Will $TWTR come back?

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by Lloyd W. Coutee, Aug 12, 2015.

  1. Jamie J.

    Jamie J.

    It reached the highest point these days. And it is about $19. I think it will be at this level next week. But I wouldn't hurry to trust this stock, but keep an eye open for it.
     
    #161     Mar 4, 2016
  2. closed right at 50DMA n may have created some confusion among traders..any dip is buying opportunity and should hit soon $22.55
     
    #162     Mar 9, 2016
    Vincent S. Ashmore likes this.
  3. Hopefully they won't turn into the next Yahoo
     
    #163     Mar 9, 2016
  4. Jamie J.

    Jamie J.

    Not entirely successful to compare it with Yahoo. Quite possible that the situation on TWTR will be stabilized, but certainly not now, they need enough time to reconsider their business model and to improve their product.
     
    #164     Mar 9, 2016
  5. @jack doing well talking to Kayla @cnbc. twitter goes down with $SQ, twitter goes down with mkts, but never up with either...
     
    #165     Mar 10, 2016
    Vincent S. Ashmore likes this.
  6. Jamie J.

    Jamie J.

    Looks like TWTR again takes its lowest position. Tomorrow should definitely clarify the whole situation.
     
    #166     Mar 10, 2016
  7. One break of 16 happens . boom to 15 quick. Destroy this POS.
     
    #167     Mar 16, 2016
  8. Today we are either going to break over $17 or drop back to test $16.13
     
    #168     Mar 18, 2016
  9. Baron

    Baron Administrator

    http://www.cnet.com/news/twitter-keeping-140-character-limit-on-tweets-after-all/

    Ok, after this article, I've gotta say that this company's future is pretty dismal. Look, they can't just be a conduit for links and nothing else. If their primary service is only allowing people to post 140 characters, then there's no room for any substance in a tweet since a sizable chunk of the 140 characters is usually taken up by the destination URL that actually has real content on it.

    Why would an advertiser want to expose themselves at a point of transition and not the final destination? The answer is that they don't. At least people actually submit posts, pictures, and videos to Facebook, which is real content that Facebook can sell ads against, ever how pointless the majority of that content is. A tweet with half of a sentence and a shortened URL is not content. The only hope they have is getting acquired. Sorry Twitter, but the glory days are over.
     
    Last edited: Mar 20, 2016
    #169     Mar 20, 2016
    m1nt and Vincent S. Ashmore like this.
  10. they decided not to increase the 140 character limit...

    was this a mistake?

    [i don't use twitter myself, although i read a few posts, now and then]

    marc
    :cool:
     
    #170     Mar 20, 2016