Also-who is into the Medical Pot stocks. I have 4500 shares of one "company" that did not do squat. Some other stocks soared 125,000%. Curious where you think the next play is with so many states changing pot laws. [Reply]
Originally Posted by RubberSponge:
At close this was at .54. Bought in at 12:25-12:30pm for .39. 34.62% gain in 2 and a half hours. I look at that gain as insurance in case tomorrow BAC goes down a little. Set up for Friday morning earnings to make the option price spike in the morning. I should be out by noon. If not, I have till the 20th to make a decision. But I don't really to want to hold this position over the weekend.
So did you sell? Now you're underwater if you held [Reply]
Originally Posted by RubberSponge:
Get out. Take a gain when you see it. Don't try to be too greedy.
I did that recently on WRMT. I had spin-off dividend shares from PWCL, a solar energy company.
I had them at .00 cents due to the dividend and sold at almost $3.00. Here it is a year later and the last week the stock has shot to the moon- 30% daily gains-now sitting at $24.00 per share. Could have bought it 11 months ago for 9 cents a share. :-)
At least PWCL has been moving upwards. Big gain today. [Reply]
Originally Posted by Dunit35:
My only question is.
I have three cards already. All with zero balances. One I haven't used since 2010 and only keep it because it is my oldest account. Should I cancel it? We will be upgrading houses in 4-5 years and I want a top notch score.
If you don't have an annual fee in a card, I would never cancel. It will shorten your average age of accounts and potentially negatively affect your score. [Reply]
Here's a strange question. I have an older relative who doesn't trust banks or any financial institution. She got some stock 30 years ago from her employer, and it's actual stock certificates, not electronic at all. The company still exists, so I presume it's worth something. I've got the job of talking her into putting it into a brokerage instead of keeping it in a drawer. Anyone ever convert actual certificates? I presume maybe I take it to a brokerage in person? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Rain Man:
Here's a strange question. I have an older relative who doesn't trust banks or any financial institution. She got some stock 30 years ago from her employer, and it's actual stock certificates, not electronic at all. The company still exists, so I presume it's worth something. I've got the job of talking her into putting it into a brokerage instead of keeping it in a drawer. Anyone ever convert actual certificates? I presume maybe I take it to a brokerage in person?
Is this a public company or a private company? [Reply]
Then yes, just bring it to a broker. I imagine they take physical possession of the stock and then put it into your relative's name. Convert from physical, direct ownership to street name ownership.
That's my best guess, but they can do whatever needs doing. Or you could try to call the company's transfer agent. Computershare or whoever. Those services track who owns stock for each public company, and they may be able to help. I'd just call your broker, though, as a first step.
Given stock splits, etc. over the years she may own more or fewer shares than indicated on the stock certificate(s) itself, however. Will be interesting for you to find out.
Has she been getting proxies etc. in the mail all these years? [Reply]
Originally Posted by Amnorix:
Then yes, just bring it to a broker. I imagine they take physical possession of the stock and then put it into your relative's name. Convert from physical, direct ownership to street name ownership.
That's my best guess, but they can do whatever needs doing. Or you could try to call the company's transfer agent. Computershare or whoever. Those services track who owns stock for each public company, and they may be able to help. I'd just call your broker, though, as a first step.
Given stock splits, etc. over the years she may own more or fewer shares than indicated on the stock certificate(s) itself, however. Will be interesting for you to find out.
Has she been getting proxies etc. in the mail all these years?
I have no idea if she's been getting proxies or anything. She just showed me the certificates last year (and was having trouble finding some of them), which made cringe.
Thanks for the help! I don't know if I'll talk her into entering the late 20th century or not, but figure I should try. However, my nightmare is that I'll take it to some broker who's never even seen these things, and they'll get lost in the system. [Reply]