A list of puns related to "North 24th Street"
Looks like Iβll be driving Holmes for Christmas
Any parking sign that is not in effect 7 days a week (eg no standing anytime) is null and void on a major holiday.
Good Saturday afternoon to all of you here on r/stocks! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week ahead. :)
Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning January 24th, 2022.
> Market turbulence is likely to continue in the week ahead as the Federal Reserve meets and the biggest of big tech βApple and Microsoft β report earnings.
> Stocks on Friday closed out their worst week since 2020, with big losses in technology and consumer discretionary names. FANG darling Netflix was ripped after its Thursday afternoon earnings, and traders are watching to see whether the same fate will take down other big tech names.
> It was a painful week on Wall Street, with the Nasdaq slumping 7.6% for the week, its worst performance since March, 2020. The S&P 500 ended the week at 4,397, down 5.7%, and is now 8.7% from its Jan. 4 high.
> The Nasdaq has fallen 15.5% from its high and is off to its worst start to the year, through the first 14 trading days, since 2008, according to FactSet.
> The Federal Reserveβs meeting Tuesday and Wednesday trumps everything else for markets, as investors await any new clues on how much the central bank will raise interest rates this year and when it will start. Economists expect the Fed to steer markets to a quarter-percentage-point March rate hike.
> There is also an avalanche of major earnings reports expected, including nearly half the Dow 30β²s blue chips, such as 3M, IBM, Intel, Caterpillar and American Express. The two biggest stocks in terms of market capitalization, Microsoft and Apple, report Tuesday and Thursday respectively. Tesla reports Wednesday.
> The economy will also be a focus with a first look at fourth-quarter GDP on Thursday, and Fridayβs personal consumption expenditures data, which includes the Fedβs preferred inflation measure.
> Stocks could be in for more volatile trading, after a wild week of seesaw action resulted in steep declines in major indexes. The weakest major sectors for the week were consumer discretionary, off 8.5%, followed by communication services and technology, both lower by about 7%.
> Earnings seas
... keep reading on reddit β‘Deep Yellow published results from Q4 2021 drill program at Barking Gecko North.
More details here: https://deepyellow.com.au/wp-content/uploads/ThickHighGradeMineralisationIdentifiedAtBarkingGecko18Jan21.pdf
J. Borschoff comments, "the interesting feature of Barking Gecko North is the high-grade character of the mineralisation that is being encountered, which is very similar to what is found at the near-adjacent Rossing and Husab uranium deposits. On this basis alone the follow up drilling that is planned on this target is highly justified."
Stay tuned. More drilling planned to start on January 24th with results in March.
All this while they continue to advance the Tumas project. More detail on Tumas, Deep Yellow's strategy, and a corporate overview here: https://deepyellow.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2021AGMCorporatePresentation29Nov21.pdf
Disclaimer: My three largest holdings are Global Atomic, Elevate, and Deep Yellow - in that order. DYODD.
Deep Yellow is DYL on the ASX and DYLLF on the OTC.
They are 1.13% of the URNM etf. More detail on the URNM etf here.
I'm planning to take the day off from work so that I can bask in its glory and assume the mantle of a filthy tarnished, but I'm eager to find out if it will be released in the morning or if it will be released in the evening (in which case I would schedule the NEXT day off). Does Steam have a standard unlock time?
Forgive me if this is stupid question. The last time I pre-ordered a game was Sekiro and I just don't recall what time it unlocked, and I never get excited like this with other devs.
Thank you in advance!
Hey buds, looking to borrow some gas money. Can provide all docs to show legitimacy/prove I'm a legit person. Can repay addition tip/interest amount as requested or sought by lender. Just waiting for Wednesday payroll and things are a little tight. I need to pick up my wife at the Atlanta airport this afternoon and I'm trying to this to cover that. Reply with an offer and we can work it out. I appreciate the consideration.
Found it on the sidewalk!
The Pilot Test was region coded for both NTSC and PAL, allowing it to be played on any Xbox
Pilot Test letter for Japanese participants
More information can be found on the Steel Battalion Fandom Wiki:
https://steelbattalion.fandom.com/wiki/Steel_Battalion:_Line_of_Contact_Pilot_Test_(Beta_Version)
I am from Europe, living in Texas and I miss walking on interesting streets with cool buildings and sidewalk cafes and people watching. Where can I go in Texas to wander & grab coffee? I really like Magnolia street in Fort Worth, anywhere similar? I donβt mind driving far for a nice day of walking. I am just sick of endless strip malls!
Good Saturday afternoon to all of you here on r/StockMarket! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week ahead. :)
Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning January 24th, 2022.
> Market turbulence is likely to continue in the week ahead as the Federal Reserve meets and the biggest of big tech βApple and Microsoft β report earnings.
> Stocks on Friday closed out their worst week since 2020, with big losses in technology and consumer discretionary names. FANG darling Netflix was ripped after its Thursday afternoon earnings, and traders are watching to see whether the same fate will take down other big tech names.
> It was a painful week on Wall Street, with the Nasdaq slumping 7.6% for the week, its worst performance since March, 2020. The S&P 500 ended the week at 4,397, down 5.7%, and is now 8.7% from its Jan. 4 high.
> The Nasdaq has fallen 15.5% from its high and is off to its worst start to the year, through the first 14 trading days, since 2008, according to FactSet.
> The Federal Reserveβs meeting Tuesday and Wednesday trumps everything else for markets, as investors await any new clues on how much the central bank will raise interest rates this year and when it will start. Economists expect the Fed to steer markets to a quarter-percentage-point March rate hike.
> There is also an avalanche of major earnings reports expected, including nearly half the Dow 30β²s blue chips, such as 3M, IBM, Intel, Caterpillar and American Express. The two biggest stocks in terms of market capitalization, Microsoft and Apple, report Tuesday and Thursday respectively. Tesla reports Wednesday.
> The economy will also be a focus with a first look at fourth-quarter GDP on Thursday, and Fridayβs personal consumption expenditures data, which includes the Fedβs preferred inflation measure.
> Stocks could be in for more volatile trading, after a wild week of seesaw action resulted in steep declines in major indexes. The weakest major sectors for the week were consumer discretionary, off 8.5%, followed by communication services and technology, both lower by about 7%.
> Earnings
... keep reading on reddit β‘Good Saturday afternoon to all of you here on r/EarningsWhispers! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week ahead. :)
Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning January 24th, 2022.
> Market turbulence is likely to continue in the week ahead as the Federal Reserve meets and the biggest of big tech βApple and Microsoft β report earnings.
> Stocks on Friday closed out their worst week since 2020, with big losses in technology and consumer discretionary names. FANG darling Netflix was ripped after its Thursday afternoon earnings, and traders are watching to see whether the same fate will take down other big tech names.
> It was a painful week on Wall Street, with the Nasdaq slumping 7.6% for the week, its worst performance since March, 2020. The S&P 500 ended the week at 4,397, down 5.7%, and is now 8.7% from its Jan. 4 high.
> The Nasdaq has fallen 15.5% from its high and is off to its worst start to the year, through the first 14 trading days, since 2008, according to FactSet.
> The Federal Reserveβs meeting Tuesday and Wednesday trumps everything else for markets, as investors await any new clues on how much the central bank will raise interest rates this year and when it will start. Economists expect the Fed to steer markets to a quarter-percentage-point March rate hike.
> There is also an avalanche of major earnings reports expected, including nearly half the Dow 30β²s blue chips, such as 3M, IBM, Intel, Caterpillar and American Express. The two biggest stocks in terms of market capitalization, Microsoft and Apple, report Tuesday and Thursday respectively. Tesla reports Wednesday.
> The economy will also be a focus with a first look at fourth-quarter GDP on Thursday, and Fridayβs personal consumption expenditures data, which includes the Fedβs preferred inflation measure.
> Stocks could be in for more volatile trading, after a wild week of seesaw action resulted in steep declines in major indexes. The weakest major sectors for the week were consumer discretionary, off 8.5%, followed by communication services and technology, both lower by about 7%.
> Ear
... keep reading on reddit β‘Good Saturday afternoon to all of you here on r/StockMarketChat! I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and are ready for the new trading week ahead. :)
Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning January 24th, 2022.
> Market turbulence is likely to continue in the week ahead as the Federal Reserve meets and the biggest of big tech βApple and Microsoft β report earnings.
> Stocks on Friday closed out their worst week since 2020, with big losses in technology and consumer discretionary names. FANG darling Netflix was ripped after its Thursday afternoon earnings, and traders are watching to see whether the same fate will take down other big tech names.
> It was a painful week on Wall Street, with the Nasdaq slumping 7.6% for the week, its worst performance since March, 2020. The S&P 500 ended the week at 4,397, down 5.7%, and is now 8.7% from its Jan. 4 high.
> The Nasdaq has fallen 15.5% from its high and is off to its worst start to the year, through the first 14 trading days, since 2008, according to FactSet.
> The Federal Reserveβs meeting Tuesday and Wednesday trumps everything else for markets, as investors await any new clues on how much the central bank will raise interest rates this year and when it will start. Economists expect the Fed to steer markets to a quarter-percentage-point March rate hike.
> There is also an avalanche of major earnings reports expected, including nearly half the Dow 30β²s blue chips, such as 3M, IBM, Intel, Caterpillar and American Express. The two biggest stocks in terms of market capitalization, Microsoft and Apple, report Tuesday and Thursday respectively. Tesla reports Wednesday.
> The economy will also be a focus with a first look at fourth-quarter GDP on Thursday, and Fridayβs personal consumption expenditures data, which includes the Fedβs preferred inflation measure.
> Stocks could be in for more volatile trading, after a wild week of seesaw action resulted in steep declines in major indexes. The weakest major sectors for the week were consumer discretionary, off 8.5%, followed by communication services and technology, both lower by about 7%.
> Earn
... keep reading on reddit β‘Good Saturday morning to all of you here on r/stocks. I hope everyone on this sub made out pretty nicely in the market this past week, and is ready for the new trading week ahead.
Here is everything you need to know to get you ready for the trading week beginning May 24th, 2021.
> The trading pattern of the past two weeks β particularly alongside cryptocurrencyβs movements β suggests stocks could continue to be volatile in the week ahead.
> Investors are watching the wild swings in b/itcoin and trying to gauge whether technology shares can gain traction after a rally attempt in the past week.
> The Dow and S&P 500 were lower in the past week, but Nasdaq was slightly higher, helped by a positive move in tech, as well as buying in biotech and big cap growth names like FANG members Alphabet, Facebook and Netflix.
> A steep plunge in b/itcoin after China announced new regulations soured the mood for risk assets during the past week. The U.S. also called for stricter compliance with the IRS. Further, on Friday, China said it would crack down on b/itcoin mining and trading.
> βWhatβs interesting is the market is being bullied around by where b/itcoin goes,β said Peter Boockvar, chief investment officer with Bleakley Advisory Group. B/itcoin plunged by as much as 30% on Wednesday, to about $30,000. Though it recovered to above $42,000, it slid again on Friday.
> The cryptocurrency was down about 9% late Friday, hovering around $36,000, according to Coin Metrics.
> βB/itcoin is a poster child for risk appetite,β said Boockvar. βIt tells you the stock market is more on uneven ground, if weβre getting dragged along by b/itcoin.β
> There is some key data in the week ahead. Consumer confidence, home price data and new home sales are out on Tuesday. Durable goods will be released Thursday, and the consumer sentiment report is issued Friday.
> But the most important data will be the personal income and spending data, which includes the personal consumption expenditure price deflator, the Fedβs preferred inflation measure.
> βThe key to next week is going to be the inflation numbers. The inflation numbers are now becoming the new payroll numbers in terms of market performan
... keep reading on reddit β‘Please note that this site uses cookies to personalise content and adverts, to provide social media features, and to analyse web traffic. Click here for more information.