Message from @BottomoftheNinth

Discord ID: 428342276293525506


2018-03-27 23:53:05 UTC  

These bad boys are the blue chip supreme stocks. They have massive profit /share numbers and will be increasing in value steadily as more and more people buy in. Getting here about 300/share means you will be able to enjoy some healthy dividends before you flip them when they become normie tier (200-250/share) http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=72 http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=52 http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=53
http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=73
You'll find that most of these operate in foreign countries. Thats because the markets for these countries are less differentiated than the US, and national industries act as monopolies in each country. Always be on the look out for IPOs from non-usa countries
Next are my "buy the dip" picks. These are either decent normie stocks that had a massive selloff, lowering the price well below market value, or they inexplicably dropped in price despite having decent profits. Regardless, buy these suckers up for a quick flip once the price returns to where it was before the dropoff: http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=19 http://oppressive.games/power/corporation.php?corporation=39 (<---- pay extra attention to this one, because its owned by the ruler of germany)

2018-03-27 23:53:19 UTC  

Dont buy any crap stocks yet

2018-03-27 23:53:35 UTC  

Stick with blue chip stocks, preferably ones run by canadian ponies

2018-03-27 23:53:42 UTC  

Im not joking. The ponies are like the jews

2018-03-27 23:55:37 UTC  

lmfao

2018-03-27 23:55:44 UTC  

This whole situation is hilarious

2018-03-27 23:56:03 UTC  

How much should I diversify?

2018-03-27 23:56:12 UTC  

Like buy a little of all of those?

2018-03-27 23:56:34 UTC  

diversity is for gays

2018-03-27 23:56:49 UTC  

And what is the basic thing I'm looking for? Share price? Like what should be the "equation" I use as my litmus

2018-03-27 23:57:04 UTC  

Personally I have over half my stock in PONE oil

2018-03-27 23:57:10 UTC  

profit/share

2018-03-27 23:57:39 UTC  

thats key. High profit/share means high dividends, which means more people will buy, which means price will go up

2018-03-27 23:57:43 UTC  

What, like higher profit/lower share price?

2018-03-27 23:57:56 UTC  

Kinda

2018-03-27 23:58:13 UTC  

High profit is pretty much all that matters. High profit will grow quickly, low profit will not

2018-03-27 23:58:29 UTC  

PONE is at ~5mil/321 share

2018-03-27 23:58:49 UTC  

As more people buy the stock, the price will go up, but the profit/share will decrease

2018-03-27 23:59:13 UTC  

BOYS

2018-03-27 23:59:16 UTC  

So basically, find high profit stocks, collect high dividends, wait for normies to arrive and drive down profit share, then dump

2018-03-27 23:59:26 UTC  

Should I buy stock or invest?

2018-03-27 23:59:29 UTC  

buy

2018-03-27 23:59:39 UTC  

invest is for building up a company

2018-03-27 23:59:45 UTC  

thats venture capital shit

2018-03-27 23:59:54 UTC  

Is that bad?

2018-03-28 00:00:02 UTC  

Its not useful for you

2018-03-28 00:00:03 UTC  

I might want to get a company or overtake one

2018-03-28 00:00:06 UTC  

Later

2018-03-28 00:00:07 UTC  

you dont

2018-03-28 00:00:12 UTC  

Oh ok

2018-03-28 00:00:26 UTC  

I wanna be a (((merchant))) though

2018-03-28 00:00:41 UTC  

when is the best time to sell?

2018-03-28 00:00:49 UTC  

HODL

2018-03-28 00:00:53 UTC  

Never sell

2018-03-28 00:01:07 UTC  

Basically, the corporate game is incredibly difficult. It requires a lot of people pumping a lot of money into your business so you can develop sectors, just to get dicked out of those sectors a day later

2018-03-28 00:01:28 UTC  

How many stocks should I look to buy?

2018-03-28 00:01:42 UTC  

Id say the best time to sell on blue chip stocks is when the profit/share drops below 250 and you have a better option lined up

2018-03-28 00:01:52 UTC  

as many as you can

2018-03-28 00:01:58 UTC  

liquid capital is gay

2018-03-28 00:02:21 UTC  

Not having money in the market means you are missing out on dividends and are relying solely on wages