this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2024
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Brutal, nearly the lowest since 2008. Makes me want to buy in at this point.
The market does tend to overreact so this is possible a sign to buy low. I can't be bothered to check the fundamenals but it seems unlikely that amd is a better investment long term. If you are not looking at least 5 years to the future stocks are a bad idea.
AMD is super hot right now. Not in a good way.
I bought AMD at $8/share (and am still holding it), and I'm getting a similar vibe from Intel now...
Wow, I'd have dropped that hot potato ages ago.
I am glad I didn't lol. Still not, the datacenter GPUs are something else, and so is their multi-chip design prowess.
Fundamentals: Intel powers the US military industrial complex, they’ll weather this storm.
And the frank truth is, if things heat up on the Taiwan straight, TSMC is toast and Samsung won't be able to pick up the slack.
It's going to take 3d chess from China to put their hands in TSMC without US bringing in "democracy". That factory is more strategic than oil.
It ain't worth a nuclear war. Why do you think the feds are so focused on domestic manufacturing? The Arizona TSMC factory is just shipping workers from Taiwan it's so dependent. I'd hate to see what the actual supply chain looks like.
OTOH: Boeing. Had the 737 Max bug been a one-off incredibly bad fuck up, they would have been a good buy. Then it turned out that that bug was just the first sign of many deep seated issues with their production process. Boeing 100% deserves everything they're getting. Management skipped right over lawful, chaotic, and neutral evil and went into stupid evil, and decided that sacrificing QC/QA on aerospace equipment would be a great way to get returns for shareholders.
They didn't skip those steps. The market just ignored the fact that they've been stepping through those options for the last 30 years because that's what the market as a whole has been doing. As cliche and annoying as it sounds, this is exactly what late stage capitalism looks like. Once growth through sales becomes difficult, usually from approaching monopolistic size in a market, they only have two options left. They can either cut corners and headcount to save on operational expenses or they can decrease revenue growth. Considering the fact that the central thesis of our economy is the idea that infinite growth is not only possible but the only valid pursuit of any corporation it's easy to guess what they're going to do when faced with declining sales or any other detriment to growth.
Haha stupid evil
I'll use that any time I think about politicians as well. Trademark that fast mate
Don't worry, tomorrow the market is closed!
Good move.
I found Jim Cramer.