The latest Investing Matters Podcast episode with London Stock Exchange Group's Chris Mayo has just been released. Listen here.
Data is king, says the head of Ark investment
https://twitter.com/CathieDWood/status/1343024190404898818?s=19
And not a bad buy after all
https://insideevs.com/features/461958/top-gear-mustang-mach-e-review/
Great article showing how the NHTSA are hypnotized be everything EM says.
Safety and automotive leaders condemned Tesla for exposing its customers—and everyone else who shares the roads—to unnecessary risk. PAVE, a nonprofit providing education about autonomous vehicles, blasted the company for “using untrained consumers to validate beta-level software on public roads,” calling this “dangerous and inconsistent with existing guidance and industry norms.” An association representing truckers warned that “while [FSD] may be a fun experiment for Tesla’s customers, public roads are our members’ workplace.”
Faced with an obvious safety hazard and seemingly false advertising, you might expect federal officials to step in. Nope. Instead, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration promised merely to “monitor the new technology closely.” With an apparent regulatory green light, Tesla CEO Elon Musk claimed that FSD would be available nationwide by the end of this year.
This was not the first time NHTSA has shrugged off an urgent safety problem. The Trump administration’s regulatory hand-sitting has certainly included lax oversight of automotive technology. Earlier this year, the Government Accountability Office rebuked NHTSA for failing to revise vehicle-crash ratings to account for growing risk posed to vulnerable pedestrians (something European regulators have done for years). The Trump administration never even bothered to install a congressionally approved NHTSA administrator.
https://slate.com/technology/2020/12/tesla-biden-self-driving-cars-regulation.amp
Welcome to the fold Croc.
I remember buying my first £750 worth just over three years ago. Unfortunately (or hopefully, fortunately) it is addictive and now hold many £000k's worth. Reading the articles posted here today should give you solace that maybe you have made the right decision. As always, DYOR anmd check out the brilliant posters here too for their research.
I too had yet another top-up today, paid at mid-price.
I assume that it was my sharing post from Telegram to here that was being referred to. It's a shame that it got a few catty remarks back. However, working in the business I do and doing the job I do, I got very thick skin and broad shoulders (figuratively that is!) many many years ago.
I don't feel guilty for sharing whether some like it or not, I even said at the time that the comment from KK wasn't very clear [and could potentially be viewed other ways although most agree with at least part of my interpretation.]
I still have this page open on this BB all day on my laptop as my company policy is to block social media messaging apps on their system which is fair enough, so having to go between laptop and mobile is a bit long winded at times.
However, there is definitely no 'them & us' - it is US only, on whatever format you choose to use.
Oh by the way, for those not using Telegram, Stephen has done one of his spreadsheets again for the number of shares in private hands. The last I saw it was up to 6% and rising. I seem to recall that the last time this was done here it was about 8%?