Hey Mr.K, I don't know if you still are making videos, but if you are, I'd like to see one where you explain how to properly trade and make money off stocks! :D
It's going to happen for sure, after I deal with some medical issues. Until that happens, Jake Broe (channel name) is the guru I learned from, especially something called "The Wheel" (Jake shows you screen shots of his account as examples). Steps on what I do are below, I use TSLA, but SPY (ETF that tracks S&P 500) or BAC (Bank of America, if looking for a cheap intro stock w/ dividends) are good choices with less volatility but less profit. Avoid small market cap (small company) stocks. 1. Buy 100 shares of a stock (TSLA 30K, SPY 4oK, BAC 3K) on Charles Schwab 2. Sell a "Covered Call", a contract that you get paid for that obliges you to sell the 100 shares if it hits the price on the contract's expiration date. You get the contract money whether it hits the "strike price" or not, and you decide the strike price/expiration, usually a month out, but can be any time. More time, more money. 3. On expiration, if the stock doesn't hit the strike price, you keep the stock and your contract fee. Sell another covered call and keep printing money. 4. On expiration if the stock does hit the strike price, you sell the 100 shares at the agreed on strike price AND still keep the contract fee. If you paid $30/share for BAC and the strike price was $40/share, you paid less than you sold it for and make $10/share on top of the fee. 5. Now that you have money from selling 100 shares in step 4, sell a "Cash Secured Put" which obliges you to BUY a stock for an agreed on strike price/expiration date and get the contract fee. 6. If on the expiration date the stock doesn't hit the strike price, keep the contract fee, repeat and print more money until it does. 7. If on expiration the stock does hit the strike price, buy 100 shares at the agreed on price, AND keep the contract fee. Now you have 100 shares to sell a covered call with in step 2 and "The Wheel" keeps turning. For example, if you have $4000 from step 4, and you set the strike price for buying at $39/share, you make $1/share AND keep the contract fee. As long as you set the strike price for equal or less than your cost basis (what you paid) for puts, and equal or more than your cost basis for covered calls, you can't lose money. ...Then convert your account to a margin account so you can borrow against it, use it to put a down payment on a FSD (full self driving) Tesla for robotaxi use (in 2 yrs maybe?), and have the $20K/yr it generates pay back the loan. Operate it for 20 years...make NET $400K/car to pay itself off (and your new house). ...Then have your brain preserved (connectome and genome), which is needed to recreate you at your desired age in a couple 100 years while your investment grows, and buy a planet for you and your friends to live on. ...Then work on solving entropy (heat death of the universe) while being a hedonist.
Nice talk and info thx Jason Walker. Medically grown is the only way bringing out its genetic potential. I made some vids on how to bring out the genetic potential of medical cannabis if anyone wants to learn more. Thx for the vid Highlyskeptical!!
No idea. The old vids on this channel are mine, but this was made by the "National Math and Science Initiative" which helped with the redesign of the AP bio exam, so they got uploaded. Even though these folks are experts, the hollywood-esque trick of having a voice actor narrate would be a teaspoon of sugar to help the science go down.
It's a better guess that leaves CAN uptake nutrients and water through their stomata. Nature hedges it's bets through resiliency, it would make sense for a leaf to be able to absorb nutrients that land on its surface as fine particles picked up in the wind and from other sources. Leaf surfaces at the micro level are rough; think of a landscape. Water runs down into the valley, picking up sediment along the way, and filling up the lowest points. Stomata are the low points on the leaf surface. Water and nutrients collect there and are absorbed by the stomata. Probably. Ultimately depends on the plant and local environment though.
+Bree M So what a scientist would do next is maybe test the stomata area vs. the other parts of the leaf for a concentration of nutrients, under the cuticle that is like our skin, the plants first line of defense. Maybe check the phloem nearby, that would deliver the nutrients to the rest of the plant. Become a scientist and your days will be filled with these types of nerdy ponderings.
the man giving this lecture is amazing ! :D he makes it fun to listen to and easy to understand ... truly he is a gifted teacher ^^
Hey Mr.K, I don't know if you still are making videos, but if you are, I'd like to see one where you explain how to properly trade and make money off stocks! :D
It's going to happen for sure, after I deal with some medical issues. Until that happens, Jake Broe (channel name) is the guru I learned from, especially something called "The Wheel" (Jake shows you screen shots of his account as examples).
Steps on what I do are below, I use TSLA, but SPY (ETF that tracks S&P 500) or BAC (Bank of America, if looking for a cheap intro stock w/ dividends) are good choices with less volatility but less profit. Avoid small market cap (small company) stocks.
1. Buy 100 shares of a stock (TSLA 30K, SPY 4oK, BAC 3K) on Charles Schwab
2. Sell a "Covered Call", a contract that you get paid for that obliges you to sell the 100 shares if it hits the price on the contract's expiration date. You get the contract money whether it hits the "strike price" or not, and you decide the strike price/expiration, usually a month out, but can be any time. More time, more money.
3. On expiration, if the stock doesn't hit the strike price, you keep the stock and your contract fee. Sell another covered call and keep printing money.
4. On expiration if the stock does hit the strike price, you sell the 100 shares at the agreed on strike price AND still keep the contract fee. If you paid $30/share for BAC and the strike price was $40/share, you paid less than you sold it for and make $10/share on top of the fee.
5. Now that you have money from selling 100 shares in step 4, sell a "Cash Secured Put" which obliges you to BUY a stock for an agreed on strike price/expiration date and get the contract fee.
6. If on the expiration date the stock doesn't hit the strike price, keep the contract fee, repeat and print more money until it does.
7. If on expiration the stock does hit the strike price, buy 100 shares at the agreed on price, AND keep the contract fee. Now you have 100 shares to sell a covered call with in step 2 and "The Wheel" keeps turning. For example, if you have $4000 from step 4, and you set the strike price for buying at $39/share, you make $1/share AND keep the contract fee.
As long as you set the strike price for equal or less than your cost basis (what you paid) for puts, and equal or more than your cost basis for covered calls, you can't lose money.
...Then convert your account to a margin account so you can borrow against it, use it to put a down payment on a FSD (full self driving) Tesla for robotaxi use (in 2 yrs maybe?), and have the $20K/yr it generates pay back the loan. Operate it for 20 years...make NET $400K/car to pay itself off (and your new house).
...Then have your brain preserved (connectome and genome), which is needed to recreate you at your desired age in a couple 100 years while your investment grows, and buy a planet for you and your friends to live on.
...Then work on solving entropy (heat death of the universe) while being a hedonist.
Nice talk and info thx Jason Walker. Medically grown is the only way bringing out its genetic potential. I made some vids on how to bring out the genetic potential of medical cannabis if anyone wants to learn more. Thx for the vid Highlyskeptical!!
No idea. The old vids on this channel are mine, but this was made by the "National Math and Science Initiative" which helped with the redesign of the AP bio exam, so they got uploaded.
Even though these folks are experts, the hollywood-esque trick of having a voice actor narrate would be a teaspoon of sugar to help the science go down.
It's a better guess that leaves CAN uptake nutrients and water through their stomata. Nature hedges it's bets through resiliency, it would make sense for a leaf to be able to absorb nutrients that land on its surface as fine particles picked up in the wind and from other sources. Leaf surfaces at the micro level are rough; think of a landscape. Water runs down into the valley, picking up sediment along the way, and filling up the lowest points. Stomata are the low points on the leaf surface. Water and nutrients collect there and are absorbed by the stomata. Probably. Ultimately depends on the plant and local environment though.
+Bree M So what a scientist would do next is maybe test the stomata area vs. the other parts of the leaf for a concentration of nutrients, under the cuticle that is like our skin, the plants first line of defense. Maybe check the phloem nearby, that would deliver the nutrients to the rest of the plant. Become a scientist and your days will be filled with these types of nerdy ponderings.
foliar feeding
Are you from Texas? I hear "soil" becoming "sole" haha
I’m just going to land on this leaf that looks like a mouth,lol..