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EU
enCore Energy Corp.
stock NASDAQ

At Close
May 16, 2025 3:59:30 PM EDT
1.64USD-5.491%(-0.10)2,306,783
0.00Bid   0.00Ask   0.00Spread
Pre-market
May 16, 2025 8:51:30 AM EDT
1.67USD-3.468%(-0.06)213,601
After-hours
May 16, 2025 4:00:30 PM EDT
1.64USD+0.306%(+0.01)1,242
OverviewOption ChainMax PainOptionsHistoricalExchange VolumeDark Pool LevelsDark Pool PrintsExchangesShort VolumeShort Interest - DailyShort InterestBorrow Fee (CTB)Failure to Deliver (FTD)ShortsTrends
EU 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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EU Specific Mentions
As of May 17, 2025 5:23:30 AM EDT (<1 min. ago)
Includes all comments and posts. Mentions per user per ticker capped at one per hour.
2 min ago • u/n1ck90z • r/wallstreetbets • weekend_discussion_thread_for_the_weekend_of_may • C
US an EU bonds mostly move togheter
sentiment 0.00
8 min ago • u/Delicious_Dinner_185 • r/Finanzen • wir_alles_wissen_es • C
Oder halt Option 4: sagen was Sache ist, Migration zur Stützung des Sozialsystems führt nur zur Erstarkung der Rechten. Wenn ein starkes Sozialsystem, aber kein Bevölkerungswachstum gewünscht(Migration) oder möglich (mehr Kinder) ist bedeutet es für die nächsten 150 Jahre Planwirtschaft. Alles was wir erarbeiten, geht a den Staat, und der garantiert uns wohnen, essen, Bildung, Gesundheit und vielleicht wenn es gut läuft ein iPhone im Jahr. Wir müssten natürlich uns überlegen wie wir das mit der EU und anderen Ländern allgemein lösen und ob wir alle Wohlhabenden enteignen aber in 100 -150 Jahren wenn wir einen steady state der Bevölkerung erreicht haben, können wir ja mal was anderes wieder probieren
sentiment -0.18
10 min ago • u/HumilisProposito • r/investing • container_rates_collapsing_early_sign_to_reduce • C
>The EU which hasn't recovered from the 2008 financial crash
The financial crash that was caused by the US.
>has a big population problem:
What population problem? And how does the problem reinforce the notion that the US cannot crash itself onto the rocks?
>brain drain:
No. The US is having one, though. The government is attacking universities, decimating research programs, and set its department of education on fire. And the EU is capitalizing on it: https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/eus-von-der-leyen-invites-scientists-researchers-make-europe-their-home-2025-04-29/
>war on the border:
Europe is not engaged in a war in the European theater. What are you talking about?
>zero innovation:
You must be joking. The world, including the US is reliant on Europe's tech for semiconductors, specifically ASML's EUV and Zeiss's mirrors. The US pressed Europe against selling that tech to China. With the US rattling its saber in Europe, Europe could and should sell to China and make a mint. With friends like the US, who needs enemies.
>China who's an authoritarian government who can destroy a company at the drop of a hat:
The US calling China authoritarian is a joke. You're the one who needs to study geopolitics. Or even just read the news.
The US has been using masked squads to disappear people off the streets and "disappear" them into foreign countries with no due process: https://www.npr.org/2025/03/28/nx-s1-5342428/tufts-student-arrest-raises-questions-about-masked-ice-agents
The US under Trump has defied a federal court order: https://www.reuters.com/legal/judge-finds-trump-administration-disregarded-order-venezuelan-deportations-2025-04-16/
The US under Trump has attacked universities that disagree with Trump:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/16/trump-universities-response
The US has targeted law firms to extract personal revenge on behalf of Donald Trump: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/10/trump-administration-authoritarian
Under Trump, the US has contracted with a major firm to build literal concentration camps for his immigration targets: https://www.propublica.org/article/trump-deportations-deployed-resources-tent-company
To your point about destroying a company, the US under Trump has recently made a move to outlaw porn, which would decimate an entire industry, let alone a company. And has waged open war on PBS and individual news commentators:
https://newsnationnow.com/politics/porn-crime-new-bill-obscenity-definition-act/
https://thehill.com/homenews/administration/5181461-trump-msnbc-nicolle-wallace-rachel-maddow/
https://www.pbs.org/newshour/politics/trump-signs-executive-order-directing-federal-funding-cuts-to-pbs-and-npr
The president openly manipulated the stock market and a shitcoin to line his pockets and those of his cronies:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/apr/10/donald-trump-ignites-insider-trading-accusations-after-global-tariffs-u-turn
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/may/14/trump-crypto-conflict-interest
He's threatened and insulted the head of the central bank and threatened to replace him for not supporting him in his flawed economic reasoning: https://www.cnn.com/2025/04/23/business/trump-jerome-powell
>wants to invade their neighbors with the only friendly one being North Korea?
Meanwhile, the US is threatening Canadian and Mexican sovereignty as well as invading Panama and Greenland.
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-says-he-wasnt-trolling-about-acquiring-greenland-canada-51st-state
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4gzn48jwz2o
>India who has a caste system:
So does the US, and it always has: https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jul/28/untouchables-caste-system-us-race-martin-luther-king-india
I could go on and on, but there's more than enough above for anyone in their right mind to consider hedging against the tire fire the current president is conflagrating.
sentiment -0.98
28 min ago • u/Ok-Significance-8276 • r/investing • my_investment_strategys_for_2025_onward • C
I mean that’s fair but I’m using my geopolitical awareness to influence my investments. That and my hobbies. Means I’m more likely to stay up to date. If I was smarter a month sooner I could have gotten in when it was 100 per share instead of 200. Now tho it’s up to 350. I’m worried about there P/E Ratio at 90 but I’ve read there Q1 report and it’s apparently beyond there expectations and lines them up for end of 2025 predictions. That and the rearmament of Europe is driving my investment strategy. Means I have to trust people in the EU to actually do stuff which is a ouch but at the same time the things I’m expecting arnt impossible given the current trajectory of the world stage
sentiment 0.90
29 min ago • u/Jeffmaru • r/Bitcoin • turns_out_kyc_means_bending_over_for_a_26_tax_hit • C
The 26% tax is from Italy, not the entire EU and applies only to crypto gains over €2,000/year. The EU itself is not/ cannot impose a 26% crypto tax. Next.
sentiment 0.19
31 min ago • u/cleankiwii • r/Bitcoin • turns_out_kyc_means_bending_over_for_a_26_tax_hit • C
i made a boo-boo
what's happening is 26% in italy (that's me),
* **France**: Around 30% flat tax on capital gains.
* **Portugal**: Used to be tax-free, but as of 2023, short-term gains may be taxed at 28%.
* **Spain**: Progressive capital gains tax, ranging from \~19% to 26%.
so it's not all EU nations but these ones, for now...
i'm not posting links but i think you can easily find many articles about all of this
sentiment 0.88
1 hr ago • u/Unlucky_Map3201 • r/quantfinance • imperial_rmfe • B
Got the offer from Imperial’s MSc in RM&FE. As an EU student, things are looking hectic in the Blighty, but it’s more the MSc that concerns me.
Super expensive and don’t know if it’s good enough for Quant positions. What do you suggest?
https://www.imperial.ac.uk/business-school/masters/risk-management/
sentiment 0.88
1 hr ago • u/Michael-3740 • r/Trading • data_on_trading_activity_and_brokers • C
Check the T&Cs. Brokers operating in the UK and EU must comply with GDPR but that doesn't mean that this sort of data processing is illegal - far from it.
sentiment -0.71
1 hr ago • u/ad727272 • r/trading212 • any_thoughts_or_advice_on_my_pies_any_advice • C
Let’s see your EU defence pie
sentiment 0.10
2 hr ago • u/fairlyaveragetrader • r/investing • is_the_united_states_truly_exceptional • C
You know what I keep running into when I have that dilemma. Where else am I going to go with my money? You really want to buy gold up here? Already have a property, I guess I could get another one but then I'm managing a rental. You look at the growth rate in the EU and the population demographics. that's not going to grow very fast long-term. Look at the uk, they have sky high tax rates over there and inefficient government that makes the US look down right well tuned. When people look at alternative investments, the fact Ibit has been rather catchy this is why. people are looking for places to park money. American equities still offer an attractive rate of return
If someone is looking for higher rates of return, it does exist but it also carries more risk. At least theoretical risk. If we look at a lot of the products that have done a 10x or 100x, even if you limited your Capital exposure in the beginning, you know what the really hard part with those is, actually holding the whole time. How many people could have really bought BTC for a dollar and kept it until now? How many people bought Nvidia back in 2015 and still have the shares? See that's the hard part
sentiment 0.61
2 hr ago • u/hjk1231 • r/investing • is_the_united_states_truly_exceptional • C
As an European, from one of the smaller EU countries, I don't invest in my country at all. In comparison to the US it's basically a banana republic, and I'm still salty about some things - like introducing a copper tax that basically targeted only one company (that I owned in stock) because it had an unexpected great year. Or companies that are owned on large part by the government, that do not really operate in investor best interest. Also the liquidity is low. And since others think the same, P/E is lower and the growth is slower.
So I prefer the US casino, at all least larger European countries. Nowadays I just full world ETF and chill though, with some EU bonds.
sentiment 0.92
2 hr ago • u/SirDinadin • r/Revolut • joint_account_between_2_countries • C
As you already know, Revolut only supports the joint account when both account owners are resident in the same country. I suspect this is due to legal and regulatory reasons. It would be very complicated to decide on which legal framework to apply and which Ombudsman for an appeal. There are small differences in the products,offered in each country, but probably not a big difference as you are both in Euro countries.
I don't think there is any way round this, but you could suggest that Revolut relax this for countries using the Euro, and lobby Revolut to relax this restriction . How you go about this, I don't have any good ideas. I don't know if there are any EU discrimination rules that could be used.
sentiment 0.52
3 hr ago • u/vegancorr • r/investing • is_the_united_states_truly_exceptional • C
That's not true. The dominance of the US dollar was because of the huge size of the US economy. There was no other currency. Chinese Yuan is not fully convertible / free float, so it's out of question. Even now the euro is not a full alternative, eurozone GDP is half of the US and there are more political risks (Russia is actively trying to destroy the EU construction).
sentiment -0.43
3 hr ago • u/strong_slav • r/ValueInvesting • a_lot_of_people_seem_to_be_ignoring_the_level_of • C
The market can stay irrational for longer than you can stay solvent.
And honestly, I think we're at the BEGINNING of a cycle rather than its end. We just came out of the COVID pandemic lockdown years not too long ago and the markets are just heating up.
The Fed Funds rate has a lot of room to decrease, and Powell will be out in a year - meaning Trump will be able to select someone with a much more liberal monetary policy. The US federal government has a historically high deficit, outside of the COVID pandemic lockdown years this deficit is unheard of since WW2. Elon Musk's DOGE failed to meaningfully cut federal spending, Trump and the Republicans are proposing tax cuts, and these two things together means they will be blowing up the deficit even more. And if these tax cuts primarily benefit the rich, as expected, that'll mean more money flowing into assets and further asset price inflation.
In Europe, there's a similar situation: the EU just gave member states the green light to increase deficit spending for military purposes, Germany (the strongest economy in Europe and the third strongest economy in the world) announced massive infrastructure and military spending plans, along with plans to ease their debt limit. And not just Germany is spending more - many other countries in the EU are as well (e.g. Poland, where I'm from - record spending and deficits, central bank has plenty of room to cut rates, the PM is talking about deregulation and the Finance Minister is talking about cutting capital gains taxes). And while interest rates are already quite low in the EMU, they still have plenty of room to go down - plus increased European centralization could mean new central EU government borrow-and-spending programs in the near future. Even in the UK (outside the EU), budget deficits are up to 5.3% of GDP (increased from 4.8% the previous year) and the Bank of England has plenty of room to cut rates.
I don't know much about the situation outside of Europe and America, but it looks like these major economies are hitting the gas HARD and we should expect robust growth. The only bumps along the road could be the Trump tariffs - but that's just a bump in the road, compared to the massive de facto stimulus deficit spending that's happening now.
sentiment 0.81
3 hr ago • u/Any-Side-9200 • r/investing • is_the_united_states_truly_exceptional • C
We’ve been sucking at school and education for like 40 years, and getting worse and worse, while capital got higher and higher. And now the squeeze is even tighter on social programs, more extraction and therefore higher wealth concentration and valuations. Automation is making companies need less and less employees and make higher and higher profits. The money put in circulation is captured by fewer and fewer hands, profits get higher and valuations get higher. The companies traded on us stock markers, many are global companies with HQ in dozens of countries. The US is the place of finance, not necessarily the place of business. The US has the deepest capital markets by far and the world is holding onto trillions and trillions of treasurys. The us is a social shithole but is the capital of capital, and would probably take many decades to move the nexus of global capital elsewhere and to a different currency. And not to mention nobody else wants that position, because everyone else would rather be exporters with their currencies and bonds held most domestically. The EU might be a highly reluctant candidate but they have very shallow treasury markets and are an export economy. Would take a very long time to move over. And then you think Facebook is gone? It’s just going to be traded wherever the market moves. But highly unlikely the us stops being the financial capital of the world or that markets suffer some kind of catastrophe. The entire world is rooting for these markets to keep growing.
sentiment -0.90
3 hr ago • u/DonasAskan • r/Bitcoin • the_coinbase_scam_texts_have_started_coming_in • C
Since they provide services in EU too, are they liable through GDPR?
sentiment 0.00
4 hr ago • u/PlungePool-GoldMiner • r/Nio • motor_trend_51625_publication_driven_the_onvo_l60 • C
Well while not available in the US, Motor Trend is a respectable magazine/brand. Unfortunately they needed to print and distribute it online via channels that will reach Chinese and especially EU customers.
sentiment 0.40
4 hr ago • u/Alarming_Anything796 • r/Finanzen • c24_bank_geldautomat • C
Hat jemand Erfahrung gemacht im nicht EU Ausland Geld abzuheben? Ist es dann mit oder ohne gebühren?
sentiment 0.00
4 hr ago • u/Secure_Marzipan_5017 • r/stocks • what_would_need_to_happen_to_see_april_lows_again • C
"the trump administration is backing off the whole tariff thing."
Trump just said today he's preparing to push higher tariffs on a bunch of countries. How in the fuck do you interpret that as "backing off the whole tariff thing"? Right after the US-China Geneva debacle, he started trying to pick a fight with the EU on Truth Social.
What delusional universe are some of you living in?
sentiment -0.61
6 hr ago • u/TheRedFrog • r/unusual_whales • breaking_moodys_downgrades_us_credit_rating_to • C
Fuck now we have the same credit rating as the EU. We’re fucked.
sentiment -0.75


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