 sleepywaves. You wanted to look at Intel, right? So let's take a look at Intel. Let's do a little looksie here. And by the way, let's do a quick look for Lululemon. Okay, just because Lululemon is down that much, which is good, since family has put on Lululemon. Let's take a look at Moderna. Moderna is up $5.40. So what's going on? That's an indicator, by the way. Microsoft. Family has put on Microsoft. Microsoft was actually down $3 earlier today and is crawling back up again. What else? What else? What else? What else? Well, let's look at Intel. INTC. Okay, here's INTC. Let's bring up, you know what? We'll close the NASDAQ website for options. We're not going to use that. We'll keep the Yahoo open. We don't want that. We won't Intel INTC. Intel. And we'll bring up Intel here as well. INTC. And let's look at the chart for Intel, first of all. Okay, and here's, because it's a simple look, we'll take a look at it on Google, because it gives you a clean. It's not busy, right? So here's the Intel chart. So Intel chart, and last year, it peaked at around $68. And it's sitting at around $51, $52 right now. It's got a market cap of $210 billion, a P of 10%, and a yield dividend of 2.69%. You can come down here. You can look at what the financials were on a quarterly basis. So they had revenue of $19 billion, net income of $6.8 billion, cost of revenue of $8.45 billion. You can see all these metrics. This is the quarterly, and here's the annual. Okay, annual, they had $77 billion in sales, net income of $20 billion, down 0.71% from the previous year, cash on hand of $7 billion, cost of revenue, $34 billion. So that's the general chart for a year. Here's the general chart for five years, and here's the max chart for Intel. It does a lot of fluctuations, and it's looking like this, and it looks like just basic. It looks like it's sitting on some kind of support, right? Let's go back here and let's look at the technicals on this thing. Some of the technicals anyway. What Lulu Lemon is clothing company in Vancouver, those are icicles, clothing company in a headquarter in Vancouver, British Columbia. It's overpriced in my opinion. The clothing is, I know someone in textile industry, and they say it's cheap ass shit, but it's got a huge market cap, and people buy it. One of the reasons people buy it, and my friend in the textile industry mentioned this, she had the opportunity to work for Lulu Lemon when they first started, by the way, and basically she told me that people buy Lulu Lemon product because it's high end, high end expensive meaning, right? So it's for people who have extra cash to spend, and it makes, this is her paraphrasing, her wording, it makes women's asses perk, so women like buying it because it perks up their bums, it makes their bodies look better than what, more fit than what they are, right? So it's a smoke and mirror thing, but they do have serious revenue, they have stores all over the world, and they make good income, right? DEMPA YOKI, no, just a boring kind of sick unfortunately, oh no, boring sick, not the exciting stuff. So here's Intel, right? This is a six-month chart on it, right? You can take a look at it, it popped above the 50-day moving average, and then most likely, if we do the earnings, you can add a new metric here. Overlay, where's the overlay? Chart overlay, let's see if we can put the earnings on here, where's the earnings? Price, parabolic moving average, simple moving, hey, where's the earnings? Events, oh there it is, events, earnings, let's put the earnings on here, there it is. You see this major drop here? That was most likely they missed their earnings, right? So the stock does drop. Now before we put that on, that's what we're looking at, right? But when you see a drop like this, it's usually an announcement, or usually it's a warning, or they actually came out with their earnings and they missed their numbers, or expected numbers, right? So it's a good idea if you're seeing major, major movements in the stock to see what took place, right? And right now, this is where Intel's sitting, channeling between the 200-day and the 50-day moving averages, right? And here's the one-year chart for it, right? It looks like it might be bottoming out, okay? And we can definitely take a look at the chart here as well, Intel, here. We'll take a look at the chart and some of the metrics that we've set up, just to see. Oh yeah, by the way, here. Let me go back one more. And you can look at different stuff. Right now, analyst rating, you know, there's nine people that say it's a buy right here, right? Oops, right here, right? Nine people say that's a buy, you know, two people say that it's overweight. 21 analysts are saying, because it's one of the major tech companies, it's got major coverage. 21 people are saying, just hold it. And six people are saying, sell it, right? Now, we can take a look at the charts here as well, and do one-year chart on it. And you can take a look, it's showing the same thing, right? For us, this is just a moving average that I've plotted on here, put on here. So it's sitting well below the 200-day moving average, but a little bit above the 50-day moving average. Here it is here. Now, would I be betting that this stock is going to go up? Let's see the 200 two-year chart on it. Here's the two-year chart. Let's do a five-year chart on it. Five-year chart, refresh. Yeah, it could go either way, but the odds are it won't do serious heavy movement. And then you can take a look at the options and see the premiums on it. And Intel, again, this is trading at what? 51.69. So what you see here is sitting between 51.5 and 52, right? So people are betting one way or another. There's lots of activity going on here, right? 5,000 trades and stuff. But you can take a look at, for example, two months out of February. February, it's saying that if you're going to bet that, let's pick a nice number. It's sitting at 51.70. So it's closer to 52.5, right? So if you're betting, if you want to bet that this stock is going to go up, right? And you want to buy calls for it for the next two months, right? You're going to pay, let's say take what is being offered at, or what they traded at last bid, this is the last trade, $1.77, right? So right now, $1.77, if it's going to go down, you're going to have to pay $1.77 to be able to control 100 shares of Intel, right? On the way down, right? So you have to pay $1.77 to have the right to sell Intel at $50 a share. If that's the case, then you only make money, right? If Intel trades is sitting at $48.33, right? $50 minus that $3.33, yeah, $48.33 you break even, right? Because the difference between $48.33 and $50 is $1.77. If Intel closes below $48.33, you're making money, right? So for example, if Intel drops down to $40 by February, February 18th, you see the date here, February 18th, 2020, if it drops down to $40, then you go $10 difference because you had to, you bought the rice to sell it at $50, that's $10 you can sell Intel stock for, but you paid $1.77, so what you can do is go $10, here, let's bring up the calculator, $10 minus $1.77, that means you made $8.23, right? If Intel drops $10 in the next two months, okay, a little bit less than two months actually because we're going to January 1st, so month and three weeks, let's say, right? What is that relative to what type of return is that? So $8.233 minus $1.77 divided by $1.77, that's 3.65 times return on investment, return on your money, right? Now, if you're betting that the stock is going to go up, right, you can buy calls on Intel at $50 a share for $3.25, that means Intel stock has to close be at least $53.25 for you to break even and anything above that is premium that you're making. That's the way you can think about it. Ronnie, you got some top comic, right? I wish I'd gotten the Spiderman Carnage comic, but I'm still happy with what I got. Ronnie says, Ronnie, what did you get? I can't remember what you got. And by the way, hi Ronnie, how you doing? Hey Chicho, I received your package. Well, thanks again. Awesome Ronnie, glad you got it. Oh, oh, how are you doing? Welcome to another live stream. I'm surprised they don't seem to have been affected by a global microchip shortage. Supposed to be Intel's coming up with some new stuff, and they were affected by a global shortage to a certain degree because take a look at this. This is the one year chart and oh, come on, it's refreshing again. Come, come, hurry, hurry. There we go. Oh, Intel's closed down now, it was up $55. Nice, we're going to take a look at it. So take a look at this thing. At the six month, right, on October 21st, they announced their earnings and the stock dropped, right? Stock dropped, so they were probably affected by the shortage supply chain issues, right? So let's take a look at Intel options, right? So Intel was up $0.55, right? Now it's down $0.05. Let's see, hey, where'd the options go on it? Oh, it kicked us out of the options. Let's take a look at the options. Come on, load, load. My internet's really slow. Here's the option. Here's what the, oh, let's look at the straddle. Look, I don't use Yahoo too much for options. There, we're looking at the 52 one, weren't we? What were we looking at? We're 50, oh, crap. I forgot which one we're looking at. Where is Intel? Yeah, we're looking at the 51. Oh, hold on. Let's bring up Q. It was a 52 we're looking at. Oh, no, I forget what we're looking at. Poop. Anybody remember what the strike price was? How does this work? You sell them now for 50 and you have to buy them back at 48, whatever price? No, no, no. That's shorting rank. This is option. Option is you're paying a premium over the timeframe to control a certain amount of shares. You're not buying the stocks or selling the stocks. You're buying the rights to be able to sell a stock at a certain price or you're buying the rights to be able to sell a stock at a certain price. So what you risk is that that's all it is. You're not risking any more than what you're putting in. If you're naked short-selling and stuff like this, you're risking huge, right? So that's the difference. That's the difference. Okay. That's the difference. Oh, because we're looking at alcohol. We weren't looking at Intel. That's right. We're looking at alcohol before for 55 cents. It was up. So what would alcohol be doing right now? Let's see that alcohol do a movement. We weren't looking at Intel. We're looking at alcohol. Alcohol is still the same. So that's the general gist of options trading. Okay. And one thing you can do is you can look for, you can bet that the stock is going to go up and down. Right? So for example, if we go here, let's find a serious movement in the market. See how many things moved heavy. Let's see if anything's done a major move that might have options on it. See the thing is nothing's moving really too much right now. Okay. Nothing's because it's the last trading day. Let me do this. Let's bring up my video. And let's bring up chat. So do you think it's going to go up or down based on the charts for Intel? Oh, that's a serious question. Right? It looks like it's bottoming. Right? So it might do a move up, but it really depends on the announcements. From what I understand, sleepy waves. Intel was going to announce that they were going to, they're working on something new. Right? So it really depends on what their news is. As far as the general market goes, what's Intel's PE? Intel's PE was pretty low, I believe, and it gave a dividend. Let's see. Let's take a look at that. Sorry if I'm not sharing the screen. It's not worth sharing. Intel's PE is 10. It's got a yield of, where's the yield? Yield is 2.69. Right? 2.7 percent yield. The PE is low and the yield is 2.7 percent, which isn't bad relatively speaking. I mean Intel's competitor is NVIDIA. NVIDIA is killing it and has been killing it. Right? NVIDIA's PE is 92. It's got a yield of 0.05. So as far as value investing go, Intel is better value in terms of tech goes. People are choosing NVIDIA over Intel. Intel, I believe, lost Apple's contract, if I remember correctly.