@Roto_Frank@CBSScottWhite@CPTowers F.Y.I. regarding Samuel Basallo he played at catcher on Sunday and was hurt on a slide tying to make a tag. He was holding his wrist. https://t.co/Y4GpSZcz9w
@adamtaggart I have no skin in the crypto market but it really scares me to think so many young people have their careers, net worth and hopes tied to this one asset class.
@adamtaggart Keep families together with mom and dad. Consider a trade school on the same level as college. When possible buy products made in the US if you can afford to do so and the product is as good or better than non-US. Don't just default to the lowest cost most convent to purchase.
@MLB@Roto_Frank@CBSScottWhite@CPTowers Is there a record for inside the park / little league home runs? There sure seems like there have been a lot of them in the last few weeks.
Skip the aisles of the grocery store.
Everything you need is on the perimeter.
Meat. Eggs. Dairy. Produce.
Real foods don’t need marketing, mascots, or flashy packaging.
@Chartfest1 When I first read it I wasn't sure if Walter was being creative or this was actual history because the similarities were too unreal to believe. I performed a quick (lazy) AI search and it found that it was indeed fact. Great history Walter, thank you for sharing this nugget.
Back in the 1960s there was a company called National Video. They made color television picture tubes, and were the first to produce a 23-inch rectangular color TV picture tube. It quickly became the industry standard, and every major TV set producer scrambled to get their hands on National Video’s picture tubes. They literally couldn’t make them fast enough.
The stock went from a low of 15 in 1964 to a peak of 120 in October 1965. The final 70 points came in just the last few months.
Eventually, though, the Motorola’s and Zenith’s of the world produced their own color TV picture tubes. They didn’t need National Video’s any longer.
The stock went from 120 to a low of 40 in 1966, 15 in 1967, and then to zero in 1968 as the company went bankrupt. The poor thing couldn’t even make it to the Go-Go years.
In those days, Mueller and Company produced tick volume charts. National Video’s chart depicted the stock going from Northwest to Southeast in a straight line while the tick volume line went straight up.
The stock was a fundamental short. In those days, short sales could only be executed on an uptick. Which meant the whole world was always offered up an eighth.
Oh, National Video’s ticker symbol? NVD.A.
This story is true, but any resemblance to any other companies is purely coincidental.
@badcharts1 Do you think this might be the catalyst that finally trips up the stock bull market? Higher interest rates combined with higher engery prices doesn't seem like a good combo for equity prices.