As an investor it's my job to buy a stock low, then have others value the company higher.
Printable View
Nope just a general comment. It will mainly be a weight loss drug with reduced T2 diabetes as an effect of that (and many other related things presumably).
https://www.nbcnews.com/health/healt...lity-rcna60422
It's worth what the market says it's worth, at any given time.
I decided Nvidia was going to be seen to be worth much more than it was valued at when I bought it, because it was already a (the!) leader in A.I. but the super demand had not even started yet. Months later ChatGPT hit the scene, and the rest is history.
The market dictates the price but not the intrinsic value. The only time market price will ever influence intrinsic value is when a share issue or share repurchase occurs.
All I am recommending is a prudent approach to investing which, whilst not as exciting, should serve you better overtime.
Seriously, who doesn't have exposure to those companies. I'm trying to have less of them but everywhere I turn I end up getting more.
Kernel's Global 100 is 14 per cent Apple, 12 per cent Microsoft and 5 per cent NVIDIA for example. How about Superlife's ESG fund, ok thats 8 per cent Microsoft. I know, what about a highly diversified whole market fund called the S&P500...oh dear.
Go the whole hog and buy them individual. And buy only the best one: Nvidia. ;-)