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INAP
BAB Holdings Inc.
stock NASDAQ

Inactive
Mar 25, 2020
0.0850USD-14.314%(-0.0142)3,538,789
Pre-market
0.00USD0.000%(0.00)0
After-hours
0.00USD0.000%(0.00)0
OverviewPrice & VolumeSplitsHistoricalExchange VolumeDark Pool LevelsDark Pool PrintsExchangesShort VolumeShort Interest - DailyShort InterestBorrow Fee (CTB)Failure to Deliver (FTD)ShortsTrendsNewsTrends
INAP Reddit Mentions
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We have sentiment values and mention counts going back to 2017. The complete data set is available via the API.
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INAP Specific Mentions
As of Jun 30, 2026 7:51:57 PM EDT (1 min. ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
814 days ago • u/greytoc • r/investing • changing_my_roth_ira_from_voo_to_10_individual • C
If that's your goal - It may be simpler to overweigh your total portfolio allocation with a tech sector thematic fund instead.
There are lots of those types of funds available. And the stock component selection, weighting, and rebalancing would be done for you.
The challenge is that trying to forecast future expectations into 25 years for a single company isn't really a good idea. The best tech companies today may not survive in another 25 years. So you would still have to evaluate the future expectations of your selections at least once per year and rebalance and reconstitute appropriately.
Think of it this way - 25 to 30 years ago - tech was booming with the advent of the internet - so your thesis about the younger generation being addicted to tech isn't new. Everyone was getting in on the internet boom.
So - if you were doing the same thing 25-30 years ago back in the mid to late '90's - what would you have selected? Many would probably say companies like CSCO, EXDS (maybe or WCOM or VZ or INAP), MSFT, maybe BORL, maybe VRSN? , YHOO, AOL? Probably CMGI since it was the company funding a lot of tech companies.
GOOG wasn't public until the mid 2000's and YHOO was bigger in the late '90's.
AAPL is likely a company that would have been recommended since they almost went bankrupt in the late '90's.
Companies like AMZN weren't really seen as tech companies but were considered more like new age retailers - and it was traditional retailers like Gap and EddieBauer that dominated internet online sales for some time. And then there were the speculator ones like eToys and Petscom.
How many of the companies that I mentioned are you familiar with? Some don't exist anymore but they were the darlings of the tech stock market. I even invested in some of those companies.
Anyway - I'm not trying to dissuade you because there are strategies to select stocks. But you should just be aware that there is really no such thing as set it and forget it when you select specific underlying companies to create your own investing theme.
sentiment 0.95
814 days ago • u/greytoc • r/investing • changing_my_roth_ira_from_voo_to_10_individual • C
If that's your goal - It may be simpler to overweigh your total portfolio allocation with a tech sector thematic fund instead.
There are lots of those types of funds available. And the stock component selection, weighting, and rebalancing would be done for you.
The challenge is that trying to forecast future expectations into 25 years for a single company isn't really a good idea. The best tech companies today may not survive in another 25 years. So you would still have to evaluate the future expectations of your selections at least once per year and rebalance and reconstitute appropriately.
Think of it this way - 25 to 30 years ago - tech was booming with the advent of the internet - so your thesis about the younger generation being addicted to tech isn't new. Everyone was getting in on the internet boom.
So - if you were doing the same thing 25-30 years ago back in the mid to late '90's - what would you have selected? Many would probably say companies like CSCO, EXDS (maybe or WCOM or VZ or INAP), MSFT, maybe BORL, maybe VRSN? , YHOO, AOL? Probably CMGI since it was the company funding a lot of tech companies.
GOOG wasn't public until the mid 2000's and YHOO was bigger in the late '90's.
AAPL is likely a company that would have been recommended since they almost went bankrupt in the late '90's.
Companies like AMZN weren't really seen as tech companies but were considered more like new age retailers - and it was traditional retailers like Gap and EddieBauer that dominated internet online sales for some time. And then there were the speculator ones like eToys and Petscom.
How many of the companies that I mentioned are you familiar with? Some don't exist anymore but they were the darlings of the tech stock market. I even invested in some of those companies.
Anyway - I'm not trying to dissuade you because there are strategies to select stocks. But you should just be aware that there is really no such thing as set it and forget it when you select specific underlying companies to create your own investing theme.
sentiment 0.95


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