• @MataVatnik
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      669 months ago

      For profit publicly traded companies just look quarter to quarter and make the dumbest fucking decisions as a result

    • @UsernameIsTooLon
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      249 months ago

      This is the key. I believe GabeN specifically owns 50.1% of Valve so that he can always make the final executive decisions.

    • @[email protected]
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      139 months ago

      Yeah but neither is Epic - I think the key is that Gave isn’t driven by some technofascist plan to have everyone live in the metaverse or play games using brain implants or whatever

    • @chiliedogg
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      89 months ago

      Exactly. Steam is a money-printings g machine, and since they’re not publicly traded the owners make money asong as they’re profitable.

      With publicly-treaded companies, anyone who invests only makes money when the value of the stock goes up. Your company can make 5 billion dollars a second in profits, but still lose value to shareholders if the next quarter you aren’t making 6 billion a second.

          • @[email protected]
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            49 months ago

            That’s not a good example. A lot of tech companies don’t pay dividends because they aren’t yet profitable. The share price fluctuates heavily because it’s all speculative.

            Longer term, profitable companies that pay consistent dividends are the bread and butter over a strong passive income generating portfolio. You can also get significant dividends just from index fund ETF.

            A million dollar portfolio can easily print $30000-$50000 a year in dividends depending on how it’s allocated