It's funny they have IHG Hotel group on a list to benefit from Macau but look at these cheap ass prices. $67 Holiday Inn Macau, an IHG Hotel 4.1(500) · 4-star hotel Part of IHG Hotels & Resorts Pool Spa $83 Crowne Plaza Macau, an IHG Hotel 4.3(614) · 5-star hotel Part of IHG Hotels & Resorts Pool Free Wi-Fi $76 Holiday Inn Express Macau City Centre 4.1(22) · 2-star hotel Part of IHG Hotels & Resorts Free Wi-Fi Free breakfast No thank you!
The lead actress is amazing she is not autistic. Minor controversy there but she hits this roll out of the park. It is a very light fare but good fun.
Cdn Oil stocks finding buyers Friday even though Oil was down ( eg Athabaska, Baytex, Tamarack Valley ). The value play is becoming popular again to some market generalists ( see Chevron buying back 75B in stock ). Oil stocks are normally seasonally strong from Feb forward ( to May maybe ), the SPR draw is likely done, China reopening. Miners still strong but we are at the tail end of normal seasonal strength maybe a month more tops unless Gold just goes on a big run. Copper miners I sold off for now. Some of my small caps are still interesting. Questor an annoying large sell order got bought finally there is no real resistance left to any up move. Avanti still looking strongish I thought about rebuying at .78 on Friday but didn't. I'm hoping Gear Energy finds some buyers, if not now on earnings Feb 14. The first two can move big in either direction. Gear I can't see it going under $1 with the massive dividend ( 1 cent a month ). Nat Gas still an area to avoid short term but watching Birchcliff. Earnings start with Arc Resources on Feb 9/10?, Birchcliff on Feb 15?. If Nat Gas settles, they are great buys days before the report sell on the news day. I made money in Birchcliff then gave 80% of it back. Should have stuck to my gut ( day trade only until Nat Gas stops dropping ).
China. Lol. Happy Saturday Night/Sunday morning Stoney. China is the the 10,000 pound pariah in the room. I was early on my call, but like every stock I have ever provided under the GBA shingle, aside from a few SPAC's that I admittedly fell for.... along with many of the WS greats (an easy excuse... but still...no excuse imo)... my portfolio of picks has weathered the last 18 months quite well, outperformed the best on WS, and other than that.. what can I say. So... back to China and where I was going with the above. Do a quick search Stoney on my Vietnam individual stock picks, and of course the granny etf. ALL UP HUGE. But it's not too late Stoney. While you're getting "a good feeling about China"... forward thinkers are looking across the golden triangle... and zeroing in on the one country that both parties of the American political system seem to support. And that also includes the SV whale money. China... lol.... Stoney... as I said before... you should wake up daily and give thanks to whatever god you pray to... and give thanks that you have VZ here to guide the readers.
Oh Van that's nothing my Mexico picks kicked out any Vietnam crap. The place to be where all the rich Chinese are going is Singapore<-- write it down. But for businesses it's Mexico<-- write it down But for consumer catch up it's China. <---- Hey we lost another guitarist> RIP- Tom Verlaine
Nio is a much more speculative investment than Tesla, though. Nio shares are also down about 60% over the last year, but unlike Tesla, it has yet to make a profit. Due to rising costs and production delays from COVID-19 impacts in China in 2022, the company reported a net loss of almost $1.3 billion in just the first nine months of the year. But growth is still accelerating for Nio, and total revenue is expected to be about $7.5 billion from 2022 sales. With the stock's decline over the course of the company's struggles last year, its valuation has reached a reasonable level for a speculative investment. Nio's price-to-sales (P/S) ratio is now below 3.0, which is less than half that of Tesla. That makes it an intriguing addition to a mix of EV stocks to buy in 2023.