PML
PIMCO Municipal Income Fund II
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US. Investment property is always my top priority but for the liquidity I hold on the side (or for money that I'm not sure what I want to do with yet) I put it into PML. Cycles back around 3-6 months and I can decide where it goes next. Cashflow on Canadian properties is terrible so if you were going to invest in a property the US is the way to go. A couple logistical hoops to jump through to do it but it's not that bad. How much liquidity are you looking to put toward whatever you're doing? PML would make you more money but property would build you more wealth over the long term.
Guys, don’t have to debate. Check this. Long or short outside PMH or PML or 15 min orb. 50% SL and take 100% profit. (Or something you re comfortable with). Check this everyday and tell me if you are profitable to not. Do it on paper account if you’d like.
I actually have an indicator that gives you actual probabilities based on 5 years of historical SPY data. Basically on any flush of premarket low within the first 120 minutes, there’s a 77% that price continues $1.00 below PML. We never retested PML yesterday also.
Alright that’s it, it’s 5pm here in Europoor land, time to light up a j and watch what happens when we smash through the PML. Great television.
i wonder if we will genuinely test PML or i missed an entry
Still the same approach with watching PMH/PML and the 15-mins candle as you described in the previous post?
From ChatGPT…He waits for SPX to hit a high or low based on recent patterns (fractals). If it’s at a high, he buys puts aiming for it to drop to yesterday’s low (PML). If it’s at a low, he buys calls aiming for it to rise to PML. He does this with cheap 0DTE options (around $1), so the upside can be big if the move happens fast.
I use a TOS vector chart for good entries and target PML from ceiling or floor!
I use fractals to pull the ceiling, floor, & PML. If price is at the ceiling I target PML & vice versa. On this particular trade it went from ceiling & absolutely blew past PML
Do you only buy if the first 15 min candle breaks the PMH/PML? SPY has been dropping during pre-market hours and it takes longer than 15 mins (hours sometimes) to cross the PMH. Do you still buy then? Do you still stick to 0 DTE? What delta do you buy at? Do you sit out red days or switch to puts?
what if the price action is still between PMH and PML?
At market open I wait to see if spy breaks the pre market high (PMH) or low (PML) for direction. I wait for the 15 candle close for confirmation. Then I just get in on the pullbacks when it bounces off the 2minute 9 ema. I try to immediately sell some when I hit 20-30% profit to eliminate risk
PML and alternative deals. Market is not good for anyone using dollars to invest. But if I had a ton of Swiss francs I'd be taking a piece of the double discount.
I did well when I kept it as simple as possible. For the sake of not getting into all the details….. PMH, PML, PDH, PDL levels on the chart along with hourly levels and ATR for price targets. 9 & 20 SMA to help with entries and exits. After market open wait for a clean break with volume of either previous day or pre market level or both, and enter on a retest of said level or one of the 9/20 SMA. I refrained from entering any trades between 11am-2pm and always take profit along the way. Hot take: I really started profiting consistently when I quit using stop losses. I found myself getting stopped out leaving lots of money on the table more often than not. I’ve got a high risk tolerance which can lead to some very red days but the Green Day’s far outweigh them.
Honestly, about the same strategy. I use MA50 and VWAP for when the price crosses over and holds with good volume and price action. In addition to that I use Key Psychological Levels, PMH, PML PDH, PDL, and VIX increases and decreases. Once I enter the trade I set my limit order at the target for 5-6% profit depending on my funds used. If I see a huge movement happening I'll sell 70% of the contracts and let the others run to 10-15%.
Basically humbled myself to begin with, started only looking for 3 trades a day, and it’s literally so easy bro, PDL, PDH, PML, PML, like strict key levels, with like 1:5 rr and then matching that with candle stick readings, like it’s been actually nuts
Every insurer says they are conservative. In fact, I can't remember an insurance company ever claim they don't have underwriting discipline. Is there numerical evidence to support this claim? For example if they write PMI they can show default rates are very low vs. industry average and FICO scores are very high. How is their prior AY IBNR? Do they consistently release reserves or build them (particularly reserves of AY 5 years out? How do they compensate underwriters? Based upon volume or do they have long-term compensation based upon how their risks do years out? When there is signs like softening did they recently increase leverage a lot or start paying things down? So as an example ACGL during the soft-market and reduced profitability, they drastically reduced to PML and returned cash to shareholders: https://i.imgur.com/ujZf5Tv.png Finally adverse selection is extraordinarily hard to detect as an investor. "Only when the time goes out do you see who is naked". I like seeing insurance companies doing well in bad times then picking who look like winners.
Look into closed end funds like PML and NMZ
I bought in and lost 5-15% across the board, which only came out to $250 but still sucks. My fault for buying PML, VZ, and other blah stocks. I said screw it and put in a good until sold limit on each on at 10% profit. I'll wait. QQQ was one of the least terrible losses, though. Helped cushion the learning experience, I guess.
[https://ycharts.com/companies/PML/stress\_test](https://ycharts.com/companies/PML/stress_test) ​ pretty neat function.
Well that's interesting why isn't something like PML supported on Robin Hood
Going to start this off by saying I have no idea how any of what I’m about to say would affect the price one way or another or if it would have any effect at all. This new drug is just a very slightly different version of a now generally well accepted and utilised therapy for RRMS. Ocrelizumab (brand name Ocrevus) is an excellent MS treatment which I just started myself this month. The only draw back is being in the hospital for the best part of an entire day, something which this drug addresses. The glycoengineering used means it is much more potent, meaning less of it is needed and this reduces the potential IV administration time. I’m unsure if this potency has to be adjusted for in some way because you can get quite a powerful reaction from Ocrevus as it is. As I said I don’t know how stock prices of new drugs typically go but I will tell you that Neurologists are very reluctant to change a patients treatment if it is working well. Where this drug could potentially start being offered is when another drug is unsuitable for a patient, like tysabri due to PML risk or Lemtrada because of other autoimmune risks. However consultants are also hesitate to start offering or recommending a drug until it is on the market for a good amount of time and they will probably still prefer to offer Ocrevus which has a good track record. Point being that it’s actual roll out to real patients may be incredibly slow. Much longer than you would anticipate. Hope that gives a little context if you are interested in this but unfamiliar with MS treatments in general.
Check out closed end funds muni stocks like NMZ and PML - no fed / state income tax with 6-7% dividends
From Least Risk to Most Risk: 1. Treasuries bought directly (as opposed to through an ETF). Treasury Direct sells bonds and they pay twice a year. These bonds are about as safe as it is possible to find so long as you are holding the bonds directly and aren't investing in a fund that holds bonds. The payments are currently in the \~3% range for 20y and 30y and so long as you buy them higher than 2.5 you will earn a real return, but the return will never grow. You can also go with 10y bonds depending on what you want to do. 2. Corporate Bonds, muni bonds, and preferred shares. These you'll usually buy through an ETF and you'll have to do some research into which ETF you want to invest into. These are still bonds, so retain a lot of the safety of Treasuries, but they have origination risk so usually carry a 1-2% premium in their yield to account for that risk over Treasuries. 3. Dividend Aristocrats. There are many ETFs that track them or subsets of them, but SCHD is the most common one. The dividend payment is going to be lower than a bond would pay, but you gain a history of yields increasing roughly in line with inflation at the expense that your principal is at risk. Historical norms predict that the principal should go up over time so long as you can wait 15 years, but past returns do not predict future returns. That said, Dividend Aristocrats are the safest of equity stocks as far as not losing principal. 4. S&P 500. There are likely 100s of S&P 500 funds that exist out there and my favorite is SPLG personally. This is kind of the gold standard of funds as far as total return is concerned, the downside is that the dividend income is much smaller than the dividend aristocrats so you'd have to sell shares to get a decent return. Generally speaking you can sell 2% of the principal each year without to much risk, but that 2% hurts a lot in times like 2022 and this introduces entry and exit risk which is a very significant risk. If you just live off of the dividends than you will avoid this risk and historically the S&P is the benchmark that everybody else compares themselves to. 5. This is where we get off the beaten path and there are a lot of additional risks from here. CC ETFs r/qyldgang is the home for conversations on this topic, but just know there are a lot of risks with CC ETFs which is why the yield is so much higher. DIVO, QYLD/RYLD/XYLD, ETV, and JEPI are the most talked about ETFs, but there are a lot of new funds getting opened all the time with variations on the CC theme. Generally speaking you trade a higher annual yield for lower total return so this is not going to be right for every person, but it can allow you to retire off a smaller principal balance compared to the above. 6. Leveraged Bond funds. the two that I hold are PML and FFC and they take on a significant amount of leverage to juice the yield of their holdings. They struggle in raising rate environments and excel in dropping or stable rate environments so they have a lot of entry risk if you buy at the bottom of rates, but they can still produce a lot of stable yield even if the principal is at risk. With all this said, the best option for you is likely going to be a combination of the above categories weighted based on your mom's age, ability to keep working, the risk tolerance for losing the principal, and the ability for your mom to wait out market downturns and not sell shares unless required.
You got in under break and base under PML and vwap? or what was your plan? That's what it looks like from your timestamp entry. Congrats!
On the dip around 380 , when everyone was selling I bought 60k of muni bonds split evenly between IIM , PML , MQT. And about 5k of ETV. And 800.00 of ADX. And about 17k of FOF .
Trading Plans for Friday 4/29/22 --- [QQQ](https://imgur.com/LrldSF3) [NVDA](https://imgur.com/5PzKRuQ) - I played the spill yesterday but missed out on the ramp up. [TSLA](https://imgur.com/GRtIzAs) - best Friday 0dte ticker my recent favorite to make/lose $$$ on. ---------------------- I like to trade the chart based on predetermined supply and demand zones from previous trading day, and in premarket. So PML = premarket low, PMH = premarket high, PDH= Previous Day High, PDL = Previous Day Low, BNB= breaking base/ breaking the zone. So if it breaks the zone going down, buy puts, if it breaks the zone going up, buy calls. My goal is to buy/sell just OTM or ATM options, and take profits. I am not looking for baggers, but like 20-80% per contract. I take profits quickly, and try not to let green trades turn red.
[Trading Plan for QQQ Today.](https://imgur.com/KQMbVoS) ---- I like to trade the chart based on predetermined supply and demand zones from previous trading day, and in premarket. So PML = premarket low, PMH = premarket high, PDH= Previous Day High, PDL = Previous Day Low, BNB= breaking base/ breaking the zone. So if it breaks the zone going down, buy puts, if it breaks the zone going up, buy calls. My goal is to buy/sell just OTM or ATM options, and take profits. I am not looking for baggers, but like 20-80% per contract. I take profits quickly, and try not to let green trades turn red.
[QQQ trading plan for today.](https://imgur.com/FrHXYo9) ------------ I like to trade the chart based on predetermined supply and demand zones from previous trading day, and in premarket. So PML = premarket low, PMH = premarket high, PDH= Previous Day High, PDL = Previous Day Low, BNB= breaking base/ breaking the zone. So if it breaks the zone going down, buy puts, if it breaks the zone going up, buy calls. My goal is to buy/sell just OTM or ATM options, and take profits. I am not looking for baggers, but like 20-80% per contract. I take profits quickly, and try not to let green trades turn red.
I answer this question atleast once every day when I post it. Maybe I should have a key posted everytime. ----------- I like to trade the chart based on predetermined supply and demand zones from previous trading day, and in premarket. So PML = premarket low, PMH = premarket high, PDH= Previous Day High, PDL = Previous Day Low, BNB= breaking base/ breaking the zone. So if it breaks the zone going down, buy puts, if it breaks the zone going up, buy calls. My goal is to buy/sell just OTM or ATM options, and take profits. I am not looking for baggers, but like 20-80% per contract. I take profits quickly, and try not to let green trades turn red.
It's not much, but it's honest work: 171% on QQQ 338P, opened at 1:14, closed at 2:18 [open @ $0.87](https://imgur.com/a/UuZAbML) [close @ $2.36](https://imgur.com/a/7k61PML)
Can someone explain how municipal income funds like BKN, PML, MFM work? And what in general do loans and loan terms look like (i.e. how they will be effected by rate hikes)?
Are you referring to the Lock-Up Agreements on page 139? The restrictions are regarding PML (Prime Movers Lab) and are regarding roll over shares offered to PML to pursue the transaction after cutting the valuation. "not including the shares of Class A Stock issued in the PIPE Investment pursuant to the terms of the Subscription Agreements" PML holds 27.9m shares and the pipe holds only 11m. I could not find any lock-up regarding the pipe. PML is listed under Affiliates of Momentus and not under the section holders of pipe shares (p. 145). Please correct if I am wrong, I did not do that too often.
I am a bot. You submitted a picture of a banned ticker, PML. This check will fire if you included unnecessary pictures that have bad phrases or a bad crop with news about cryptocoins, for example. Repost with the useless pictures omitted if you did that. Yell at /u/zjz if it's above 1.25 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC/SPACs.
I am a bot. You submitted a picture of a banned ticker, PML. Yell at /u/zjz if it's above 1 billion-ish market cap and not related to crypto/pennies/OTC/SPACs.
Diamond hands, to the moon etc etc etc 😂😂😂 PML
Baaaa haaaa PML fucking epic 🦧💜