$130----$110 Polaris. This is a name that delivers at earn time. Why is it down so much. 1 month down 14%? These off road vehicles they make -- people still use them I assume, is there some shift here I'm missing- are they going electric. Save me before I buy because PII has reached out target entry price.
Mongo, TEAM, TWLO, CRM.... outside of earnings, they move with the tide. I saw yesterday you post your typical Stoney "I am the greatest" regarding TEAM at $184... but brother.... it hit that from $190 like 3 times. Not to mention you called me stupid when I closed the post earnings trade at $198. Where was your great TA then? It was dead wrong either way. Not gloating here... but I was dead right. We all make mistakes Stoney, he difference is not all of us claim perfection and ignore all the wrong calls. Lesson learned on Stoney's part maybe? TEAM @$200: Far from "My TA is 100%" Hey... we all make mistakes....
Way down from when I told you it never moves. Did you happen to check DEO btw? It went ex-divy for $2.45 and still closed up. IT WAS A GREAT WEEK FOR ALL GBA READERS THAT FOLLOWED VZ. One reader emailed: Dear Van, -You nailed the TSLA short. -You Called the QQQ bottom to the exact minute last Friday days in advance. -You called the NASDAQ $COMPX top at the exact level days in advance. -Your 4444 level is flat out spooky the way it has played out. -You told us to buy Affirm with 20 minutes left before the close... ....and then kept us all updated with an in depth MINUTE BY MINUTE analysis of their earnings report after hours... while Stoney attempted to dilute these posts... by stepping on each and every one of them with childish videos and off topic remarks... and we all know he read them. -AND!!! You predicted Powells speech verbatim. >>> ONE WEEK IN ADVANCE! As an avid reader of GBA.. I have to wonder... why do you put up with Stoney's apparent jealousy and not start your own thread? Looking forward to seeing if you predicted 9/13 right. Regards, ~Curious Katy in Curaco. Dear Kate.... Why do I tolerate Stoney? Because I feel compelled to help those that try hard. All of my love, ~van
Debris field at the launchpad after the SpaceX Starship explosion in Boca Chica, Texas. IndustriesTransportation SpaceX Blast Left Officials in Disbelief Over Environmental Damage Fish and Wildlife Service biologists expressed frustrations in emails obtained by Bloomberg. August 25, 2023 at 2:38 PM EDT In April, US wildlife officials visited the site of a SpaceX rocket that exploded shortly after takeoff and took in the damage: Concrete chunks had left craters a foot deep and were strewn across tidal flats, almost four acres of state park were burned, and seven bobwhite quail eggs and a collection of blue land crabs had been incinerated. The officials, biologists working with the Fish and Wildlife Service, privately expressed disbelief at the extent of the scene, records obtained by Bloomberg News show. “The explosion was so extensive it sent concrete chunks flying into the surf,” said one email from Chris Perez of the FWS to colleagues. The environmental damage was due to the tremendous amount of force required to get the world's largest rocket off the ground. The wildlife agency couldn’t begin its review until 48 hours after the failed launch. Some of their observations show that behind the scenes, officials at times questioned whether they were blocked from accessing the site. And they puzzled over why SpaceX had opted not to use flame-suppression technology long considered the gold standard in the launch industry. Not doing so appeared to be a costly error, allowing what Elon Musk called a “rock tornado” of power, heat and gas to blow a hole into the ground under Starship, the SpaceX rocket, during the April 20 incident — a problem the company is still trying to resolve. SpaceX's “pad site was totally destroyed and will likely force them to re-design the whole thing,” Perez wrote to Joan Marsan, an attorney with the US Department of Interior. “Probably won't see another launch for awhile.” SpaceX didn’t respond to emailed questions about the documents and a spokesperson couldn’t be reached by phone.
I almost hope we open down Monday or we won't get Van back. I hope he does. It's a good teaching moment for all of you. When Van first said rally and joined our Zig call we were so happy then just three days later as he always does Van got scared and said close all your winners. Luckily I was here to keep you all straight and highly profitable. The one thing you can't do if you want to be taken seriously in my world is flip flop.
I will give you names before they move and I will tell you why. That is what makes me different I guess. Anyway... Lets Hope For the best-- lets get Van back in the fold-- don't harsh out on him.
Unfortunately for my son I am in Ct and all his info is in NYC. TEAM I may end up with myself> I keep doing that. // stealing his stks. We set up some buy targets for various stks and TEAM is at $190 which I think was the area I a have to double check.
Using AI as a carrot for cloud migration Then there's Atlassian, the Australia-based business behind the collaboration and project management tools Jira, Trello, and Confluence. This company is adding AI features to its cloud-based tools for all the usual reasons -- improving the user experience, giving people easy access to the right information in a massive data collection, and running powerful analytics on said data to generate helpful insights about your projects. However, Atlassian is also leaning into cloud-based AI tools from OpenAI for a more unusual reason. The company has been converting old-school software license clients into cloud service subscribers for years now, and the AI surge provides a unique push to get the last stragglers over that conversion hill. OpenAI's GPT engine powers ChatGPT but is also available as a separate generative AI system for business use. Atlassian has added generative AI features to most of its products, but only for the cloud-based versions. After all, OpenAI's tools are also cloud-based and require internet access, so why shouldn't Atlassian ask its clients to go all-in on the cloud platform if they want the full experience of integrated analytics and chatbots? "All these new products that we're delivering and shipping -- they're only available on the cloud. So I think customers recognize the direction that we're shifting toward and where we think the best customer experience will be," investor relations chief Martin Lam said at a recent investor conference. "Customers are recognizing that as well, as they evaluate their migration plans and say, 'Okay, hey, I want access to generative AI capabilities. I really need to think about my cloud migration plans.'" So the inherently cloud-based AI features are serving as "a pretty big carrot" that should inspire Atlassian's last non-cloud customers to make the leap into software-as-a-service subscriptions. That's a clever move, boosting the subscriber counts for a more profitable revenue stream. And we haven't even talked about Atlassian's stock price yet. The stock has gained 43% year-to-date but still sits 61% below (all together now) the peak price from the fall of 2021. This stock isn't cheap in terms of valuation metrics but Atlassian is a fast-growing cash machine. It is another rock-solid AI investment in my book, especially at these relatively modest share prices. TEAM Revenue (TTM) data by YCharts