MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
- Yodean
- Jeidi
- Posts: 2685
- Joined: Wed Sep 30, 2020 9:02 pm
MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
2 questions:
1) pg. 13 - CCMP should be "Cabot Microelectron," not "CMC Materials, Inc.," I am assuming.
2) @TIT: could you recommend a decent palladium bullion ETF?
1) pg. 13 - CCMP should be "Cabot Microelectron," not "CMC Materials, Inc.," I am assuming.
2) @TIT: could you recommend a decent palladium bullion ETF?
Buy Fear, Sell Euphoria. The Neonatal Calf undergoes an agonizing birthing, while the Bear falls into hibernation.
- Budge
- Black Belt
- Posts: 1099
- Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2020 7:13 am
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
ETF as opposed to stocks?
Sibanye, Ivanhoe, Impala?
..whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..
- Budge
- Black Belt
- Posts: 1099
- Joined: Sun Oct 11, 2020 7:13 am
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
If you want an etf have a look at PALL, holds bullion rather than futures:
https://www.etf.com/PALL#overview
..whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government..
- Yodean
- Jeidi
- Posts: 2685
- Joined: Wed Sep 30, 2020 9:02 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Thanks! Entered on the watchlist.Budge wrote: ↑Wed Feb 02, 2022 10:02 pm If you want an etf have a look at PALL, holds bullion rather than futures:
https://www.etf.com/PALL#overview
In other news, Rothschild descendant Zuckerberg's stuff taking a bloody beating of beatings in afterhours trading ... glad I sold some Skynet today, will need it to finance the acquisition of a big lot of FBIbook tomorrow ...
Buy Fear, Sell Euphoria. The Neonatal Calf undergoes an agonizing birthing, while the Bear falls into hibernation.
- SOL
- Power VS Force
- Posts: 3267
- Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Cabot Microelectronics Corporation Announces It is Now CMC Materials, Inc. and Declares Quarterly Cash Dividend
https://www.cmcmaterials.com/investors/ ... fault.aspx
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply
The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
- harryg
- Advanced
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:54 am
- Contact:
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Just wanted to say that this newsletter contains a lot of wisdom in the first few paragraphs...
(By wisdom I mean, of course, things with which I agree).
(By wisdom I mean, of course, things with which I agree).
---------------------------------------
https://www.harryginsights.com
https://www.harryginsights.com
- harryg
- Advanced
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:54 am
- Contact:
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Indeed, no-one else interested in Meta? Guidance wasn't great, but 20% off overnight...
---------------------------------------
https://www.harryginsights.com
https://www.harryginsights.com
- RMSLSP
- blue pill or red pill
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2021 10:56 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
I have the same doubt, i´m in europe, how could I buy physical palladium here (I guess with Larry that Sol recommends wouldn´t be cost efficient) or could I instead choose some group of stocks? I use interactive brokers and it doesn´t let me invest in etfs.
- AstuteShift
- Black Belt
- Posts: 1083
- Joined: Thu Oct 01, 2020 11:24 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
It’s always good stuff to keep you in check and also points to improve.
I’m a high risk taker and my weakness has always been discipline. So I automated the process and made sure to make the portfolio management perfect. Profit targets and mental stops make the management simple.
Never risk too much money in one asset and always have some cash just in case a juicy opportunity comes by.
I find having a business plan keeps you honest since at the end of the day, trading is a business and also an art to enjoy.
- SOL
- Power VS Force
- Posts: 3267
- Joined: Sat Sep 26, 2020 7:32 am
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
One option is for Palladium is the ETF PALL and for Gold there are a bunch of ETF's that one can consider like GLD, or the miner based ETF's. For those willing to take more risk there are leveraged ETF's but those should be approached with Caution.
When the words short term appear under any post; the same conditions listed in the Market update under the short term category apply
The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
The end is always near; its the beginning and how you live each moment that counts the most
- nicolas
- Junior
- Posts: 143
- Joined: Thu Oct 08, 2020 6:04 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
If you want an ETF accessible to EU residents, check the WisdomTree Physical Palladium (PHPD.)
Or you can buy bullions with a broker that offers vault storage. I use Bullionstar in Singapore. They have palladium too (though not a large selection.) You can pay in USD or EUR, but I found personally that the most cost-effective solution was to pay in SGD from my Transferwise account.
There are plenty of similar solutions in Europe (Switzerland notably) but I don't have any particular name to recommend.
Sone things to pay attention to and compare between them are the commissions, the spread between buy and sell prices, the yearly storage fee + any flat fee they may charge.
- RMSLSP
- blue pill or red pill
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2021 10:56 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Thank you Sol but the problem is I can’t invest in ETFs I have no trading permission with interactive brokers (the one I use) I think its because I am retail investor but not sure I completely understand their policies.SOL wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 2:06 pmOne option is for Palladium is the ETF PALL and for Gold there are a bunch of ETF's that one can consider like GLD, or the miner based ETF's. For those willing to take more risk there are leveraged ETF's but those should be approached with Caution.
- Yodean
- Jeidi
- Posts: 2685
- Joined: Wed Sep 30, 2020 9:02 pm
PGMs
@nicolas, @stefk, @TIT:nicolas wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 2:33 pm If you want an ETF accessible to EU residents, check the WisdomTree Physical Palladium (PHPD.)
Sone things to pay attention to and compare between them are the commissions, the spread between buy and sell prices, the yearly storage fee + any flat fee they may charge.
Wanted to pick your brains on the PGMs.
To me, at least for the next year or so, it would seem that platinum is more likely to approach the price of palladium, than anything else. I'm cautiously bullish on both, but on my charts at least, platinum is the slightly better buy right about now. With that said, I did buy a bit of PALL last week.
My understanding is that Russia is a big producer of palladium, so with geopolitical uncertainty surrounding the region, there may be a bit of a supply shock - demand imbalance wrt palladium.
Still, any other particular trend/reason/rationale why palladium is a superior acquistion compared to platinum atm?
Buy Fear, Sell Euphoria. The Neonatal Calf undergoes an agonizing birthing, while the Bear falls into hibernation.
- RMSLSP
- blue pill or red pill
- Posts: 14
- Joined: Wed Mar 31, 2021 10:56 pm
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
Great thank you very much. That ETF seems to work for me.nicolas wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 2:33 pmIf you want an ETF accessible to EU residents, check the WisdomTree Physical Palladium (PHPD.)
Or you can buy bullions with a broker that offers vault storage. I use Bullionstar in Singapore. They have palladium too (though not a large selection.) You can pay in USD or EUR, but I found personally that the most cost-effective solution was to pay in SGD from my Transferwise account.
There are plenty of similar solutions in Europe (Switzerland notably) but I don't have any particular name to recommend.
Sone things to pay attention to and compare between them are the commissions, the spread between buy and sell prices, the yearly storage fee + any flat fee they may charge.
- harryg
- Advanced
- Posts: 654
- Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2021 8:54 am
- Contact:
Re: MU, Chinese New Year Edition, Feb. 1st, '22;
RMSLSP this is perhaps because you are an EU resident? (or at least not a US one). It's an EU law (MiFID II) to "protect" (cough) retail investors.RMSLSP wrote: ↑Mon Feb 07, 2022 4:40 pmThank you Sol but the problem is I can’t invest in ETFs I have no trading permission with interactive brokers (the one I use) I think its because I am retail investor but not sure I completely understand their policies.
A reasonable site for info on non-US ETFs is at https://www.justetf.com/
If you really want to buy the US ETFs (for example, let's say you have an ETF-only focus) you could look into opening an account with a US broker in the US, eg https://www.firstrade.com/content/en-us/international
---------------------------------------
https://www.harryginsights.com
https://www.harryginsights.com