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From: | Glen Whiteman <quality.res.ltd@xtra.co.nz> |
Date: | Thu, 03 Feb 2000 01:05:51 +1300 |
Hi Phil Did you notice that EBT was up 22% on volume of 2.19m shares in Oz today. Perhaps this explains the weird sale in NZ? Regards. Glen. Phil Eriksen wrote: > > > The trade of the day from my point of view as a trader trying to eeek out a > > living > > was the person who traded EBT 45 to 60 today. Whilst it was only 5000 shares > > value $2250. My congratulations. > > I tried to hold my tongue but cannot. Lets assume one bought EBT at > .45, and sold them today at .60 cents. A 6 month chart tells me that if > you bought them in the last 6 months, you probably paid around .45 for > them. Unless my maths is wrong (school and I didn't enjoy a long term > relationship ; don't trust my maths) the profit on this trade is $750, > before brokerage costs, and tax, which anyone acting as a share trader > should be paying. Again, the shares have been around .45 for at least 6 > months, with very little buying the selling as far as I can see. Taking > the "middle ground", lets say the shares were bought 3 months ago. A > $750 profit, less costs, strikes me as a pretty bad return given the > risks involved. With such an infrequently traded, speculative share, if > flying pigs stop flying and stocks take a hammering, who would rush in > to pick up these shares?.. > > I don't know, I think holding EBT for any period of time in order to > take a $750 profit is a very risky way to go. I'd be washing car > windows for the money first. > > Admittedly, I know very little about day trading but I do watch the > short term price movements of stock. Anyone watching, say, Steel and > Tube, will notice a decent spread of prices and no firm direction. I > have held these shares over a year, managed to buy at a rock bottom > price, and am just waiting to see what happens. No one knows what is > going to happen. I know, however, that (a) given a bargain basement > purchase price, my downside is limited (b) i'm sitting back collecting > dividends (c) while nothing is guaranteed, I have enjoyed an acceptable > level of capital appreciation and, given the state of the business, > would expect this to continue and (d) the big question marks that hang > over all stocks (takeovers, market re-rating, some "good news") still > apply to boring old stocks like STU. > > While the stock has something to offer to an investor, If I was a trader > I'd probably be buying them still. Over recent months, the price has > tracked between $1.45-$1.85. While it's always hard to pick when to > buy, thats the game a trader chooses to play, and that range certainly > offers some room for a profit. Much more importantly, a stock with some > substance, a stock which is definately not speculative nor overvalued > allows you to invest a larger amount of money, and still sleep. Rather > than put, say, $2000 in EBT, i'd much rather load up on a share like STU > (0.15 cent gains are much bigger when the multiplier is a decent sum of > money) which I can feel much more comfortable doing, because, if my > "prediction" for short term appreciation doesnt work out, i'd happily > hold them too. > > Finally, with the possible sale of the majority shareholding (which > hasn't happened yet, as far as I know) and whatever may happen after > that, there is the chance of a "news-inspired" jump. > > How can you go too far wrong? > > Cheers, > Phil > > ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors > To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at > http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.sharechat.co.nz/ New Zealand's home for market investors To remove yourself from this list, please us the form at http://www.sharechat.co.nz/forum.html.
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