IDR
Idaho Strategic Resources Inc
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I spent all my student loans on 0DTE options anyway...
Student Loans: The Only Degree That Forgives You for Being Broke.
Some of these 100%+ YTD movers aren’t even on most screens. What the institutional read here?
DigiAsia Corp (FAAS) Partners with Indodax to Power Fiat Transfers for Indonesia's Largest Crypto Exchange
Check Your Email: 50,000 Borrowers Get Student Loan Forgiveness Notices, And Yes, It’s Real
Anyone with Federal Subsidized/Unsubsidized Loans
Fitch Places United States' 'AAA' on Rating Watch Negative
Do not bet against SCHWAB. 2023 Credit Rating A
Insight into Soligenix, Inc. (SNGX)
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Also, lowering monthly student loan payments for those on an IDR plan
My whole port is ripping today $SATL $IDR $UUUU $BKSY $AZZ $ASTS $CDE $NNE $DBA
Depends on whether they have IDR. That student loan payment alone could easily be over $2000 at an average of 6% and the number is going up for that master's degree. Another $400 a month for the car loan and then 10k in high interest credit card debt? If it isn't at least $3000 a month toward the debt, it's only going to keep snowballing worse.
Do you expect your salary to increase significantly in the coming years? I hope your student loans are on an IDR plan, or else those are going to be a huge bitch. You're looking at $3-4k a month for all your debt, and that's before factoring in other costs like rent. Invest the bare minimum to take advantage of the match and pay down that debt aggressively.
I was rambling about IDR yesterday and bam +22%
My best performing stock might be IDR, a random Spanish defense company with 0.17 beta lmao. They do air control systems but pivoted into drone defense so it made sense.
been eying this for a while. I did a swing on IDR it was ok
IDR another one in the US although low float/volatile.
IDR selling off, now below $40. I pitched this one to a few people when it was $11, but it was too small to post about here at the time. Management is the best I've found in a miner. Absolutely long term focused. You could throw John Swallow into CSU and his ethos would fit right in. Building something for the long-term. Also, in addition to a great gold miner, they own the largest deposit of rare earths in the US. Oh, and the CEO has helped write legislation on rare earths. They mine about 10,500 pounds of gold ore per quarter. At current prices, that gives about $52.5 million in quarterly revenue, or $200 million annually. So maybe 3x forward sales? I'm not ready to buy yet, but the valuation is becoming interesting again. I'd love to see the sector cool off a little before entering. Great interviews with the CEO [here](https://open.spotify.com/episode/3MyZJ4oHaK2LASTk7Z40t0?si=0TUON5U7Q8SqgVWol2UNWA) and [here](https://open.spotify.com/episode/30sLddugVQjvs3fEFQnlxZ?si=3d7BbVr7TSynynUk7LJzRg).
IDR. Gold mining outfit segueing proven gold deposit profits to develop REE.
IDR has both gold and rare earths but still is exploring, not producing. I went with gold and silver miners calls last quarter. I'm up by a lot and still the stocks can go 4-10X from here to catch up with the metals.
Wtf IDR??? Dumping massively on no news. Whats going on?
I'm in CDE SBSW ARMN EXK AG AYA KNT (k92, not KTN) IDR and HL since October-December
As posted elsewhere (not by me); *SYM is negative margin and just plunged -30% last month.* *FLNC also is negative margin and also plunged -20% last month.* *IDR is an illiquid small cap (with barely any revenues, in the millions per qtr)* *Even as I wrote this reply, both SYM and FLNC just went ITM and with weeks to go, you may find yourself deep underwater.* *Anyway, it's your play but calling them "fundamentally solid" is misleading.*
Every person has a different strategy in the market and not one size fits all. I have always worked with small and mid cap stocks which I see have the potential and are stable (atleast from my research angle). **SYM** \- SYM has negative margins yes but the revenue has gone up from 600 Million in 2022 to 2.25 Billion in 2025 FY. That kind of revenue growth is a very strong indicator of demand. They have very less debt and quite some money in hand. It is a safe growing bet for me. **FLNC** \- Energy storage solutions is a big challenge with AI coming into the picture. FLNC is backed by really strong investors who know this business (Siemens). This is a capital intensive buisness and they have a revenue of around 2 Billion in FY 2025. For me this is growing sector and a company poised to grow. **IDR** \- It's a small company and much more riskier. They are a gold mining firm and are profitable. My thought here is with rising prices of gold margins will improve. Also the stock is in a rally for a while. These are the trades which I have opened. At this juncture I have received these premiums. I keep posting my trades even when I close them on my account and in that I clearly mention what is the net gains (after pating back part of the premiums for closing). Also none of this is financial advice and everyone must do their own research based on their risk profiling. These are just my trades.
My portfolio for next year is fairly boring and mostly remains what has been for a while now, but there you go: 75% in a S&P500 ETF; 5% is in ORCL, which I bought two days ago. The remaining 20% is in two sectors: gold mining (IDR, MUX, HMY) and defence (RCAT, RR.L, CHG.L, DRH.F).
Great episode of [value hive](https://open.spotify.com/episode/34tgJgOeUduQGrnWS6HIOE?si=MUFAxZQER3uX8Yn2WKTXBA) with Kuppy as the guest. Discussion went all over including emerging markets, materials, and macro. They talked about sprott (SII) as one of the best plays on materials, which I'm totally on board with. This might be one of my biggest regrets on not buying when I looked at it at $40, but it's still not that expensive for what it is. High priority on a pullback. Value hive generates some great ideas. This year I heard NBIS pitched around $20, IDR at $10, and AMTM at $17. Really solid show.
anyone know why IDR just dropped like $2.50 in a few minutes?
I’m looking at Idaho Strategic Resources Inc. (NYSE: IDR) — primarily as a gold stock, but with a twist: they’re actively exploring rare‐earth elements and critical minerals across their properties. They hold the largest rare‐earth land package in the U.S. (in Idaho) while also moving forward in gold production.
I’m looking at Idaho Strategic Resources Inc. (NYSE: IDR) — primarily as a gold stock, but with a twist: they’re actively exploring rare‐earth elements and critical minerals across their properties. They hold the largest rare‐earth land package in the U.S. (in Idaho) while also moving forward in gold production.
if my IDR options weren't up 160% today it would have been a very bad day for me with how red the rest of my portfolio is
IDR seems to be a new find. But their revenues are quite small wont this be a risky bet?
I’ll stick with it but I also bought IDR on the dip. It’s only 500m market. Domestic lithium and rare earths. I think this will become a much larger long term story of protectionism
Any reason the likes of IDR are moving the opposite of the rest of the market?
My non overpriced minerals stocks are doing fine (PPTA, IDR) but all the other ones are likely just consolidating after yesterday’s run
loaded up the boat on USAR, UUUU, UEC, ABAT, UAMY, SETM, IDR, SILJ
I'm holding USAR, UUUU, UEC, ABAT, UAMY, SETM (etf), IDR, SILJ (etf). All shares only. Ranging from 20 shares to 500 on each of these. Got in after discovering the amazing DD on [https://substack.com/@stevezissouu/posts](https://substack.com/@stevezissouu/posts)
nfa but ppl saying the idaho one IDR and steve posted new dd about aussie companies cuz we mite partner w them i mite yolo one of the aussie ones cuz they cheap and jus assume it zero or moon
How many of these squeegee stocks haven't had any short shares available for multiple days? ELBM, IDR, UAMY, USAR, etc. Wild
IDR and TMC. You're welcome bro
IDR. Sitting on the biggest rare earths deposit in North America
NAK NB USAR IDR See you boys tomorrow 👀
If you missed on MP and USAR, buy IDR. They have the biggest rare earth deposits in the entire US, both the LREE and HREE. It's in the US, not Greenland (which doesn't belong to the US) and will almost surely get a Government investment. Market cap is only 700 million, contrary to all the other rare earth companies that skyrocketed
IDR, the only rare earth company with the biggest deposit in the entire US and with a market cap still below 1 billion
IDR, only rare earth company in the US remaining with a market cap less than 1 billion
IDR hasn't run yet, it's a rare earth company in the US with a less than a billion market cap, the only one remaining
I hold UAMY, UUUU, NB, USAR, TMC I think IDR is sleeper MP long term And I bought and sold AREC already for 40%ish gains
Depends, for MP is too late for IDR no
IDR is the most undervalued and under the radar rare earth company (in the US) by far
I like PPTA but it’s mostly an antimony play. I also like IDR but I’m not sure how much their rare earths are developed
IDR is the one that people are slept about MASSIVE RARE EARTH DEPOSITS
Rare earth aren't actually rare at all, there are vast amount of them anywhere in the world including the US. What we miss is the refining capacity, if it becomes a thing very important for national security the US will simply inject all the cash these companies (like MP Materials, USAR, IDR ecc) need to advance their projects and mass scale the technology
IDR. Sitting on the largest deposit in North America
Amazing that if I had just held onto my June 2nd 2023 purchase, I'd be up 70+%! But luckily I've been holding $IDR after learning about it from u/creemeeseason, and that's been doing well.
Look again at their website - "Idaho Strategic Resources (IDR) is an Idaho-based gold producer *which also owns the largest rare earth elements land package in the United States."*
so instead of crml, was/is it IDR/HIVE/TMQ? And like how are OPEN bots still on that when all this other chaos/projection is potential for hive-minding idfgi...
I got an iron grip on IDR shares. 52 week high in AH
Official list of US government insider dealing: MP INTC USAR CRML UMAC (don jr) Strong candidates PPTA (antimony processing. In talks with Glencore. Paulson is heavily invested) MRAR (memory stocks started pumping. Someone is building a big call position here). IDR (Idaho based. Rare earth and thorium, also have gold).
I have IDR shares. PPTA Jan $30 2027 calls.
What’s the details on IDR? I haven’t looked into that one yet.
I think it would be good to add in some rare earth mineral plays. Many of these rare earth mining companies also mine gold, which is on an absolute tear this year. The current administration has made it a priority to increase rare earth mining in the US in order to lower reliance on other countries. I've got plenty of suggestions if you want some. My current play is IDR. they've been on a tear (150%+) since July.
I think it's a good idea to get some rare earth mineral exposure (better sooner rather than later). The current administration has made US mined rare earth minerals a priority. I am currently in IDR, they have been on a 150%+ tear since July this year.
I brought up IDR back in January. Largest supply of rare earth metals in the US. Stock is up 200% since, so I'm not sure how much is left to go.
Nice, I've been looking at GROY. I'm in IDR (not a penny) and it's been real good to me!
Got TSEM, WAT, and IDR calls for Monday open probably all will open down as usual
Relative volume and considering he movement of week month quarter and checking charts for order blocks and ema crossovers got me into IDR JOBY and QS this past week. I also watch relative volume under $10 and extended hours volume activity for unknown names. When the charts line up I’ll select an entry at either a dip or get in if support and movement is obvious and volume continues. Got me into nvts nak crwv crcl sezl sii and many others. I’m not so much off the wall. Most of those types of picks have gotten stopped out or cut for a loss. I try not to invest with risk on a whim anymore and look for the setup.
6 million IDR lol, that is my salary as fresh grad programmer and that is ok enough compared to many people.
16271.6 Indonesian Rupiah = 1 USD. Trying to understand the economics. As of 2025, the average monthly salary in Indonesia is reported to be around 6,000,000 IDR (approximately USD 367). So with $367 what kind of US products will Indonesians buy?
Might get taken down due to market cap size, but IDR holds the largest deposit of rare earth minerals in the US.
If you want to make a lot of money…put money in Indra (#IDR) and Arteche (#ARTC)
IDR (indra sistemas, spanish defense company). Bought some just a few months ago because someone mentioned them here and already up by 30%. Would have never found out about a spanish company, was definitely not on my radar.. Rheinmetall became, unfortunately, soooo expensive.
Somebody here suggested IDR (Indra Sistemas SA, Spanish defense company) a while ago. Thank you for this, bought first at 27 and again at 33, now already up by 20%.
Ohhh thank you- it’s been a bit and I crossed up details. I caught part of an interview with Bannon- Trump and don Jr are parked waiting and have a driver whisk them all off to some remote place for days/ weeks- because he’s such a loyal or good friend IDR exactly.
Prove it: Given two loan options for a $30,000 student loan—one a federal loan at a fixed 5.5% interest rate with income-driven repayment (IDR), and one a private loan at a 3.8% variable interest rate with no forgiveness—under what conditions (income trajectory, job market volatility, inflation, repayment plan structure) would the private loan be a better long-term financial decision? Answer this with only the information taught in a basics macroeconomics course, so no concepts like near present value or effective annual rate, no stochastic income modeling, no risk analysis on the job market, and no looking into the loan amortization schedule or how the interest compounds; using only the ideas in macroeconomics, prove that you can make effective decisions without needing knowledge of the actual financial ideas, concepts and tools that are designed for this.
A basic understanding of the money supply, velocity, the effects of inflation, and interest rates will not explain the difference between subsidized and unsubsidized student loans, expected returns, how to evaluate the investment of college or any investment, etc. Moreover, basic macroeconomic theory is not a fantastic baseline for personal finance, no one will learn anything about lifetime consumption curves, mortgages, structuring debt effectively, personal budgeting, etc. from learning about supply and demand curves, extremely barebones monetary policy, and cost curves for producing firms. Plus, as you pointed out, this an elective, not offered at some schools and students may not be aware of the value of such a course. As an aside, only 1% of high school graduates had taken an upper level economics course and in Illinois for example, less than a third of high schools offered an economics course at all. This does not seem to indicate a baseline of financial literacy that is being taught but ignored by lazy, or ignorant students but rather that even the modicum of financial knowledge that could be gleaned from a high school course is unavailable to large swathes of people. Of course, in 2023 a survey showed that only 20% of US adults had taken any financial courses in their entire educational career, including college. In short, if you’re suggesting that the arbitrage undertaken by loan services should be blamed on low levels of financial literacy brought by a failure to take a specific elective, in high school, which may not have been offered in their area and doesn’t actually speak to the actual financial information that they should know then I’m gonna ask you to nut up or shut up: Given two loan options for a $30,000 student loan—one a federal loan at a fixed 5.5% interest rate with income-driven repayment (IDR), and one a private loan at a 3.8% variable interest rate with no forgiveness—under what conditions (income trajectory, job market volatility, inflation, repayment plan structure) would the private loan be a better long-term financial decision? Answer this question, using only the macroeconomic theory contained in a high school level course, and I’ll obviously concede this point.
$IDR.MC (70%), $WKEY (20%), $GRRR (10%) All primed for growth.
Not a popular opinion but another vote for rare earths are not quite as rare as they're made out to be (there was already a rare earth bubble about 14 or so years ago - Lynas is still about 80% below the 2011 peak when it was one of the big names of that bubble.) Processing is where it's limited/the issue. In terms of plays, IDR is a gold play w/rare earth exposure.
IDR. They are a gold miner, but they also happen to own the largest rare earth deposit on the US. Also, the CEO has helped write the legislation around rare earths. I own it.
It's not a penny stock, but take a look at $IDR European (Spanish) defense company that is starting…
Did you look at IDR payments? It's a huge burden on poor and middle class. Someone making 50k before tax would pay 200-350 a month. Thats 6-10% of their after tax income. Which is probably 50% of discretionary spending for those income brackets.
You're also forgetting that all the IDR programs are still available and $0 monthly payments are perfectly feasible. I don't know where the administration is getting this 5 million people in default number - it's not like there's any reason to take anything from this administration seriously - but it's literally impossible to default on a student loan so long as you put in the paperwork.
Been scaling into $UUUU and $IDR as each has established biz mining uranium(uuuu) and gold (idr) and tapping into REE
MELI, VRTX, IDR, MUSA all green.
Can you find a HYSA with greater than 3.7% interest rate? I think that's the question I would ask myself. I'm in a similar situation and I've opted to DCA invest slowly. Especially since I can't pay off my loans in full at this time. Now, if I had the lump sum available to just remove my student loan debt entirely, that would be a very tempting option. With the way things currently are with student loans, it's very unlikely we will see any kind of loan forgiveness in the foreseeable future and possible that IDR plans will disappear entirely. So you *will* have to pay that loan back. If you pay it back now, you will be free and clear for the future. Nobody knows what the future will bring. But you will know that whatever happens, you won't have that loan hanging over you. That will increase your financial security for the future. You could theoretically get more money investing that 25k but you could also lose money until the market bounces back. We haven't felt the impact of tariffs yet so it could be a long time for that bounce back. If you invest 25k in the S&P500 index today, you will have less money tomorrow, most likely. :p My FXAIX has been a net loss for a couple months. Given the uncertainty and likelihood the market will keep dropping, your best bets IMO are a high-yield savings account of 4% or higher, or paying off your loans now. Paying off the loans is the safest decision. If investing is low-risk then paying off the loans is negative risk... You are *removing* risk from your life and insulating yourself for the future.
Is it a federal loan? If so keep it, pay IDR, invest the 25K and keep adding to it. Likely that in an index fund you’ll outperform the loan interest and after several years you may get it wiped out anyway. Biden tried to forgive 20K, so the next Dem president may do the same
Been saying this for a week. So many people in IDR, PSLF and deferrment/forbearance since COVID and it' all going away. That's a lot of money that has to be paid, that people don't have.
It’s not just mortgages though. If your credit tanks, things like cars become much more expensive. Most people need transportation to get to work and might not live or have a situation where public transportation is feasible. I agree you shouldn’t be taking on a mortgage if you can’t afford it, but credit scores impact everyday things. Predatory rates make it impossible to get out from under debt. IDR at least allows people to not have a repayment beyond a certain percentage of income.
>Not being keenly aware of the status of IDR programs you rely on to make those payments is a red flag Tbf, even if you are keenly aware of the status, so many people are getting screwed over by servicers not being aware. Nelnet and MOHELA specifically are constantly making mistakes with people's loans that are starting to be reflected in people's credit scores. You can get it removed from your history if you go through the correct processes. But still, it's quite ridiculous that communication between the govt and these servicers is so awful that the servicers don't know what they're doing anymore. And your first point: >But taking out student loans at a level that require you to utilize an IDR program at all is a mixed signal - lender POV there is: > >> Why did you take out loans for an education that wouldn't result in an income level that would allow you to pay the principal + interest? I obviously don't disagree fundamentally, this is how it works. More so just a comment, I think it's ridiculous that kids are told all their lives that they HAVE to go to college to be successful. So of course they're going to take out loans to go to school. Yes, they're legally adults by that point, but it still seems so friggin predatory to me. Add on how so many jobs require a degree when they really shouldn't, and that makes the problem even worse. Anyone could do my current job after maybe a month's worth of training, but it still requires a degree for some dumb reason. No degree and your resume is thrown in the trash. It's so stupid, and so many jobs are like this.
> They don’t have discretionary money without IDR. You can see why this would make them poor candidates for a mortgage yeah? We're talking about why that situation does and should make it harder to *voluntarily take on a lot more debt*.
The problem is that you don’t know what market you are graduating into and that feeds into your ability to make payments. I have friends in 09 who had to remove their masters work from their resume because they were just trying to get in somewhere to pay bills. They were being overlooked because they were too educated when the market was saturated for basic entry level jobs. I lucked out my loans were manageable at 4-5% and I paid them off early but I have family who are my age and still struggling to get on the IDR program. They aren’t paying into retirement. They don’t have discretionary money without IDR. They tried to sign up for IDR and it shows as $0 and they are scared the payments will skyrocket.
Look I get that this is an emotional topic for people. But taking out student loans at a level that require you to utilize an IDR program at all is a mixed signal - lender POV there is: > Why did you take out loans for an education that wouldn't result in an income level that would allow you to pay the principal + interest? Not being keenly aware of the status of IDR programs you rely on to make those payments is a red flag - lender POV is: > How confident are we that those programs will hold for the remaining term of your student loans - are you going to default on your mortgage if they don't? Only finding out you're delinquent on the above from one of the credit score providers is a huge gigantic dumpster fire with flares shooting off it - lender POV is: > This person doesn't have a fucking clue about who they owe what and when, or is insolvent. I know this sucks to hear but having had a 10 year direct PLUS supplemented with a variable rate private student loan attached to my MS degree - assure you those are tremendously less complex obligations than a mortgage with a related property as collateral whose upkeep you are solely responsible for. Struggling with student loans is a very strong signal that you will struggle with a mortgage.
I went in a bit late, so i avoided the big ones, did some research and ended up going with IDR.MC , AM.PA , LDO.MI and SAF.PA
BME: IDR and [ETL.PA](http://ETL.PA) Looks like its the Euro markets. Can it be found in the States?
I forgot a few stocks (IDR, MTX, QQ.) last time I loaded up on European defense so now I’m buying the dip
Calls on Indra (IDR) yesterday before earnings. Seems another good euro defence play that hasn't taken off as much as the other small ones.
Indra (IDR) another good euro defence play? Saw they had a good earnings.
**Contratistas de defensa europeos cotizados** * **BAE Systems (Reino Unido):** * Ticker: BA.L * **Thales (Francia):** * Ticker: [HO.PA](http://HO.PA) * **Leonardo (Italia):** * Ticker: LDO.MI * **Rheinmetall (Alemania):** * Ticker: [RHM.DE](http://RHM.DE) * **Safran (Francia):** * Ticker: [SAF.PA](http://SAF.PA) * **Airbus (Países Bajos/Francia/Alemania):** * Ticker: [AIR.PA](http://AIR.PA) * **Indra Sistemas (España):** * Ticker: [IDR.MC](http://IDR.MC) * **Dassault Aviation (Francia):** * Ticker: [AM.PA](http://AM.PA) * **MTU Aero Engines (Alemania):** * Ticker: [MTX.DE](http://MTX.DE)
You have too INDRA Sistemas (IDR). Indra specializes in various sectors, such as energy, transport, defense, health, finance, telecommunications, and telecommunications.
IDR is a junior gold miner with a huge stash of rare earth metals ready to develop.
Eh, you have to actually research to successfully invest in this sector, so not really the WSB style. There are lots of poorly-managed shit mining companies that aren't good at anything but hype. You have to understand the regulatory environment, locally, nationally, and internationally, the shifting demand, and the huge difference between between promising geological tests and a given company's actual ability to 1). extract those resources and 2). make a profit doing so. My own two mining plays and companies I think will pop in the next year are IDR and TMQ but we'll see.