link 10 times and people keep posting this "hopium".
It's designed to distract us. After months of court proceedings board will ask investors to code and 83% (large investors) will decide in 5 mins: same as the board. We just lose time. The outcome is known upfront.
Elon is in control. He won’t let the shareholders suffer... hang on to stock. Buy more.. u got at least 10 pts coming and a whole lot more. He will make it better, as share price will show, his only intention..... he stated cares not for economic reasons. And make it better he will. Elon gets what he wants.. good for us...he is a good guy
SLI standard lithium is a huge buy
I think Elon is too smart to buy Twitter. It's already dying, nobody is going there and nobody who left will be going back. They won't earn a second chance, not even with the old 'Under New Management' ploy. I am sure this is a troll, to show exactly what it showed to shareholders; and if he (or anyone else) bought it, it would be because they have money to burn and carnage to wreak over a losing platform that boldly betrayed its audience, its investors, and its country of origin. Just remember, we're all going to Truth Social; it's better, and patriots have invested - don't let yourself get too caught up in these trivialities of that old, suicidal Twitter thingy.
Are you saying that the majority of people who own Twitter stock, don't care if the price goes up or down?
This exactly.
Yes, that I agree with
If the poison pill they passed doesn’t make that clear, idk what else would