TKC
Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS
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Marathon Digital, Riot Platforms And Other Big Stocks Moving Higher
Turkcell Communication Services ($TKC), why you should/shouldn't invest in it. Fundamentals of an undervalued stock.
Turkcell Iletisim Hizmetleri AS - Consensus Indicates Potential 13.2% Upside. Turkish Lira is coming back up after big drop. TKC has not followed it back up yet.
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A non-penny stock here & there is alright but it being the *theme* of the thread is annoying. That being said, I found $SBS & $TKC last night which are both intriguing (& pay dividends). They’re right at the pent stock threshold which I understand; maybe waiting for them to dip would be solid. $TKC seems nicely consolidated.
Also $TKC, both dividend payers 🤙
Thinking about shorting $TKC.. is it a good move?
Puts on #TKC cuz I hate my country
I would buy TKC if I thought Turkish Lira was going to strengthen. It's a Turkish telecom that trades on the NYSE. Also, I'd be very surprised if Erdogan lost. If he really was worried about losing the election, the opposition would be charged with something and taken off the ballot.
I've got 11. Two are employer stocks (my wife's company and the company that bought mine). One is an inherited stock that looked good enough to keep and throws off a nice dividend (utility company). One is a thankfully small holding that I treat as a hobby stock instead of an investment (TKC). I bought it when I was working oversees in the mid-2000's and they were the cell provider that I used. The rest are a blend of companies that fit my value model that I was able to acquire at really good prices (eg. HD, DIS, MKC).
> Why don't we set up society in such a way that we don't have all of this imaginary money then. I don't understand. Short answer? Because we can't come up with something better. The only other economic system that is even remotely feasible and has been tested is... socialism. As to why we don't stop that "fake money" creation that u/cybercuzco mentions? Well, the Central Banks of many countries have the ability to do so, a little bit, and sometimes they excercise it. We need a bit of context first: * How is the fake money created? Well, pretty simple, really. Money is like a lot of other assets, in that if it is stored away it doesn't produce more money. Hoarding money a la Scrooge McDuck is very inefficient, because you are sitting on an asset that can reproduce itself, ie that money can give birth to more little monies, but you choose not to use it that way by storing it away. The same way a baker that purchases an oven and doesn't use it, someone sitting on a ton of cash without investing it, lending it, etc, is grossly misusing said money, because it could be generating more. Now, us serfs and peasants who live paycheck to paycheck are hardly concerned by this, because we often don't have enough cash on hand to turn it into a profitable investment (short of gambling it) because any money that survives paying bills and groceries is too small a sum to give us little more than penies on your run of the mill interest rate, or to buy large capital or land or whatever. But the big players (banks, investment funds, pension funds, whatever) can, due to the scale they operate at. So this is how it works: lets imagine, to help illustrate the point, that there is only one bank in your entire city, and there is only a single $ 100 in the entire city. No other banks, and nobody else has money except for that guy with $ 100. Now, because cash under the mattress doesn't generate interest, the owner of the $ 100 bill goes to the bank and deposits the $ 100 so he can get a nice small trickle of interests. **Bank Balance: $ 100** The bank can now use that money to generate a profit, usually by lending it and other totally safe^^TM investment activities. They are required, however, to keep a portion of their deposits liquid. So of those $ 100 they have, 10% ($ 10) have to stay liquid inside the bank, by Central Bank Regulations. Now, lets say a peasant like you wants to buy a Lamborghini. You walk into the bank, apply for a loan and get approved for a $ 90 loan (because remember, the bank has to keep a percentage, just in case). You immediately run away with your loan and purchase your Lambo. Now, what does the dealership do? Deposit those $ 90 in the bank, of course. **Bank Balance: $ 190** "But how can it be?" you say, "if there is only a single $ 100 bill in this economy, the bank cannot possibly have more than $ 100!". Welcome to the wonderful world of secondary money, where wealth can be created out of thin air. And this is how bank runs happen: the bank only has $ 100 in actual money, but the total deposits sum $ 190, so if the dealership guy and the owner of the only $ 100 bill suddendly decided the same day to withdraw all their money... they can't, because the bank only has $ 100. The bank *can* cover small withdrawals, and that is why the central banks mandate that regular banks keep a percentage of their deposits on hand all the time (the 10% we spoke of earlier) There is another risk associated with this too: that you, the serf toiling everyday to pay back the loan which you used to buy your Lambo, gets fired/breaks a leg/lands in jail/whatever, and the bank suddendly cannot recover those $ 90 that it lent you. The bank should have seen this coming, and should have never lent you the money if they knew you were a drug addict with a bad credit history and a criminal record, but they were charging you such a juicy interest on that loan that they took the risk. And failed. That is what happened in 2008, by the way. Every idiot that applied for a mortgage got one. And when they defaulted, the whole market came crashing down. As for "made up" money... why don't we curtail it and stick with just hard cash? Well, because money aggregates create additional wealth. Without it, you wouldn't be able to afford a Lamborghini, remember? And perhaps you are an upstanding member of your community, that works hard and spends rationally, and you pay all your installments on time, and the system keeps on chugging. In the words of Will Emerson: > This is going to affect people, real people. > [Jesus, Seth. Listen, if you really wanna do this with your life you have to believe you're necessary and you are. People wanna live like this with their cars and big fuckin' houses they can't even pay for, then you're necessary. The only reason that they all get to continue living like kings is because we got our fingers on the scales in their favor. I take my hand off and then the whole world gets really fuckin' fair really fuckin' quickly and nobody actually wants that. They say they do but they don't. They want what we have to give them but they also wanna, you know, play innocent and pretend they have no idea where it came from. Well, that's more hypocrisy than I'm willing to swallow, so fuck 'em. Fuck normal people. You know, the funny thing is, tomorrow if all of this goes tits up they're gonna crucify us for being too reckless but if we're wrong, and everything gets back on track? Well then, the same people are gonna laugh till they piss their pants cause we're gonna all look like the biggest pussies God ever let through the door.](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TKC2c225EnE)
Went to 34.17 at 4:04AM on 5/13. https://ibb.co/Df9TKC7. That was the peak.
Buy $HEPS and $TKC
Last week I opened a small position in TKC a Turkish cell phone operator. An absolutely retarded play considering the hyperinflation. It's up 20% already. I should sell, but the position is small. I'll let it ride.
I nibbled on a Turkish cell operator called TKC. Companies with real assets that can survive the current crises are at a major discount as money flees the country. Opportunity is there to take the other side of that trade. My position is small but as things get worse I will try to increase it. Turkey is not going to fail as a state. They will turn it around.
I decided to pull the trigger on an absolutely pants on head retarded play on the Turkish inflation crises. I figured companies with strong earnings and real assets would be a bargain and they were getting beat up unfairly. I bought TKC at a cost basis of 3.29. Anyway it's green at 3.50 and about my only one that was green today. It has a 13% dividend.
My pants on head retarded play of TKC is already very green. I thought i would dabble in the hyperinflation in Turkey.
I have a really retarded idea to submit. The Turkish stock market is collapsing because of a variety of reasons. Hyperinflation and wars on the borders, and lack of foreign investment. I think this might be an opportunity. Do we think the country of Turkey is going to collapse? I think that is unlikely. This is just a temporary condition and Turkey will get it's shit together. Anyway here's the idea: TKC PE ratio is 8.43 with a 14% dividend yield. The Turkish sovereign wealth fund is the largest holder so it's unlikely to get kicked in the teeth by the government no matter who is in charge. They are the largest cell operator in the country.
All kinds of ways to lose money. I am studying a way to jump into Turkey's hyperinflation disaster by buying a cell provider there called TKC. Plenty of retarded plays to choose from.
Thinking about dipping my toe into Turkey's hyperinflation disaster. TKC is a cell operator in Istanbul. Real assets, positive cash flow, low debt. 12.5 dividend yield. Is Turkey going to totally collapse? Probably not. This is definitely a falling knife, but the currency crisis seems an opportunity to pick up this for cheap. What do you all think?
[In my feels a little](https://i.imgur.com/TKC61va.jpg)
Dude, Biontech (BNTX) is also an ADR, so is the Turkish Telecommunications company Turkcell (TKC) ADRs aren't exclusive to China The VIE structure though is exclusive to China as far as I'm concerned The "variable interest entity" exists because there are certain industries (like media and tech) that the CCP doesn't want any foreign influence in. So in order to get access to foreign investments but to prevent any actual foreign influence or control over Chinese media and tech they created this financial structure. It's ridiculous to believe that the CCP will just cancel the entire structure all of a sudden, basically taking it all away from us. If they were against the VIE structure, which doesn't give you actual ownership or control but a right to the profits of a company (like Alibaba or Tencent), they would have cancelled the structure right away. The CCP doesn't play around. We have a common interest. I think China is misunderstood.
$TKC SMA20: -0.66% SMA50: -5.97% SMA200: -10.82% Average Volume: **820.28K** Volume: **480,778k** None of that looks good.
Check TKC as well if you are into that. Most undervalued company of Turkey (also traded in NYSE). I am thinking about writing a detailed research report about it on here but I am afraid it will die in the new.
Bought the biggest drops from bad news: yesterday was RLX (vape regulations in china) and TKC (Turkcell, turkey dropping currency).
TKC and TUR are Turkish stonks by the way if you want to do puts on them. Don't know if they would pay well but y'know. Turkey is cooked and all that.
Turkish Tech company dip dip dip $TKC
I would have but the stock (TKC) was hovering around 5.50-5.60, my strike 7.50... I was trying to get 1.85-1.95 for it the past couple days and it wasn't happening. Got about that much by buying the shares and exercising. If I had done nothing today would I have just taken the whole loss, or might the broker do that for me upon expiration?
I'm currently trying to decide between 3 companies i like. All 3 are the same type of investment: high value combined with high growth potential, but with some potential risk and high lack of momentum. BDSI: Riskier play of the bunch. Small cap health care with insane growth planned for this year and the next. if one of the 3 will double, its this one. From reading articles on it, yes there is a catch: an ongoing litigation. NESR: The forward PE for this one is only 8, lots of planned growth, and sounds oversold to me. TKC: Another crazy value/growth play, but the catch is the very low momentum combined with the risk of investing in turkey. The company itself would be a no brainer if US based.
Damn, just went down a rabbit hole - Hartford Financial Services > owns TKC Holdings > owns Centric Group > owns Keefe