Stoney.... Cramer was pumping this thing the other day. Did Big Pete join the investing club? You threw out FLEX the other day also. Another Cramer ceo "bullish" interview. I have no problem with these but at least give the man some credit.
You know I don't watch that fat fuck. I do know his little intern reads our thread every day so we can do the math and pretty much assume Cramer is getting interview ideas here-- I'll give him another two: MEG Montrose Environmental and Fluence look for CNBC profiles soon. Misunderstood companies I think./ Really feeling it today. Some days are worse than others I miss my Bacchus so much I could cry. I think it's this hot weather. With a big dog you are always thinking i got to get him up to the Ct where there's shade and no cement.
This Chinese POS is not moving! Fucking what do the Chinese know about coffee!!! Ahhhhh stoney stop chasing butterflies. Luckin Coffee Non-GAAP EPADS of $0.64, revenue of $1.72B beats by $150M $150 mil what wontons! No soup for me! Up 40 cents.
The market is not in a rewarding move. For a blase day yesterday my screen was full of red. and some decent earnings are getting no reaction- Case in point my coconut play: Vita Coco GAAP EPS of $0.38 beats by $0.03, revenue of $169M beats by $7.44M Up 12 cents.
Ok this is moving a bit up 3%// It's an IRA name. The Chefs' Warehouse Non-GAAP EPS of $0.52 beats by $0.06, revenue of $1.03B beats by $20M
CHEF The Chefs' Warehouse, Inc. $61.56-1.12(-1.79%)4:00 PM 07/29/25 NASDAQ |$USD |Pre-Market:$63.55+1.99(+3.23%)7:43 AM
Tamarack Valley Energy GAAP EPS of $0.17, revenue of $408.27M; raises FY production guidance TNEYF Trump tariffs give Canadian, Mexican chocolate makers an edge over U.S. peers
This was halted at one point yesterday. Don't know why. Red Rock Resorts. RRR. Stifel raises PT by $16.
(Bloomberg) — Upper-income Americans are increasingly falling behind on credit card and auto loan payments, signaling an underlying vulnerability in the US economy as the labor market slows. Delinquencies on such debts from those making at least $150,000 annually have jumped almost 20% over the last two years, faster than for middle- and lower-income borrowers, according to the credit-scoring firm VantageScore. A recent Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis study found the share of people making late card payments in the highest-income zip codes has risen twice as much over the last year as in the lowest-income ones. The mounting liabilities coincide with a slowdown in hiring that has hit white-collar workers especially hard, raising the stakes for an economy that has come to rely more and more on consumer spending from top earners to power continued expansion.