Reddit Posts
Bed, Bath, Baby, and Beyond - A tail of saying buy buy baby
700% increase in Rev YOY $88 mil, Guidance for +300%, $200-$300mil 2022 - Medivolve, $16 mil MC, $COPRF, $MEDV
ABEV ( $3.35 on US Exchange ) for thos who like good beer and or Pepsi ( and divdends too)
LatAm Beer and Pepsi king ABEV at 3.35 showing nice post Covid rebound..pays 2.8pct div too
Mentions
He did decide that 14 million men women and children should starve to death / die as their subsidized AIDs meds were cut off. It’s impossible to separate the company from the man with unilateral control who has demonstrated pure evil intent. A man who could do that could happily defraud investors. If he is willing to trade 14 million deaths for a tax cut what else could he rationalize? https://id.elsevier.com/as/authorization.oauth2?platSite=LT%2Fthelancet&response_type=code&client_id=JBS&additionalPlatSites=LT%2Fjbs%2CSD%2Fscience%2CLT%2Fcell%2CLT%2Fgeneric&site=lancet-site&scope=openid+profile+address+email+els_auth_info+els_analytics_info+urn%3Acom%3Aelsevier%3Aidp%3Apolicy%3Aproduct%3Aindv_identity&claims=%7B%7D&redirect_uri=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thelancet.com%2Fcallback%3Fred_uri%3D%252Farticle%252FS0140-6736%252825%252901186-9%252Ffulltext&state=17440625857&authType=SINGLE_SIGN_IN&client_name=TheLancet.com&prompt=none
CSD premiums were also expensive, their premium has eaten up 40% of Scion before the market turned into a profitable state.
You have no idea, what you're talking about. I have developed trading platforms and clearing systems as my day job (at Eurex). You cannot imagine how difficult this is due to all the regulatory requirements, corporate actions processing, dealing with legacy systems and organisations and shit like that. The ecosystem/infrastructure is a web of interconnected systems and organisations (e.g. trading venue->CCP/clearing/settlement->CSD), and all of them need to rework their part of the puzzle to enable the 24 hr schedule. I understand, that retail does not see this, but it still takes like 2 days before bought/sold stocks actually change hands (T+2 settlement)! When you buy a stock, the broker will put them into your virtual account immediately, but the shares won't land in the broker's account until 2 days later.
These do not seem to be ADRs or GDRs. Those would not be priced in Yuan (CNY/CNH). The capacity of the Chinese government to seize these assets is just like the capacity of EU/US to seize the Russian ones. They are held in a CSD in China, ultimately (as are US securities in US CSDs etc.). https://preview.redd.it/c0wur3i2ppfe1.png?width=374&format=png&auto=webp&s=59563a7e868b2e011ca77f83f929f50aa8bff921 On a similar note - I am quite concerned about my US securities held at this Danish (Saxo) broker. In case Trump really goes after Greenland (a Danish territory) and ends up sanctioning Denmark, my US stocks could end up stolen, too. There are no saints.
You should be able to exercise them until maturity, if you have or somehow get the shares to put into it. It's a clearing house transaction, the stock does not need to be listed or tradeable (it just needs to exist and be CSD eligible).
The options would likely continue existing until they expire (as long as the stock itself exists and is eligible for CSD operations), but in case of puts, you may have trouble acquiring shares to exercise. Institutional investors may continue to have access (OTC etc.), but I would recommend any retail investor to close out the position before the delisting date.
Looks like CREST is a UK thing, rest of the world calls them Central Securities Depositary (CSD). Looks like from this link you can move UK bought stocks into Computershare with a bit of work/info: [https://www.computershare.com/uk/insights/crest-beginners-guide](https://www.computershare.com/uk/insights/crest-beginners-guide) so you can access them in the US.
Market movement more gay than walking on CSD
Ahhh.. numbers. They tell stories of how accountants have moved money around on P&Ls to meet corporate performance goals. Coke is well established and has a nice stranglehold on fountain food service, as well as some extra leverage through Monster (huge), Powerade (not so much), and are now leveraging the hell out of Body Armor (FU, Lance Collins) to whittle away at Gatorade. Pepsi, at least in a CSD sense, is more regional (dominating in the Plains), but it's really been the relentless price increases of Frito Lay that they've been able to shore up their bottom line. Funny side note, KDP (Dr Pepper) passed Pepsi in grocery sales last year, and continues to grow. Pepsi has been on a space buying/contract leveraging spree trying to keep the "Coke vs Pepsi" rivalry front of mind for consumers as it has fallen to 3rd place. Throughout Covid, it was shown Pepsi had more to lose. Their Mountain Dew flavor-of-the-week push has slowly diluted the brand and oddly condition their drinkers to try new (other) flavors- which has benefitted both Coke and KDP. Coke has played the game by rapidly raising white tag pricing (everyday), but then having somewhat agressive sales (B2G1).. but also pushing weeks of non-ad activity to bring pain to consumers. They and Pepsi are both taking rate the first of the year, so expect $8.49+ 12pks, and all bets are off on convenience store 20oz. $2.49-$2.79? They are bleeding their core consumers dry and are running into demand destruction. People are walking away. But they still buy at restaurants, so they can capture that income. It's the fine dance on how high can they squeeze who's left. Also funny side note, that case of 24 20oz bottles they are selling for $37-$45 to convenience stores has a COGs of about $4.28. That's a great markup (and I will assume similar for Monster- that $3.99 can costs about 28 cents).. but the distribution network, the fuel, the vehicles, the disgruntled drivers, the masses of merchandisers- all add a ton of overhead. But yes, tell me again how those numbers are working out for you.
So belgium, germany, finland, france, ireland and sweden are located inside the UK? I can assure you that is not the case. These are sovereign countries not related to the UK in any way. And I can assure you Euroclear provides their services in the rest of Europe aswell, 90% of all banks and brokers uses their services. Regardless of them being the CSD in the country or not. Their policy is changed for the whole company (Euroclear). Not just UK. Its a company wide policy change. Same letter has been sent to UBS, the largest brokers in Schweiz, for example.
I'm a UK investor that uses Hargreaves Lansdown - messages today that their CSD (Euroclear/CREST) are no longer accepting NA cannabis stocks and I'm forced to sell by 27th Jan or move them to a broker with a different CSD. Anyone with UK knowledge got advice on brokers that may be a good move considering that, and also thoughts on how this might be affecting the red day today?
I mean i got a massive amount of new CSD and other structured products to short the market and protect from a downturn, during the last 3 weeks. Today they even cut the fees for those by 50%…
You miss out the main point, you get this insurance without a CSD…why does it exist? Because insurance is linked to agency rating a CSD is a bet that the market is right with it’s CSD price and moodys is wrong.
Where do you get live CSD for $CS? I need a proper source, please 🙏.
As you say you bet, they aren’t an indicator and people spreading those news try to manipulate. It’s also CSD and on the weekend as they are mostly traded beyond the market.
People from the Us explain swiss banks to WSB with a 3 h time delay. CSD improved during the weekend. CSD is a bet that rating agencys are wrong. Credit Suisse is selling his investment bank, which is one of the bigger global. UBS did this years ago. CS hired Mr restructuration Uli the Knife, so exec are leaving the company. It’s a criminal offence in switzerland to post news without a credible source, so there is no backlash on this strange news. CS is system relevant and will therefore always be bailed out. If somebody didn’t realise Europe is also in a bad shape in general. So a big nothing burger pushed by people not even close to CS.
$ in CSD doesn't agree now.
> No where, does it say the DTCC holds all shares in the market. Not "all shares in the market", just all shares that are held in brokerages which is a vast majority. Here's a source you should like: https://www.computershare.com/News/TransparencyofShareOwnershipShareholderCommunicationsandVotinginglobalcapitalmarkets_12032014_GCM.pdf According to computershare themselves (pg 28): > The US CSD, the Depository Trust Company (DTC), is a depositary that immobilises legal ownership in the name of its nominee, Cede & Co. As a result, a substantial majority of DTC-eligible US securities are registered to Cede & Co And some more sources saying the same thing: https://www.americanbanker.com/news/you-dont-really-own-your-securities-can-blockchains-fix-that >While private-company stock is still directly owned by shareholders, nearly all publicly traded equities and a majority of bonds are owned by a little-known partnership, Cede & Co., which is the nominee of the Depository Trust Co., a depository that holds securities for some 600 broker-dealers and banks. For each security, Cede & Co. owns a master certificate known as the "global security," which never leaves its vault. Transactions are recorded as debits and credits to DTC members' securities accounts, but the registered owner of the securities — Cede & Co. — remains the same. https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2015-07-14/banks-forgot-who-was-supposed-to-own-dell-shares >Nobody owns stock. What you own is an entitlement to stock held for you by your broker. But your broker doesn't own the stock either. What your broker owns is an entitlement to stock held for it by Cede & Co., which is a nominee of the Depository Trust Company, https://www.sec.gov/oiea/investor-alerts-bulletins/ib_dtcfreezes >Most large U.S. broker- dealers and banks are DTC participants, meaning that they deposit and hold securities at DTC. DTC appears in an issuer’s stock records as the sole registered owner of securities deposited at DTC. DTC holds the deposited securities in “fungible bulk,” meaning that there are no specifically identifiable shares directly owned by DTC participants. Rather, each participant owns a pro rata interest in the aggregate number of shares of a particular issuer held at DTC. Correspondingly, each customer of a DTC participant, such as an individual investor, owns a pro rata interest in the shares in which the DTC participant has an interest. Even the paragraph you quoted says "The vast majority of these securities are deposited with The Depository Trust Company (DTC)" thus confirming what I said, the DTC is holding all the real shares (that aren't direct registered, aka all broker held shares), that's the entire point of the system.
Actually, Frankfurt is trading a listing through a Direct-CSD-Link between Clearstream AG and CSD. They are as real as GME shares. Whatever this shall mean.
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[Guide to Financial Markets](https://www.amazon.com/dp/1610393899/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_glc_fabc_JAP62R8CSD1KZGMJXCCF?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1)
"Coinseed, which was founded by Davaasambuu in 2017, operates a virtual currency trading platform through a mobile app. It offered CSD tokens in two rounds, selling approximately 200,000 for an estimated total revenue of only $141,410." Yeah, 140K will crash the market. C'mon!