AIV
Apartment Investment and Management Co
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The company Tesla booted from the S&P 500 is outperforming it
What Kind Of Shareholders Own Apartment Investment and Management Company (NYSE:AIV)?
$AIV - Apartment Investment and Management Company
$MITT - No substantial DD, no hot news, just a very calm stock which has been slowly recovering after pandemic crash (Hypothesis: lots of REITs are still undervalued following pandemic crash)
NRXP formerly BRPA applying for Covid Therapy drug ZYESAMI by Monday
What do you guys think about AIV been holding 10 shares since December 2020
$6.75 on a $38 stock? What am I missing here why such an Under value on $AIV ?? I grabbed 5 contracts for 6/18 just on FOMO alone🙄
AIV is an good option too around $6.50 now, huge upside potential
$AIV TO THE MOON. Went in at 5.50 haven’t had a red day all week. An easy buy and hold #ToTheMoonMyBrothers
Mentions
You've heard of AI, but wait til you see AII. Then next year releasing AIII then AIV, AV. We're just getting started. This is just the beginning.
$AIV declared a 2.23USD cash dividend AM on a 7.5USD stock price. Went to 9ish AM settled around 8
>Then they put NVIDIA in after it's had a huge run. S&P Global does the exact same thing, but the larger number of stocks mute the effects. They added Tesla a few years ago after a huge run, then it slipped pretty substantially and was outperformed by AIV, the stock it replaced. They added Builder's First Source and Fair Isaac more recently, also after big bull runs for both stocks. >More Than A Third Of S&P 500 Stocks Get Kicked Out In Nine Years https://www.investors.com/etfs-and-funds/sectors/sp-500-stocks-more-than-a-third-get-kicked-out-in-nine-years/
AIV, the company booted from the SP500 to make room for Tesla us up roughly 90% while Tesla is only up 9% since Dec 2020 when Tesla was added.
Dude get help for your gambling addiction. Also, with a current AIV of 41.2%, using one standard deviation points, there’s a 68% chance that Nike will stay within $10.47 of its current price, and with a standard deviation of two, a 95% chance that Nike will stay within $20.94 of its current price, within a range of one month. So technically, according to my calculations (done by hand I might be off), it is 20:1 odds that Nike will go above 105 within 30 days. I find it incredibly unlikely that Nike will go far beyond 105 by 10/2, but hey, I’m just some guy what do I know.
>ever changing slate of companies that are doing something right at the right time…. doing something right, according to who? according to the people at S&P Global? Why do they have the magic touch to pick the best stocks at the best time? actually, the data shows S&P Global are terrible at picking stocks for the index. they have a long, documented history of adding new stocks at peaks before they decline, and of dropping stocks at bottoms before they rebound. from 2005: >Since the beginning of 1998, the median annualized return of all stocks deleted from the index and held from their removal date through March 15 of this year was 15.4 percent. The median annualized return of all stocks that were added to the index was 2.9 percent. Similarly, the average annualized return for deleted companies was 11.4 percent, while those added to the index earned just 0.4 percent. https://www.hussmanfunds.com/rsi/misfitstocks.htm Rob Arnott did a papers showing how adding Tesla to the S&P 500 cost investors almost half a percent, because Tesla slumped after it was added and the company it replaced, AIV, rebounded. this cost investors a cumulative total of about $45 billion. https://www.ft.com/content/869c90a8-d457-40d6-87e1-d83c190cb63d or here: https://www.researchaffiliates.com/publications/articles/832-revisiting-teslas-addition-to-the-sp500 see what I mean? Nobody understands what they're actually buying when they buy VOO.
>I have yet to see an argument compelling enough to make me believe VTI is anything more than equivalent to VOO. VTI is more diversified than VOO. VOO is only 500 stocks, mostly large caps. You miss out on small caps with VOO. And small stocks outperform large stocks over the long term. >“As of lately it's mostly overvalued speculative stocks, and the re-indexing causes a lot of buying high and selling low.” You have stocks that get kicked out of the index that are very undervalued, and then stocks get added to the index that are very overvalued. For example: 1. AMD was dropped by the S&P500 back in 2013 when it was $3.50 a share. It was added back less than 4 years later after the price quadrupled. The companies that replaced it only went up about 20-25%. If the index had kept AMD in, it would not have missed out on those gains. 2. Tesla was added to the S&P500 and is down 20% since. The company it replaced, AIV is up more than 60% in price, and has more than doubled if you include dividends.
AIV crush... 
Yes, the s&p 500 had to do a rebalance to add TSLA at end of 2020. After adding, the stock spiked quite a bit. Traditional cap-weighted indices routinely buy high and sell low when the index rebalances resulting in substantial hidden costs to investors who track the index. The December 2020 S&P 500 rebalance out of AIV and into TSLA cost investors 41 bps in the first six months, and the cost may go higher
IV will crash downwards, and calls and puts will become irradiated because the AIV is jo longer there to keep value high
Did they stop talking about AIV
Wished I could get you guys to look at AIV. It is ready to climb just needs some volume to get people interested
Congrats! I have been heavily invested in AIV but for some reason the stock is still not moving up. It has all the potential can someone help me understand why it is still stagnant?
Had a few 5-10 baggers in the financial crisis. Mostly fixed income from BAC, AIV (currently AIRC), FR, and NRF (merged with something). Im sure there were more but cant recall right now. Tesla at the bottom of 2019. Got out early 2000. KRUS at $12 average is a big holding right now. No plans to sell that. ENPH at $40. Might get out this year or next depending on their plans. Bought 5 properties around 2011-2012. They have nearly tripled in value (banks werent doing many loans yet) and rent rev has already exceeding my purchase prices albeit its not all net. Right now those have a basis price cap rate of about 17% (yikes). Totally unexpected but Im happy. My big bet right now is CD Projekt Red. Had a small position since 2021 and finally took a big position when i tanked last year.
There’s a handful up for auction. The auction started at $50 for these. https://hivemodern.com/pages/product1433/eames-lcw-plywood-lounge-chair-herman-miller?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI9Z6mwbaA_AIV6WJyCh2aYQLeEAQYBSABEgL__fD_BwE
AIV is boasting a 50% dividend. idk much about the tax implications, but seems like a good way to double your money in two years. i mean, its 91% institutional ownership; cant imagine theyd set a divvy like that if they werent confident in the companies financials.
What are people’s thoughts on the ideal portfolio for a down payment on a house in 7-10 years? In a taxable account I have 11k, I’m in a position to contribute 2-3k per month, and at the absolute minimum 1k per month if I move to a higher cost of living area soon, which I plan on. Currently I have a little MGK, MSFT, AIV, and SCHD, but most of it (like 75%) is in cash and SPY puts while I wait for rate hikes to stop, and until then I’m DCA’ing into SCHD. My end goal is to do like 40% SCHD, 40% VTI, and 20% REITs. I came up with this because SCHD lets me lock in some gains with its higher dividends, VTI is a no brainer move it seems, and REITs, especially residential ones, will let my portfolio follow the weight of the housing market, i.e. if housing rises above average, I’m not stressing because my portfolio rises a little more than average, and if housing falls below average, then I don’t care that the REIT portion is underperforming because I need less money for a house anyways. Does that make sense, or is 100% VTI still better? I know there are also bond plays to consider as I get closer to my target date, so maybe I start with the above and convert the SCHD to bonds over time? And do I need to consider international markets at all, or is that too loosely correlated with housing to matter for my case?
A good example that you can explore is when TSLA was added to the S&P 500 on in December 2020. A date is set for inclusion in the index. Funds that track the S&P 500 bought TSLA and sold AIV. If a fund didn't adjust, the tracking error for the fund will increase.
A somewhat long-term possibility might be AIV (curr 9.22) On the 3-yr, you'll find a $20-25 gap to be filled...$10 calls Jan'23 can be had for a decent price. They've partnered with the Alaska Permanent Fund, conducted a share buyback+issued a special cash dividend, and are quite active project-wise. After taking hits during Covid-1 and Covid-2, they have plenty of recovery room to the upside. Interesting to note, this stock does *not* trade pre-market or after-hours...
Debating how long AIV holds bullish.
Here’s a simple explanation: Options give you the right (but not obligation) to buy (or sell) the underlying security. Typically, for “vanilla” options (i.e. almost everything an average retail investor would ever encounter), the multiplier is x100. So let’s say I have $5,000 and I want to buy 100 shares of Amazon stock. For me, it’s an unfortunate day, because Amazon costs 113 a share, so 100 shares would cost me $11,300 USD. I don’t have enough money! :( Enter the option ;) A call option gives me the “option” to buy Amazon at a certain price (the strike). I also can decide how long I want to have this “privilege” to buy the stock (the expiry). Since this “contract” isn’t the actual stock, it is much less be valuable—but to my advantage, (depending on the strike and expiry I select), it allows me the ability to purchase using my $5k. Now, I don’t “own” Amazon stock, but as the price moves up (or down), I enjoy the benefits of ownership in the short term as the value of my option contract increases (or decreases) along with the value of the stock. One very important thing to remember about Index options in particular is that they are cash settled— Whereas if, let’s say, I really wanted to own a certain company’s stock I could buy an option and exercise it, with an index option there is no stock for me to “own.” So when the expiration comes due, I will have to either close my option position or roll it to a future expiry. I won’t have the ability to say “I think I’ll just buy the SPX and wait to see how it goes.” This is why most people prefer ETF options (SPY), because it trades along with the SPX but gives you a little more flexibility. One thing that’s important to remember is that these are all financial derivatives and, by their nature, involve higher risk than other investment vehicles. Timing is as important with options as pricing. As you learn more and more, you’ll discover all of the amazing income opportunities that options provide to you. I know much of my description is simplistic, and encourage you to read further. The [Options Clearing Corporation](https://www.theocc.com) (OCC) has a great learning base, and used to publish a free handbook introducing many concepts in an easy to read and understandable manner. I’m not sure if they still send these out though. Another great place to learn from is [CBOE](https://www.cboe.com/tradable_products/sp_500/spx_options?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIvs_ozrTz-AIV5XxvBB0DBgsFEAAYASAAEgIQnPD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds) (Chicago Board Options Exchange) which also has a really great educational section. glht!
So based on my experience this is not true. When an entire market goes down, it takes everything with it. The business doesnt matter at all when there is a major market crash. Case and point. During the financial crisis, residential REITs were near 100% safe and anyone with knowledge of real estate could have told you that. The reason is when there is a recession, housing sales and startups fall and demand for rentals goes up. Add to that, people losing their homes due to the crisis and bam, residential REITs had a field day. Though its true they had less access to financing, interest rates were falling (also a plus) and given how far property value fell, they could just buy things with cash anyway. So yea, you would think that people with a brain would have piled into those REITs... but nope. None of the fundamentals mattered. Stocks like AIV went from around $40 to about $7 even though their dividends were 100% solid and both rent and interest changes were positive for them. The yield on their common share was stupid... like 15% (lol). Oh and thats just the tip of it. Their bonds and fixed income issues of some REITs.... wow. Those were even safer than the common shares and they all dropped from $25 to about $10 for residential stuff. The yield on those was like 20%. I was buying bonds for even less than that during the major dip. I had bonds paying 40%-50% yield (lol) and they were near 100% safe because their business operations were not in peril. So in other words, when a major crash happens, your share price and business performance dont matter. This is probably because of funds. People pulling their money from funds causes them to sell stuff systematically, not selectively. This takes everything down.
SWIM said these are good https://www.chewy.com/meowijuana-purrple-passion-catnip/dp/152742?utm_source=google-product&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=12621679119&utm_content=Meowijuana&utm_term=&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIy-buns-w-AIV2B-tBh1VCQqmEAQYBCABEgJBhPD_BwE
They give you instant diversification. So instead of owning a few stocks, if you own shares of VOO or SPY you own pieces of 500 different stocks. Unlike a race where there is only one winner, in the stock market there can be many winners - and losers. Diversification reduces risk. If you pick a few stocks and most or all of them are losers, you lose big. By diversifying you reduce the risk that you picked a bunch of losers. And increase the chance that you own a bunch of winners. [The stocks in the S&P 500 have to meet certain criteria to be selected](https://www.fool.com/investing/2019/02/09/how-are-sp-500-stocks-chosen.aspx) so they have to have some track record of success. If a newer company reaches a certain size and degree of profitability it can be added to the S&P 500 and one of the fading companies in the index gets kicked out. When Tesla (TSLA) was added to the S&P 500 in Dec. 2020 Apartment Investment and Management Co. (NYSE: AIV) was removed to make room for TSLA.
Amazon and anal? Prime and penetration? Hulu and hang (out). Disney and dick? Disney plus and pus? AIV and HIV?
AIV has entered the chat.
Yields on Chinese HY dollar debt just surpassed 25% for the first time. https://pbs.twimg.com/media/FNiEezGX0AIV0i8?format=png&name=medium
In my portfolio, the greenest performing right now are: Precious Metals(DPB) Renewable Energy(ARRY, ICLN) & Real Estate (AIV, IRM) Everything else is well in the red.
AIV has a price target of $55.72 and is sitting at $7.65.
On November 29, 2021, we entered into the Securities Purchase Agreement with certain accredited and institutional investors (the “Purchasers”). Pursuant to the Securities Purchase Agreement, we agreed to sell in a registered direct offering (the “Registered Direct Offering”) 2,153,333 shares of our common stock to certain of the Purchasers at an offering price of $3.00 per share and associated Investor Warrant. Pursuant to the Securities Purchase Agreement, in the concurrent Private Placement, the Company also sold to the Purchasers (i) 1,180,000 PIPE Shares at an offering price of $3.00 per share and associated Investor Warrant, and (ii) Investor Warrants to purchase up to an aggregate of 2,500,000 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $3.50 per share. The Investor Warrants became exercisable immediately upon the closing of the Private Placement on December 2, 2021 and will expire five years following that date. Subject to limited exceptions, a holder of Warrants other than JCP III SM AIV, LP will not have the right to exercise any portion of its Warrants if the holder, together with its affiliates, would beneficially own in excess of 4.99% (or 9.99% at the election of the holder prior to the date of issuance) of the number of shares of our common stock outstanding immediately after giving effect to such exercise, provided that the holder may increase or decrease the beneficial ownership limitation up to 9.99%. Any increase in the beneficial ownership limitation shall not be effective until 61 days following notice of such change to the Company.
[BBS rims are the move for the RS3](https://m.tirerack.com/wheels/WheelCloseUpServlet?gclid=EAIaIQobChMI7pnBnKXZ9AIV5f7jBx3iYQ_3EAQYAiABEgLkYfD_BwE&target=runWheelSearch&wheelMake=BBS&wheelModel=XR&wheelFinish=Gloss+Black+Painted&initialPartNumber=XR0408BG&GCID=C13674x012-wheel&KEYWORD=wheels_BBS_XR_Gloss_Black_Painted_Wheels_17_In_17x7.5_+45&code=yes&autoMake=Acura&autoModel=ZDX&autoYear=2012&autoModClar=Base&checkVehicle=&ef_id=EAIaIQobChMI7pnBnKXZ9AIV5f7jBx3iYQ_3EAQYAiABEgLkYfD_BwE:G:s&s_kwcid=AL!3756!3!537118804928!!!u!293946777986!&gclsrc=aw.ds)
Found a helpful website for you: https://www.betterhelp.com/get-started/?utm_source=AdWords&utm_medium=Search_PPC_m&utm_term=how+to+find+a+psychiatrist_e&utm_content=38492093453&network=g&placement=&target=&matchtype=e&utm_campaign=741974393&ad_type=text&adposition=&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIps69iqKi9AIV1nNvBB0aBgyeEAAYASAAEgLny_D_BwE¬_found=1&gor=start-go
[Flippy to the rescue!](https://invest.misorobotics.com/?utm_source=rgamisolandingpage&utm_medium=nonbrandedsearchGADS&tnames=nonbrandedsearch%7B14725422214%7D%7B136115178628%7D%7Btop%20companies%20to%20invest%20in%7D%7Bb%7D%7Bm%7D&campaignid=14725422214&adgroupid=136115178628&keyword=top%20companies%20to%20invest%20in&device=m&gclid=EAIaIQobChMI3_fsjKiZ9AIV1BZ9Ch2_NwlDEAAYASAAEgIc8PD_BwE)
$AIV because you can't really be rich if you're not renting apartments to the poors
oh good AIV had a good day so I could get out with a small profit
GTLB, RTX, and AIV hopefully pop off tomorrow so I can consolidate my plays Also hoping DLTR dies at all times but I've given up on that play
Yeah AIV and AIR. AIV was kicked out of S&P for TSLA
Keep an eye on AIV (apartment investment and management). They have earnings 10/28, nice inst buys coming in and an inflow of 10x to outflow today. 11/19 - $7.5 is cheap @ .25 or .30
on the Morningstar podcast, the late Charles de Vaulx noted that after you adjust for the large cash holdings Berkshire has consistently beaten the market averages. https://www.morningstar.com/podcasts/the-long-view/30 plus with Berkshire you know everything was reasonably valued at time of purchase, which isn't always true with the S&P 500 (Tesla, cough cough cough) >We have observed that additions and deletions to the S&P 500 Index follow a dependable pattern: additions underperform and deletions overperform over the subsequent 12-month period. The December 2020 rebalance out of AIV and into TSLA lived up to this pattern rather spectacularly—at the six-month mark, AIV has a relative return advantage over TSLA of 78%! https://www.researchaffiliates.com/en_us/publications/articles/832-revisiting-teslas-addition-to-the-sp500.html
School is back in session so I'm back at work. My first paycheck will back will be a whopping $32. That's right. $32. Don't know what to buy CLOV, BNGO, LCID, SPI, FCEL, APPH, BB, AREC, INUV, AIV?
I was shocked, about 10 of my positions were green today, not just my long terms like KO, KDP, WFC, F, but my swings like PRFX, AIV, ACOR, MILE, LODE & CRFTF.
As smiffy said, you're exactly right, entry/exit into big, relevant indices can (thanks to the immense, automatic movement of index funds) move share prices temporarily. Some of that is counterbalanced by falling out of one index but *into* another (with different index funds tracking it), but some (like the S&P500) obviously dwarf others. E.g., people [bought up Tesla 6+%](https://www.cnbc.com/2020/12/20/tesla-enters-the-sp-500-with-1point69percent-weighting-in-the-benchmark-fifth-largest.html) just in advance of it joining the S&P, and the shares then fell back down when those investors "cashed in". $AIV (which Tesla replaced) is tough cuz they split their business apart but, for example, [it was announced 3/12/21 and effective 3/22/21 that Xerox would fall from the S&P500 into the Midcap index](https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/documents/indexnews/announcements/20210312-1336360/1336360_march2021-5146-shuf-pr.pdf). It fell ~8% from 3/12 to 3/22 (falling even further down to almost -13% by 3/24. However, two things. First, that the machinations of an index fund impact the index doesn't change that they are tracking the index. So, yes, you can "still say that SPY simply tracks an index". And second, while interesting, I think these events are a bit of a sideshow. They present active investors a chance to cash in on some guaranteed demand for shares in the immediate term, but long term I wouldn't think there would be meaningful ripples.
I'm pumping AIV. $7 share price Morningstar fair value: $55.72 Zacks target price: $42.85 500%+ ROI... yes please!
Might as well put on am AIV, while I agree the divi REITS have semi recovered they still gonna run
When TSLA joined the SP 500 it replaced AIV, an apartment management company. AIV’s has trounced TSLA since then.
Funny story. TSLA has been underperforming the stock it replaced (a boring apartment management firm AIV) in the S&P 500.
Super easy! For example, search “AIV Institutional ownership” on google. It will kick out a list If you use fidelity you can see it for any company on the bottom right of the overview page for any stock. It says “ownership & insiders”
AIV's market cap is 1 billion. It barely would affect movement of the S&P 500 at all
the S&P 500 gets weirder the closer you look at it. despite being the most followed index, by far, it's not passively managed. the S&P 500 is actively managed, with stocks selected by a committee based on profitability and other criteria. https://www.etf.com/sections/index-investor-corner/22846.html?nopaging=1 the original stocks from the S&P 500 have out-performed the index after all the changes (an average of ~20 stocks are traded in and out per year). http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.421.7832 the S&P 500 has a tendency to buy high and sell low. the company that Tesla replaced is AIV and it's gone crazy this year while Tesla has flatlined. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-06-28/rob-arnott-says-he-told-you-tesla-would-be-a-drag-on-the-s-p-500
It used to be one big company valued around $80 then split into two companies, the new AIV after the split is $7 and pays no dividend I think (not 100% sure) and the mother company is valued around $72 and holds the REIT status. This is off memory when I looked into it a few months back, could be wrong on the details.
It used to be one big company valued around $80 then split into two companies, the new AIV after the split is $7 and pays no dividend I think (not 100% sure) and the mother company is valued around $72 and holds the REIT status. This is off memory when I looked into it a few months back, could be wrong on the details.
AIV does not currently pay a dividend, per Seeking Alpha.
When I look at AIV on TD, I’m seeing a dividend of over $1, quarterly, on a <$7 stock? Am I missing something?
AIV split into two companies didn’t it?
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**Ticker AIV** Spam: True Last Seen Market Cap: 1104489000 Is SPAC: None
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I get that this sub is for options traders, but did anyone else take advantage of divvie stocks dumping last week? This weekend I made a list of 34 dividend stocks under 10$ and 26 of them are are up today. I just daytraded the fuck out of them. Things like PSEC, NLY, UNIT, PBI, TEF, AEG, UMC, AIV.
10k dump into AIV...research it yourself and check their price target
RHI, MSFT (linkedin), AIV, ELS, IRT, AVB, CPT
Be careful on D/E and ROI : https://www.vizstockshub.com/equities/us/AIV
AIV pays over 26 dividend, awese stock, get it now n4 it skyrockets..
IVR and AIV are both on the move, bought mine due to Fomo... They are both cheap.....
If I were you I’d look at AIRC for the “old” AIV, which remains a solid REIT with predictable revenues from rent and a dividend. The new, remaining AIV is more speculation on their development of new properties, and currently doesn’t plan to pay a dividend in the near future.
Anyone else looking at AIV? Currently trading at $7.67. Back in December after they split their business with AIRC it fell from $55 so it has tons of upside potential. Since the fall it’s been slowly climbing back week after week. Short float interest is sitting at 17% (just for y’all that only care about that) calls are cheap right now. I’m just getting a few lotto tickets in case it goes for a run.
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I made an update adding the name on the top. It's AIV
AIV pays 26% dividend and it's cheap..
#Has anyone else noticed AIV has been on the steady increase for like months now?
One undervalued stock that has steadily been rising and could potentially double your money is AIV. Got in @ 4:58 in March. Now @7:70 plus also a high yield stock for those into that kind of stuff.
Anyone else think that AIV under $10 is a steal?
Bullish for AIV and ABNB
I really hope so! Smokers sometimes pretend to smoke by mimicking the motions. They will pretend a pencil is a cigarette and pretend to smoke that haha On a cooking show w/ Gordan Ramsey, one of the chefs was trying to quit and he would pretend to smoke carrots and celery sticks. He would hold them like a cigarette, bring them to his mouth and pretend to take a puff. That process is part of the addiction and going through the motion relieves some of the tension. For you that process might be holding the tobacco tin, opening it and putting some dip in your mouth. Perhaps you could replace the tobacco tin with something more benign ? How about a lip balm tin? They look similar to a tobacco tin and instead of putting dip in your mouth, you can use your finger to apply some lip balm to your lips. [Target: Lip Balm Tin](https://www.target.com/p/vaseline-lip-therapy-aloe-vera-lip-balm-tin-0-6oz/-/A-80634742#lnk=sametab) You can even get hand moisturizer that comes in a tin that looks like a dip box: [Target: Hand Salve Tin](https://www.target.com/p/burt-39-s-bees-hand-salve-3oz/-/A-12834909?ref=tgt_adv_XS000000&AFID=google_pla_df&fndsrc=tgtao&DFA=71700000014814225&CPNG=PLA_Beauty%2BPersonal+Care%2BShopping_Brand%7CBeauty_Ecomm_Beauty&adgroup=SC_Health%2BBeauty&LID=700000001170770pgs&LNM=PRODUCT_GROUP&network=g&device=c&location=9032443&targetid=pla-894573305699&ds_rl=1246978&ds_rl=1248099&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIgd7M-JXv8AIV9Ql9Ch0olQCREAQYBCABEgI1rvD_BwE&gclsrc=aw.ds) ​ Definitely a small step but combine that with a strong mindset + patches + gun + willpower and supportive community, you can do it. Depending on your location, there may be free resources you should try. For instance, Vermont gives away free patches and gum. Example: [Free resources for Vermont](https://802quits.org/home/i-want-to-quit/get-help-quitting/free-gum-patches/) [CDC Link to help quit](https://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/quit_smoking/cessation/index.htm)
From the NRxp website: Statement from NRx CEO and Chairman of the Board, Jonathan Javitt, MD, MPH The NRx team has just approved the final text of our application for Emergency Use Authorization of ZYESAMI™ to treat Critical Covid-19 in patients suffering respiratory failure. Together with the COVID-AIV trial investigators, we will be working through the Memorial Day weekend to ensure we file by Monday. We thank the hundreds of physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and other caregivers, together with the patients and their families who made this trial possible. At the same time, this Memorial Day, we mourn more than 600,000 Americans who have succumbed to COVID-19, more lives lost than in all the wars fought in the history of the Republic.
Neuro RX Fam (BRPA) : Statement from NRx CEO and Chairman of the Board, Jonathan Javitt, MD, MPH The NRx team has just approved the final text of our application for Emergency Use Authorization of ZYESAMI™ to treat Critical Covid-19 in patients suffering respiratory failure. Together with the COVID-AIV trial investigators, we will be working through the Memorial Day weekend to ensure we file by Monday. We thank the hundreds of physicians, nurses, respiratory therapists, and other caregivers, together with the patients and their families who made this trial possible. At the same time, this Memorial Day, we mourn more than 600,000 Americans who have succumbed to COVID-19, more lives lost than in all the wars fought in the history of the Republic.
Meme stocks will start to die as we cross the 70% vax threshold. The market will adjust to push the indexes up and they’ll tout “pent up demand”. August will roll around and the signs of a significant hangover will start. Money to foreign stocks, home markets staggering, etc. September explodes volatility, as the market moves to safety and rates possibly increase. Buy UVXY in August. If you get calls, aim for late October expiry. Puts at end of August. AIV because apartments are going to be all these new poor people can get.
Have you ever seen [this stuff](https://www.harborfreight.com/1-gallon-evapo-rust-rust-remover-96431.html?cid=paid_google|||96431&utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=&utm_content=&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIxaKdvI3r8AIV4GxvBB2E3wj5EAQYBCABEgL8WvD_BwE)? It's expensive but you can get a smaller container. Shit eats rust like no tomorrow. If that doesn't work I'd try torch heating and chisel.
That's quite the devotion to a single, totally-under-the-radar company. What in the world is the draw for AIV? The smart money would be to take your investment and put it in a total market index.
I have $20k and want to invest it in AIV. It's my whole life savings; I'm 23, I did recently buy a house in MA, but aside from that, it's all I have. I'm full-time employed, make 60k before tax, and want a stock that is safe for med-long term. Everyone tends to say "diversify your portfolio" but I just want to plunge it all into AIV. Am i crazy for wanting to do this, or is it a good risk-reward balance?
I mean, I say “melt up continues” a lot. Idk what to say beyond that. I’m currently buying a house, so I’m trying to keep money kind of static. Uhhhh…buy AIV?
My friend, you are making a mistake. I don't think there will be a dividend. Apartment investment and management (AIV) was a REIT that paid a dividend, like normal REITs, around 4-5 % per year. Then in end of last year Old Aimco (AIV) split itself into two companies: 1. Apartment income Reit (AIRC) - this is where the developed properties of old AIV went on which it will collect rent and pay Dividend. The yield on this is around 5.5%. This is the sucessor Reit that pays dividend 2. Aimco(AIV)- this is the shell of old AIV that retained developing properties that even aren't completed. This AIV isn't going to pay any dividend, as it doesn't have any rent incurring properties. I believe u are comparing or using a source that compares dividend of old AIV with the price of new AIV, whereas this new AIV won't pay you any dividend. For reference: https://www.google.com/amp/s/investorplace.com/2021/03/aiv-stock-will-be-difficult-to-value-even-after-its-recent-spinoff/amp/
The stock does perform badly but it’s a real div. search AIV.
Question for the group. I’ve got positions in both UCO and AIV, riding the post- Kung flu wave. When do you guys see the commodity explosion dying out. I figure oil around the end of summer and real estate maybe never?? It’s nice that the Washingtards are so predictable. Makes investing easier.
AIV looks decent to me, hopefully it does well on earnings.
https://huckberry.com/store/truff/category/p/60759-black-truffle-infused-hot-sauce?htm_adsource=search&htm_admedium=googlep&htm_adcampaign=search-dsa-acquisition&htm_adcontent=acquisition&gclid=EAIaIQobChMIt7Cz-Pq48AIV8j2tBh1PqgcQEAAYASAAEgIY0_D_BwE