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Off Topic : 1) When Does a software engineer start financial planning for retirement since the our Career span is only 15-20 years on average.
2) How much and which schemes to invest to mitigate the risk?
3) How much do we need for retirement? Tata Consultancy Infosys Mindtree IBM Wipro Capgemini Cognizant HCL Technologies
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Hey, Fishies! We’re launching our first Interview/Q+A series "Portfolio Rewind: Would You Hire You?"
Like a portfolio review in reverse, creative leaders will share work they created when they first started out and critique it as if were a book that had just landed in their inbox. Then, tell us if they’d hire their younger selves knowing, and expecting, what they do now.
Drop in for get the chance to ask questions, and get your book reviewed by our guest. Hope you can make it!
zoom.us/j/92635977143
Infosys Limited Hi Sharks,How Much Ideal Salary Expectation to ask for as per the Current Market Scale going on For Below Expertise -
YOE - 7 yrs Tech Stack - Core Java, Spring Boot
Need Urgent Suggestion, Pls Help 🙏 Thanks
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Additional Posts in Finance
Are internal lateral moves always a huge pain?
What's your morning commute reading material?
RIP Jeff Immelt. Not sad to see this guy go.
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the book intelligent investor by benjamin graham, get the audiobook if a book is too much, but the book provides good diagrams, examples and trends
This is the way. Learn how to value and invest. Not trade
https://simplywall.st/
Thank you 🙏
Recession is coming, hold on and invest later
More so looking on how to read stocks and made predictions
Hey, have you managed to get a decent grasp of things over the past year? I’m still figuring it out myself. Just curious—have you looked into using insider transaction data as a foundation for your analysis? The reports are available on sec.gov and can give some interesting insights.
"Digging through sec.gov can be overwhelming unless you know exactly what you're looking for—specific insiders, filings, or events—and even then, it’s tough to piece everything together effectively. I’d suggest trying out this site: prismo.pro. It aggregates up-to-date data from sec.gov but presents it in a format that’s much more user-friendly for analysis.
That said, keep in mind that insider trades OFTEN don’t mean much. Ignore sales entirely unless they’re part of a cluster—those can be worth a second look. Focus only on significant purchases, and even then, make sure it’s not just a low-level employee buying $10,000 worth of stock.
And above all, if you’re planning to invest in a company, take the time to really dig into its fundamentals and understand the business. There’s no substitute for doing your homework
"
Start studying for the CFA
As a charter holder myself I’d say this is overkill for someone just interested in learning about investments. Start simple. This one is great. https://www.bookwormomaha.com/book/9781578647453