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Would have been a great trade three weeks ago... Have you done the DD on it ?
Major accumulation now in PRXI. 75,000 on bid @ 1.60, which is very large for this stock.
I tend to agree with the analysts on this one. Slashing the exploration budget means not finding growth, and with over a billion in debt and no cash, they will be eating seed corn to pay the dividend. Apply CVX as a benchmark, and you see they have 7B in debt, but 11B in cash. Etc.
http://www.businessweek.com/investor/content/dec2008/pi2008125_526086.htm?campaign_id=yhoo
MORGAN KEEGAN DOWNGRADES BERRY PETROLEUM, BILL BARRETT, TXCO
Morgan Keegan analyst Chris Pikul says he downgrades Berry Petroleum (BRY), Bill Barrett (BBG) and TXCO Resources (TXCO) to market perform from outperform, as he repositions his universe to focus on companies with highest quality assets, strong balance sheets and best opportunities for low-cost reserve/production growth in a lower price environment.
Pikul notes in BRY's case, even though the company is appropriately managing liquidity position, it is poised to scale back drilling in 2009; he thinks lower-trending oil prices, high debt levels will likely discourage investors from BRY stock, barring a dramatic turnaround in oil prices.
Not interested in being a moderator. I like the oil pick I got here, BRY.
I will try to behave myself.
SWING FOR A DOUBLE
Enter your favorite stock to double and get a chance to win a 3 month iHub subscription. Details are located here:
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=34156996
Mike
I think that would be a good idea. Are you or Bell interested on participating as moderators?
I think it would be good to set up some criteria to evalutate this sort of picks.
Randy
Seems to me there has been a good bit of activity here recently with a few people working the screening effort to find the rare bargains selling for less than cash on hand... or those that are sort of close to that.
Might be useful to compile a list of those for the ibox ?
JADE is getting close to a 1.00. Look for a pullback, nothing goes up everyday.
I have a lot of shares.
Look at the balance sheet for this .35 stock.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=WTT&annual
Numbers look good now... lots of cash, little debt, nice PEG, recession resistant focus on food some few billion Chinese eat daily... must have looked insane when it was at $4...
Very strong, volatile smallcap, was on OTCBB, fish meat:
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=hqs
How do you earn over a dollar a share on a decline in revenues and not have a trailing PE ? Worth looking at closer...
This stock has a 0.93 PE (according to Scottrade, not sure how accurate it is) and has a Yahoo target of 76.26...
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=YGE
You are right, I think he was referring to oil tankers, not dry bulk.
WOW, my EXM in up over a point in pre-market!!!
The dry bulk are due for a bounce.
This is the exact blip:
http://www.cnbc.com/id/15840232?video=956982650&play=1
These people on CNBC can give you a lot of good ideas.
Didn't see the piece on that, but it strikes me as a bit of a backwards way to get there...
Oil prices ARE down. If they stay down, and economic activity rebounds enough that cheap oil gets consumed in larger quantities, a lot of oil will need to get shipped... which would be good thing for the oil tankers, but not for dry goods shippers. But, with economic activity picking up... there would be a need for dry goods shipping to get manufactured products to markets that want them... but that assumes there is an ability to use "price - supply - push" as a tool to "force" tapped out consumers to buy products they don't think they can afford ?
Hey, I hope it works... but it would be a first ?
More likely, I think, that preference we have for cheap oil will result in a rebound in some discretionary transportation choices, but that may not be tied to more trips to the mall to spend money on dry goods from Europe or China...
A more rational argument might be that dry goods shipping isn't really down as much as was feared... so lower oil prices widen the gap between the demand for dry transport and the cost of providing it ? Otherwise you end up arguing that the best way to keep an engine going is to encourage it to stall... or you rely on your car choosing to accelerate by sucking your foot onto the gas pedal to make it happen... and try to explain that to the cop, when the physics really sort of require the opposite.
I agree that shipping of oil is likely to continue and even pick up, which is why I favored petroleum tankers in mine, also as rates are boosted by more tankers being used for low rent storage, too... but still don't see how oil prices coming down by 66%... proportionally accelerates demand for dry goods without other systemic impacts occurring first.
Decide if you think consumers are going to lead us out of this recession or not... and then yo might build on that concept... but I don't think you can forecast any upturn in consumption while ignoring that it has to have some source of leadership and a driving force enabling it. Tax cuts that are paired with government spending increases are suddenly declared to be only a really good idea, again?
The shipping rates will def go up, the index has been battered
Dennis Gartmen on CNBC, commodities trader said tonight he thinks the shipping rates will go up in 2009 because of the low price of oil, that is, a lot of the oil will need to be shipped.
To tell you the truth I don't know, I am focusing on the first nine months:
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/081113/clth042.html?.v=101
Clearly... the only reason DRYS would be running would be because I had just finished panning its prospects !!!
It seems WAY early in the cycle for shipping stocks to be rebounding... Perhaps means only that the 20th century style depression they may have been pricing in now seems to many more people that it isn't in the cards. The chart is rarely wrong... so, I won't fight it rather than use it...
I do see there are still some larger risks, but the recession we are in now seems to be shaping up as roughly comparable to that in 1982... the numbers now are better than 1982...
I totally discount much of the "big picture" economic reporting happening now... as it seems quite highly politicized... backing up the start date of the recession by a full year, for instance... is just totally bogus. Similarly, the ongoing efforts to talk the economy down are tied to the political calendar, not economic reality.
FWIW... I expect the recession didn't actually begin until the financial crisis emerged... so we are really only one quarter into it... but the massive reaction to it may quickly prove to be an over-reaction once the inputs begin to gain traction.
There is a bit of rampant economic ignorance among the elites now that creates some significant dangers... misjudgments and miscalculations... over-controlling and over-corrections... as we saw in the recently created artificial "speculative" excesses in oil prices... which served in the economic proxy role of a privately coordinated, massive and accelerated increase in interest rates... intended to make happen what has happened... just one of the problems that occurs when you give banks too much aggregated power with too little requirement of transparency or any assumption of responsibility.
The worst of the "depression scenarios" likely will be avoided... but just as there were huge misjudgments that got us here to the brink... there are unintended consequences likely associated with some of the tools being applied to prevent that result. Timing, I think, is a near total unknown for most, now... as a lot of what is being done now has never been possible before, much less considered as useful to do. Not as many questions re the "of what" portion in "the timing of what"... but the timing and sequences of what happens now is a total unknown. This could still prove to be the early onset of a more or less catastrophic depression, or both the deepest and shortest recession ever... or it may rapidly transition into stagFLATION... and I doubt anyone knows which is more likely at this point. It seems the inflation part is the only real certainty... again, with questions in timing, but four months from now... we will probably have a better view.
One of the unintended consequences now being overly discounted is the economic impact (profits) that will result in businesses that don't slow down too much too fast, but that have enormous sensitivity to the price of oil. If your primary cost just dropped by 66%, and your own demand and pricing are more or less firm on contract... falling oil prices will provide as much of a benefit now as they caused pain on the way up during the summer. I expect that impact is under appreciated, at the same time the expectations of the depth of the retrenchment thus far are over-blown. Maybe some few out there holding upside earnings surprises that will come along soon... among those with that sort of oil price sensitivity ? Maybe shippers ?
Oversold.
..back to work.
later.
-V. =)
Fell from $100'S
My ? is.. y is DRYS moving??
Dont know much about CDS but why did they have a neg Q1? Are they seasonal? Even a strong EPS for the 4th Q will probli give them a 10-20% YOY growth...
Because they are oversold.
All shipping stocks exloded UP in pps
DRYS call +700% as are the others.
wow.
Starting to pop, someone put a buy order for 13500 around .71. I'm holding tight.
What you think of CDS?
http://finance.yahoo.com/q?s=cds
You know oil will eventually come back.
Looks good. Another one in my watch list. Thanks
Keep them coming.
I'm familiar with ABAT... check out CRNT
OOCLA 5.00 Call 1.25 1.05-2.90 OPRA 2.55 +1.82/249.32% <<<
Trade Strike Price Today's Open Day Range Exchange Last Change/Change %
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=33875771 <<<
Bid/Size 2.45/287
Ask/Size 2.55/55
Net Change +1.82
Volume 6,308
Open Int 13,140
Mature Date 12/31/08
Delta 0.839
Gamma 0.071
Rho 0.001
Theta -0.036
Vega 0.003
Implied Vol 266.04
Market Data Is Real Time. As of 3:58 PM ET 12/8/08
Strategy: Long| Short
BreakevenUnderlying Last
For a battery smallcap. I like ABAT.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=ABAT
I'm very scared of OTCBB stocks now. They don't seem to respond to great news.
Showoff lol... j/k
I took a position here but not for flipping but long
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=34021791
I like todays candle but like i predicted, DI+ didnt break previous resist... We should def see some profit taking
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=34006488
Maybe, or maybe not because only shares 22,761,172 OS. 19.00M float
Swung traded Ford (F) for 1300.00 in 10 minutes in AH, so I'm happy.
Never played it but its due for a retrace.... maybe a small one but who knows lol
I would buy on weakness. Up too much today for me to buy.
Yes, what do you think? I think it will hit a 1.00 in the January bounce.
Or did you already buy and sell?
I think this is helping JADE, a lot of people follow ZACK:
http://biz.yahoo.com/zacks/081124/16057.html?.v=1
r u still holding jade?
In this market, sell into strength, buy weakness.
DRYS on fire lol y so? other shippers didnt move as much
Unless they have some surprises lurking I'd think you are right. The strangest thing about it seems to be that both the analysts and the management are having a hard time pinning down a reasonable number. The uncertainty seems to have analysts dropping their numbers by a fudge factor... while the management is still just standing in there and swinging away.
I'd focus DD on why the numbers are hard to pin down, and what that might say about the nature of the risks...
They do have a lot of debt, but if they can make 1.71, even a 1.00 per share, it still seem over sold and will almost certainly bounce when the January effect takes place.
http://finance.yahoo.com/q/bs?s=VCI
+37% up
...see what I mean about being oversold.
DRYS. etc
PE ratio is like 1/3 of 1%
"It makes exactly the same sense as you choosing those tickers to buy now because you like how their businesses are performing now."
I never buy a stock based upon what they are earning now. I always buy a stock based upon expected future earnings. All of the companies that I pointed out are expected to grow earnings going forward.
Mike
It makes exactly the same sense as you choosing those tickers to buy now because you like how their businesses are performing now... What doesn't make sense to me is for you to suggest YOU can and should buy that sort of growth in those small companies now, but THEY shouldn't or can't ?
Cash is king in this kind of market... whether it is yours or theirs... which doesn't mean all the cash sitting on the sidelines now is equal, unencumbered, de-risked, or likely to be equally as skilfully deployed with better picks and better timing, etc.
I'd agree that a company sitting on a large pile of cash now, that isn't earning anything, but DOES have a big burn rate without any ability to staunch the bleeding... is NOT what I'm looking for.
SLT ? I admit I don't know India, but I'm guessing they will have fewer problems right sizing than GM has had ? But, maybe they will have a war with Pakistan soon ? Etc.
I'm not pushing the stock, it was just an example. Mergers are just beginning... but they will pick up pace as the economy bottoms... and companies well managed or lucky enough to have big piles of cash now, will be able to use the downturn to move up a wrung or two on the market ladder... to position themselves as future market leaders.
That is worth looking at...
Shares like that seem to be priced now on the assumption that they will have trouble servicing their debts at some point in the future... and a $1.25 billion debt means they have a big mortgage payment. I do think there will be future opportunities in companies that have a lot of debt... but also have no difficulties servicing that debt, even with the impact of the downturn factored in. Of course, right now no one knows how deep or long it will be, so the uncertainty and the environment "probably" have under-priced quite a few shares...
If you can sort the probable survivors early, and time them well, you might do pretty well with some shares the pundits are writing off now.
I still think there isn't too much of need to hurry, yet, particularly in considering uncertainty in light of sector rotation in the business cycle. Many financial stocks still have a long way to go, I think... The market we are in has its own pace, and it seems to be reverting back to market norms for the time it takes for "digesting change" vs. doing everything on an accelerated basis, as it has in the recent past, pretty much since the non-recession following the dot.com bubble days.
This is a traders market, and I'm happy trading charts until I think the bottom is in... but I'd note there is a whole generation in the market now who have been taught that business cycles are dead... and that bubbles are "different now" etc. I also think it is worth trading in the shares of companies you intend to hold... at some point... so that by trading it before investing you get a better feel for how that company trades. You can learn alot that is important to know from that sort of effort while also making money.
Useful to hone chart trading skills now, and also to focus the effort in screening and DD looking for stocks you wouldn't mind holding for a week or two if the trade doesn't materialize quickly. As long as you can find stocks with trade-able charts, cash in hand, and solid DD on future prospects... it is worth trading those vs others that could implode, in this market even during a fairly short holding period.
For now, there is a modicum of safety as well as latent future capability in companies that have piles of cash that more than covers their debt... just as long as the cash isn't being burned through faster than it is being generated... won't be consumed propping up non-productive capacity, isn't balanced out by debt held off balance, etc.
There WILL be a point at which cash gets converted into growth through acquisition... and it is useful to spend time now finding those companies some one else will want to buy...
"AS IRON SHARPENS IRON, SO ONE MAN SHARPENS ANOTHER."
This verse is found at Proverbs 27:17 and speaks of the way in which we are to challenge each other and together become more than we would individually.
A verse that applies similarly is Proverbs 15:22,
"WITHOUT COUNSEL, PLANS GO AWRY, BUT IN THE MULTITUDE OF COUNSELORS THEY ARE ESTABLISHED."
One of the main benefits I hope we gain through this board is to become better investors and thus see a better return in our investment choices. There is little doubt that we all view the companies we invest in from a limited and biased perspective. Of all the stocks out there, each of us are exposed to only a certain number of them. For the most part we all make decisions based on our perceptions, experiences and understanding. For the most part we have come to these from the available public information.
The goal of this board will be help each other more accurately evaluate the companies we are invested or are thinking about investing in. If it is truly a good investment, you should be able to convince others and adequately answer the questions others might have. If you are not able to convince others and/or answer their concerns, it should help you to make a more accurate appraisal of the company.
Now as this board is being started by a professing christian, I think it is important that one has a biblical or at least a moral view of investing as such. Fundamentally, investing is placing investment capital (money) at risk in exchange for equity (stock) in a business venture in hope of sharing in the company's eventual success and increase in value.
Part and parcel of this will be attempting to invest only in real companies that have real prospects for a bright future. While we may or may not see rapid appreciation, if we own part of a successful company, we will make money longterm 100% of the time (see Peter Lynch's Rule #5).
INVESTOR INFORMATION AND LEARNING BOARDS
I thought I would provide some links to a couple boards that are educational in nature and provide a helpful insights to understand the investment process:
MONEY 101
This board was started by lowman. He has hit many nails squarely on the head. If you read and remember what he has taught, you will be saved from making a bunch of mistakes.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=7489
Charlatan's Learning Board
(Chad has been permanently banned, but his Ibox has good information.) I don't wholly agree philosophically with the "trading" nature of his advice, but there are clearly some wisdom in realizing profits when their available.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=9884
CHRISTIAN AND INTEGRITY BASED BOARDS
BIBLE board is probably the most othodox Christian witness (at least from my perspective) on IHUB. I've not had much opportunity to keep up and contribute to this board, but when I do it is always edifying. Thanks to excel and tenac there is never a shortage of godly exposition and Scripture there.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=424
ETERNITY This is a place to discuss and debate various questions about the Christian faith and Bible.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=8534
H.I.S. Stock Chat/Ethics (Honesty, Integrity, Service) Copyrighted
This board is moderated by brentjanice and visited by a host of major IHUB players. If you have a question about a particular stock, post it here and someone will probably find you an answer. Plus each December there's a Stock Picking Contest that reveals which stocks people have the most confidence in for the coming year. I am actually the one who posts the monthly contest results. It has been intersting so far.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/board.aspx?board_id=6256
HELPFUL LINKS
Managing Capital Gains to Maximize Profits
http://www.fairmark.com/capgain/index.htm
Free Level 2 Delayed Quotes (and other valuable links): [ LINK HAS BEEN BROKEN---anyone have one that works????]
http://www.allstocks.com/html/free_level_2_pink_sheet_stock_.html
More Links coming!
FOUNDATIONAL PRINCIPLES USED ON THE "AS IRON SHARPENS IRON" BOARD
Among the general principles that I utilize as well as try to invest are those set forth by Bill Matthews of The Cheap Investor newletter and Peter Lynch, of Fidelity Investments fame. I don't plan to discuss their particular recommendations, but rather establish a discussion board to evaluate the sort of stock picks they would make.
Bill Matthews Cheap Investor Philosophy
1. An educated investor is a successful investor.
2. Invest in a company, not a market.
3. Don’t be a jack of all trades and master of none: specialize.
4. Don’t fall victim to the greed-fear trap.
5. Avoid high priced stocks.
6. Controlling larger amounts of shares will translate into higher profits.
7. Always look at the profits and losses in percentages, not in dollars and cents.
8. Buying a stock near its low is key to your profit.
9. Patience can pay off profitably.
10. Buy your stock when no one wants it, sell it when everyone wants to buy.
11. Never sell a stock in December in order to take a tax loss.
12. Don’t take anyone’s word for it. Investigate before you invest.
13. Follow your stock price so you don’t miss major profit opportunities.
FYI, my dad and I have subscribed to the CHEAP INVESTOR newsletter for many years. It has been rated as the #1 Investment Newsletter for the last Five Years (see link on his site). While he sometimes recommends buying a stock too early...in that it continues it's downward trend, he generally recommends sound companies, many of which do well over time. Upon request he will send you a sample copy of his newsletter. Here is a link to his website:
http://www.thecheapinvestor.com/
Here are two images from his site: an image of the first page of his newsletter and then one of his latest book, Making Big Money in Small Stocks: Beat the Street with stocks under $5.00.
PETER LYNCH'S 25 GOLDEN RULES:
Peter Lynch books were some of first ones that I read when I was trying to learn about investing. Many of the 25 Golden Rules are practical and logical. Much of so called investing, is not really investing. It is more like gambling....it is hoping for quick returns in a volitile market. Ideally, while it can include some of this, true investing is buying and holding equity in companies that are successful in carrying out their business plan, hopefully in a profitable manner. Here are a three books that I know about (published in 1990, 1993, and 2001 respectively):
Rule 1: Investing is fun and exciting but dangerous if you don't do any work.
Rule 2: Your investor's edge is not something you get from Wall Street experts. It's something you already have. You can outperform the experts if you use your edge by investing in companies or industries you already understand.
Rule 3: Over the past 3 decades, the stock market has come to be dominated by a herd of professional investors. Contrary to popular belief, this makes it easier for the amateur investor. You can beat the market by ignoring the herd.
Rule 4: Behind every stock is a company. Find out what it's doing.
Rule 5: Often, there is no correlation between the success of a company's operations and the success of its stock over a few months or even a few years. In the long-term, there is a 100% correlation between the success of the company and the success of its stock. This disparity is the key to making money; it pays to be patient, and to own successful companies.
Rule 6: You have to know what you own, and why you own it. "This baby is a cinch to go up" doesn't count.
Rule 7: Long shots almost always miss the mark.
Rule 8: Owning stocks is like having children - don't get involved with more than you can handle. The part-time stockpicker probably has time to follow 8-12 companies, and to buy and sell shares as conditions warrant. There don't have to be more than 5 companies in the portfolio at any one time.
Rule 9: If you can't find any companies that you think are attractive, put your money in the bank until you discover some.
Rule 10: Never invest in a company without understanding its finances. The biggest losses in stocks come from companies with poor balance sheets. Always look at the balance sheet to see if a company is solvent before you risk your money on it.
Rule 11: Avoid hot stocks in hot industries. Great companies in cold, non-growth industries are consistent big winners.
Rule 12: With small companies, you are better off to wait until they turn a profit before you invest.
Rule 13: If you are thinking of investing in a troubled industry, buy the companies with staying power. Also, wait for the industry to show signs of revival. Buggy whips and radio tubes were troubled industries that never came back.
Rule 14: If you invest $1000 in a stock, all you can lose is $1000, but you stand to gain $10,000 or even $50,000 over time if you are patient. The average person can concentrate on a few good companies, while the fund manager is forced to diversify. By owning too many stocks, you lose this advantage of concentration. It only takes a handful of big winners to make a lifetime of investing worthwhile.
Rule 15: In every industry and every region of the country, the observant amateur can find great growth companies long before the professionals have discovered them.
Rule 16: A stockmarket decline is as routine as a january blizzard in Colorado. If you are prepared, it can't hurt you. A decline is a great opportunity to pick up the bargains left behind by investors who are fleeing the storm in panic.
Rule 17: Everyone has the brainpower to make money in stocks. Not everyone has the stomach. If you are susceptible to selling everything in a panic, you ought to avoid stocks and stock mutual funds altogether.
Rule 18: There is always something to worry about. Avoid weekend thinking and ignore the latest dire predictions of the newscasters. Sell a stock because the company's fundamentals deteriorate, not because the sky is falling.
Rule 19: Nobody can predict interest rates, the future direction of the economy, or the stock market, Dismiss all such forecasts and concentrate on what's actually happening to the companies in which you have invested.
Rule 20: If you study 10 companies, you will find 1 for which the story is better than expected. If you study 50, you'll find 5. There are always pleasant surprises to be found in the stock market -- companies whose achievements are being overlooked on Wall Street.
Rule 21: If you don't study any companies, you have the same success buying stocks as you do in a poker game if you bet without looking at your cards.
Rule 22: Time is on your side when you own shares of superior companies. You can afford to be patient - even if you missed Wal-Mart in the first five years, it was a great stock to own in the next five years. Time is against you when you own options.
Rule 23: If you have the stomach for stocks, but neither the time nor the inclination to do the homework, invest in equity mutual funds. Here, it's a good idea to diversify. You should own a few different kinds of funds, with managers who pursue different styles of investing: growth, value small companies, large companies etc. Investing the six of the same kind of fund is not diversification.
Rule 24: Among the major stock markets of the world, the US market ranks 8th in total return over the past decade. You can take advantage of the faster-growing economies by investing some portion of your assets in an overseas fund with a good record.
Rule 25: In the long run, a portfolio of well-chosen stocks and/or equity mutual funds will always outperform a portfolio of bonds or a money-market account. In the long run, a portfolio of poorly chosen stocks won't outperform the money left under the mattress.
APPLYING INVESTMENT PRINCIPLES TO INDIVIDUAL STOCKS.
JOHN302's OTCBB Lessons Learned From the School of Hard Knocks
original post can be found here: http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.aspx?message_id=30872866 These are my personal guidelines for determining how attractive a particular OTCBB security is. How does YOUR favorite OTCBB company stand up to these requirements? Compare it and let us know!
So what are my favorite OTCBB stocks? Of the ones I own as of 7/23/08, BOBS, DSNY, and CIWT. I don't own AYSI, but that stock looks attractive on any pullback. Do your own DD on any stock I mention, it doesn't constitute investment advice or reccomendation. I'm just an amateur private investor like you, and I'm completely fallible! What I do want to do here is share my lessons and mistakes so that you don't have to repeat them. I've had multibaggers and busts as well, as I'm sure many of you have. Together lets shift the ratio towards multibaggers and away from busts, as iron sharpens iron.
JOHN AND RANDY'S CRITERIA FOR MICROCAP STOCK EVALUATION
Each of these Criteria will be worth a maximum score of 10 points:
Randy's Favorite Stock: Dynamic Response Group (DRGP.OB).
John's Current Stocks: BOBS, DSNY, and CIWT and possibly AYSI
Key: Randy/John
Grading Scale: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Horrible Poor Fair Average Good Impressive Exeptional
91-100 Strong Buy
81-90 Safe Buy
71-80 Worth Watching
=< 70 Not Worth Watching
Stocks Total Pts. | 1. Share Structure | 2. Trading Exchange | 3. Insider Ownership | 4. Debt Dilution/Cashflow | 5. Revenue Gen/Profits | 6. Promotion | 7. Growth Potential | 8. Managemt Skill, History | 9. Macro Economy | 10. Volume/ Trading /Price |
DRGP.OB 84/ | 7/ | 8/ | 7/ | 7/ | 10/ | 8/ | 9/ | 9/ | 9/ | 10/ |
GTEC.OB 85/ | 5/ | 8/ | 10/ | 5/ | 10/ | 10/ | 10/ | 9/ | 9/ | 9/ |
BOBS.OB 90/ | 10/ | 8/ | 10/ | 9/ | 9/ | 10/ | 9/ | 9/ | 9/ | 7/ |
DSNY.OB 76/ | 7/ | 7/ | 8/ | 5/ | 7/ | 10/ | 9/ | 8/ | 8/ | 8/ |
CIWT.OB 80/ | 10/ | 7/ | 7/ | 8/ | 8/ | 9/ | 8/ | 8/ | 9/ | 6/ |
AYSI.OB 92/ | 10/ | 9/ | 10/ | 10/ | 10/ | 9/ | 9/ | 9/ | 10/ | 6/ |
Randy's Assessments of BOBS, DSNY, CIWT and AYSI are somewhat cursury---based on impressions and data from Yahoo Finance and SEC Filings.
Historic Record of Recommendations
Stock Pick | Rec'd Price | Current Price | Change | % Gain/Loss |
DRGP 84/ | .025 | DRGP | ||
DSNY 76 | .38 | DSNY | ||
CUT AND PASTE STOCK EVALUATION GRID:
COMPANY XXXX.BB
1. SHARE STRUCTURE ----------------------------
2. TRADING EXCHANGE-----------------------------
3. INSIDER ACTIVITY/OWNERSHIP---------------
4. DEBT STRUCTURE/DILUTION/CASH FLOW--
5. REVENUE GENERATION-------------------------
6. PROMOTION---------------------------------------
7. GROWTH POTENTIAL-----------------------------
8. MANAGEMENT SKILL/HISTORY-----------------
9. MACRO-ECONOMIC SENSE---------------------
10. TRADING VOLUME/RANGE---------------------
Total -----------------------------------------------------
Volume | |
Day Range: | |
Bid Price | |
Ask Price | |
Last Trade Time: |