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r/finance
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Welcome to r/Finance! No Personal Finance, Homework, Personal blogs, or Career-related posts. All questions go in Monday Morning catch-all threads.
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r/ApplyingToCollege
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r/ApplyingToCollege is the premier forum for college admissions questions, advice, and discussions, from college essays and scholarships to SAT/ACT test prep, career guidance, and more.
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r/6thForm
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A place for sixth formers to speak to others about work, A-levels, results, problems in education and general sixth form life, as well as university applications and UCAS.
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r/AskEconomics
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A central repository for questions about economic theory, research, and policy. Please read the rules before posting, as we remove all comments which break the rules. Answers must be in-depth and comprehensive, or they will be removed. Posts should be in the form of a question.
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r/AusFinance
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Australian Personal Finance: budgeting, saving, getting out of debt, investing, and saving for retirement. Please read the sidebar and observe sub rules when posting.
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The subreddit for discussion related to college and collegiate life.
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Extracurricular (EC) advice and more for students applying to college.
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r/PersonalFinanceCanada
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Welcome to r/PersonalFinanceCanada
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r/PersonalFinanceNZ
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A place to discuss personal finance for New Zealanders. Discuss savings, investments, KiwiSaver, debt management, home loans, student loans, insurance, and anything else personal finance-related.
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r/BusinessHub
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/r/BusinessHub * A central reference point for the business, economics and finance subreddits * gathers the best insightful reads from the Business, Economics and Finance subs which tend to be buried on your front page by self posts, image posts and short blog postings and in the absence of a good flair system on many subs its difficult to trawl through content to find longer insightful reads that you might miss
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r/QuebecFinance
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Venez discuter de tout ce qui touche la finance personnelle de prรจs ou de loin avec d'autres Quรฉbรฉcois!
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r/FinancialPlanning
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Discuss and ask questions about personal finances, budgeting, income, retirement plans, insurance, investing, and frugality.
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r/mmt_economics
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This is a place to post links and discuss topics relating to Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). Economics can be a fractious discipline. Remember to judge arguments on merit, and not opinion. Offer constructive criticism first (and perhaps 2nd/3rd/4th, etc). Just as important: if your argument contains opinions, expect criticisms. Enjoy! For a good getting started resource, you might consider starting here: https://activistmmt.org
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A place to discuss the in and outs of banking. Community, regional investment, commercial or consumer, come on in. Please review subreddit rules before posting.
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For the United Kingdom of Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales) and Northern Ireland; News, Politics, Economics, Society, Business, Culture, discussion and anything else UK related.
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I can't believe you like money too. We should hang out.
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This forum is for discussion on all things Australian property related. Markets, economics, finance, investing, auctions, renovating, repairing and housing affordability.
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r/biz is the place for discussion of topics related to business, stocks, economics, financial markets, startups, commercial law, securities, currencies (including cryptocurrencies) and commodities.
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Welcome to r/Big4, a place to discuss everything related to the Big 4 accounting firms: PwC, Deloitte, EY, & KPMG.
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r/Chainge_Finance_
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Discussion about Chainge Finance, its technology, products and services as well as its evolution in Web3, interaction with social media and possible implications for the wider economy and how we do business in general. Please note this is NOT a technical support channel and such posts will be deleted.
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r/EngineeringEconomics
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This is a place for discussion revolving around money and engineering. Firm startups, moonlighters, established corporations, should feel free to discuss ideas about their design, their business, or both! Moderation will be fairly lenient in therms of topics so feel free to discuss anything even the slightest bit related to the sub.
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Discussion, insights and news regarding business risks and how to manage them. Finance, strategic, cyber, operational, regulatory and technology.
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r/Business_WorldNews
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Provides you with the best of your business section. From tips for running a startup, small business, to pitfalls to avoid, /r/BusinessWorld shows you the right moves and steers you away from the wrong ones.
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r/PersonalFinanceCalcs
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Theory is good, numbers are better. Provide everyday people the tools they need to support personal finance and investment decisions. Share business cases and personal finance calculators so you can know the numbers, not just the theory. Grow the breadth, depth, and quality of the Business Case Guy tools by collecting feedback to I can build new calculator and enhance existing one's.
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r/ViraLataFinance
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Vira-lata Finance is the name of the project and community behind the socially-focused and deflationary cryptocurrency $REAU, which was born in 2021 and spread throughout Brazil and the world, appearing in multiple media outlets, all while donating thousands upon thousands of dollars to abandoned animal shelters throughout Brazil. Official website: viralata.finance
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r/dkfinance
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A place to discuss all things related to personal finance in Denmark.
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r/BusinessBritain
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A UK focussed sub (made in March 2018) with a business and marketing spin not otherwise available. /r/entrepreneur, /r/business and /r/investing are thriving communities yet concentrate largely on the USA. Rather than competing with those communities, we welcome any x-posts from them as a way of creating a UK based discussion around the same topics. Along with x-posts from similar subs to discuss in their British applications, you'll also find business news from the likes of the ONS and BBC.
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โ€ขPosted by1 year ago

About an hour ago, I finished my business and finance exam. In this course, the main takeaway was how much to value a firm, profitability of taking on a project, and learning about prices of the firm on the stock market (through EPS, book value, etc.). While taking the exam, a thought occurred to me.


Why exactly am I studying this?


To be exact, why exactly am I studying how to value a firm, and how the valuation of a firm affects it's stock market price and dividends, when the top 0.1% can simply manipulate the value of a firm's stock?

What would be the point of saying that a medical firm on the verge of releasing some cure for cancer and showing great financial accounts is doing extremely well, just for HFs to come and short the shit out of its stock into bankruptcy?

What would be the point of working for a company that is small but having great results but on the other hand, a HF putting artificial buying pressure on a much bigger company with not so great results?

For the rest of my life, I can guarantee the answer to every question I have will be somewhere along the lines of power and greed.

What I have learned in my bachelors degree so far is that without manipulation, things that are happening right now, should be happening differently. And it is sad to see that the majority of my classmates are unaware of this. Studying this degree only seems to actually prove useful in a non-existent society where the ultra wealthy do not take advantage of the systems made for society. This is why we need a market reset. To bring everyone as close to the same level as possible. And to finally make the world aware of how much fuckery has been going on since the start of time.

Thanks for coming to my TED talk.

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โ€ขPosted by4 months ago
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โ€ขPosted by2 years ago
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โ€ขPosted by7 months ago
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โ€ขPosted by9 months ago

So after 2+ years of doing DD and contributing to others' DD, I've learned a few things. The three that are the most staggering are

  1. You don't own your shares - everything in your brokers account is an IOU.

  2. Your buying pressure is likely being suppressed due to dark pools

  3. Hedge funds can and will short stocks down with their total capital to take money from retail investors and companies that are viable and can do good if left alone.

I had dinner with an old business prof a little while back. Now, you have to understand this person has always been a trusted source for business and finance information. Our conversation led us down a market structure conversation, and the 3 points above about blew his top as he doesn't short or play options anymore.

His response was this, "Do you know what would happen to the markets if every retail investor knew this?" To which i replied Yes.... it would be a fucking nightmare for the markets, people would look elsewhere to fund their retirement. He said they would stop investing in the markets, invest everything in real estate/land and that would be that.

Leaving a potential finance industry and banks in the lurch, this would also remove the ability for central banks to draw on your registered funds, removing spendable money from the treasuries.

Well damn that would be bad.

This prof also asked very clearly as anyone who has critical thinking skills would do... "How do i get my real shares like when i had my old certificates sent to me?"

I laughed and said, "Find the transfer agent, tell your broker you want your shares to be directly registered with the transfer agent. I also confirmed it must be in BOOK.

He's going to follow the bread crumbs and confirm for himself. "If this happens to be the case, he will begin adding this into curriculum".

Now, wouldn't that be a way to spread knowledge. He also asked that I come and speak to his classes.

Edit1 - small grammatical errors. Edit2 - Prof. is personal finance

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