MOASS Mindset time! If you thought the hard part was holding the last 10 months, I have bad news for you… (1/8)
So you diamond handed for 10 whole months. Picked up plenty of more shares, maybe even saw some gains along the way (or losses no judging). You didn’t sell you beautiful ape. You’ve seen the FUD, the theories, the DD… you’ve seen it all and survived it. (2/8)
The MOASS is finally here. The hard part is over right? WRONG.
That was the easy part. The hard part is when things start actually moving into action. When the ticker slowly moves from 1,000 to 10,000 to 100,000 to 1,000,000 and so on. It may even drop at certain points. (3/8)
You will start to feel the temptation. *maybe I should sell at 37,000, I could buy a new house and pay off my parent’s loans*
You will start to feel the anxiety. *what if this is the top. I don’t want to lose all my money. I can’t trust every ape out there after all. (4/8)
What if others sell first?* You might even feel fear. It may be the scariest moment of your life.
This is the hard part. It’s gonna be harder than a freshman at cheerleader practice. You will be blamed for what is happening to the economy. You will be scared. (5/8)
But you need to hold. Hold for your family. Your friends. Hold for your fellow apes. Hold for what those fuckers did in 2008. (6/8)
I’m holding and I’m holding hard. Don’t forget the DD. They need your shares, and you name the price. Don’t cheapen yourself for selling less than what it’s worth. (7/8)
Harden your resolve, apes. The MOASS is coming soon, and when it comes, be prepared. Here comes the hard part.
A year ago, in a small corner of the internet, on a sub Reddit called Wall Street Bets an idea was formed. “What if retail bought up our favorite stonks, that were maliciously shorted, and just held and bought no matter what? Can we save those companies?” $GME $AMC 1/13
So, we did just that. We bought, and we held. We bought more, and held. And on January 27th, the idea proved to be true! Our stocks saw MASSIVE GAINS! Retail was on top of the world! We did it!… until 2/13
January 28th. The market makers, the elite, the 1% told us that we weren’t good enough. That we didn’t know what we were doing, and they restricted us from freely buying into our stonks, they even went so far as to restrict buying on the app they we used most RobinhoodApp 3/13
An experience that @LowKey_disco and myself had at an @AMCTheatres, last night. I wrote @CEOAdam a message about this, and wanted to share with everyone. 1/11
I write you this to tell you about an amazing experience that a dear friend of mine and myself witnessed at an AMC theater in La Jolla, California, last night. We went to the 5pm showing of "Spiderman", 2/11
after the movie, we were sitting at one of the tables in the common area in the theater lobby. We witnessed an employee pushing an older gentleman in a wheelchair, and placed him at the table next to ours, and sat down directly next to him. 3/11
**DD FOR DUMMIES** Morning, STONKERS! If you’re a bag HODLER, and have no idea why you’re in the red, this tweet is for you!! I want to talk about Cost Basis Per Share or “Average Price”. 1/11
Your Cost Basis Per Share or Average Price Per Share (depending on your brokerage) is just that. The average price that you bought your shares at. If the price goes up, from there, then obviously you’re gaining money in your investment, and if it goes down, then the VALUE of 2/11
your investment is going down. You still own your shares, so the VALUE of your shares goes up, and it goes down on a daily basis. 3/11
WHAT IS PAYMENT FOR ORDER FLOW?
Payment for order flow is essentially the practice of a PFOF broker routing orders through a series of market-making firms, instead of directly to a stock exchange. 1/14
The broker gets paid by these firms for redirecting trades to a particular market maker for completion. These companies pay a small amount to participating brokers and complete the order.
2/14
The market makers gain from this flow of trades in two ways. First, as market makers, they are typically able to sell at the (higher) ask and buy at the (lower) bid.
3/14
DD For Dummies: A History lesson vs. Today's price action...
On January 5th, $AMC was at its lowest point at $1.91. From then to the run up on January 27th, that was 22 days... 1/5
From January27th to March 11th, AMC went into a pennant. It filled gaps and experienced a false breakout, back onto the previously formed pennant, and had a breakout to the upside, on May 11th at the end of that pennant. 22 days later, AMC went to $72.62. 2/5
Since June 2nd, the stock went into another pennant. It's filled gaps, and even had a false breakout from that pennant. On September 30th, another pennant formed and crossed the larger June 2nd pennant, AMC broke out of both of them...today, October 13th. 3/5
*DD FOR DUMMIES: What's beta? Beta is a measure of risk commonly used to compare the volatility of stocks, mutual funds, or ETFs to that of the overall market. The S&P 500 Index is the base for calculating beta with a value of 1.0.
Securities with betas below 1 have historically been less volatile than the market. While securities with betas above 1, have historically been more volatile than the market. The beta is calculated using data over a 5-year period.
GameStop Corp. Class A Report has a negative beta of -6.8, according to Infront. Roughly speaking, the negative coefficient means that the stock often moves opposite the general market trend. See below the comparison of GameStop's beta with its main segment peers.