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It is an Internet forum and social networking service concentrating on stock market discussion, with particular focus on tech stocks. Silicon Investor is currently owned and operated by Knight Sac Media Holdings. Billing itself the "first internet community", the site hosts 30 million message posts made by 90,000 registered users.
From timely and timeless optimism, to risk-rating frameworks, to cutting-edge, AI-driven Q&A, plus a first-ever Market Cap Game Show World Championship, this Rule Breaker Investing extravaganza ...
NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. stocks rose Friday to turn what would have been one of the market’s worst weeks of the year into just a pretty bad one. The S&P 500 rallied 1.1% for its best day in six ...
An Internet forum, or message board, is an online discussion site where people can hold conversations in the form of posted messages. [1] They are an element of social media technologies which take on many different forms including blogs, business networks, enterprise social networks, forums, microblogs, photo sharing, products/services review, social bookmarking, social gaming, social ...
In other words, the total return of my stock picks beat the broad market by 74%. And last December, I updated my list of top 10 stocks for 2024, which have again outperformed the market. With ...
RagingBull.com was founded in August 1997 by Bill Martin with college partners [1] Rusty Szurek and Greg Wright, who were 19 years old at the time, as a hobby. [2] It was begun in a basement with an initial investment of $30,000 from savings and credit card loans.
Stock markets recovered on Tuesday after Trump's latest tariff plans briefly derailed equities. Stock market today: S&P 500, Dow end at record as investors shake off tariff fears, digest Fed ...
Between September 1999 and February 2000, Lebed made hundreds of thousands of dollars from using a computer in his bedroom in Cedar Grove, New Jersey, using pump and dump by posting in internet chat rooms and message boards, encouraging people to buy penny stocks he already owned, thus, according to the SEC, artificially raising the price of the stock.