- Joined
- Dec 23, 2022
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I’m back in with 2 GME and 4 AMC. I know it’s a gamble but I’m ready to lose it all. Meme stocks her we come…again!
You are living on the absolute edge my man.
I’m back in with 2 GME and 4 AMC. I know it’s a gamble but I’m ready to lose it all. Meme stocks her we come…again!
You are living on the absolute edge my man.
There are people out there ready to listen and help. You don’t need to suffer alone. Gambling addiction is no laughing matter!I like to take big risks brother. I've been known to lose $20 in one sitting at Casinos.
Haven’t made a single $ yet investing. Refuse to give up because life is meaningless anyway so might as well keep on trading.
I don't know. Interesting question.Didn't most people lose money the last time they did this? Why don't they pick a more stable stock to do this with?
That's ~1.6% of the total shares.Late Sunday, the Reddit account shared a screenshot in the r/SuperStonk forum that people are speculating could be an image of the shares and call options Gill holds in GameStop.
The image showed that Gill may hold five million shares of GameStop that were worth $115.7m as of the closing price on Friday. The screenshot also showed 120,000 call options in GameStop with a $20 strike price that expires on June 21. The call options were bought at around $5.68 a piece.
Insider trading, LOL? Why would he ever need to do that? The dude has a legion of bag-holders ready to dump their cash into his pockets the moment he says "jump."GME almost at $50. Bought several shares at $26 earlier this week. Holding it til hits $150 (if it goes that high).
Lol at Massachusetts investigating Roaring Kitty for manipulation when politicians do insider trading all the time. Corruption at its finest.
You are going to the moon!I'm diamond handing my one share forever
Insider trading, LOL? Why would he ever need to do that? The dude has a legion of bag-holders ready to dump their cash into his pockets the moment he says "jump."
He waits until the stock is low. He buys a shitload of shares. Then he goes and posts on Reddit. Stock soars. He sells a ton of shares in the ensuing frenzy before the price inevitably dips, and starts crashing again (with his selloff contributing to the decline). Rinse, wash, repeat. One wonders how long he's gonna keep this up before he decides to cash out for good.
Because he knows it won't stay up. A company doesn't bleed money while revenues fall off a precipice without eventually losing investors.
Why has this become the company of "the people"? Why is it being championed?! I'm a gamer, and I don't understand it. This store is a joke in the gaming community. A dinosaur.
I'll send up a space elevatorI'm on the moon rn
DM me for ladder