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Invest Without Stress
Many investors get a lot of anxiety chasing mutual fund returns, hoping that history repeats itself while they are in the fund. In fact, a fund which has already yielded large returns has less of a chance to do so again when compared with its peer group. A better idea, rather than stressing out over the vagaries of the financial markets, is to look for wisdom in time-tested, academic methods. Once your high-quality investment plan is set up, relax. Let your investment compound, understanding that the plan is rooted in knowledge, not hype.
Good Soil
As with growing a garden, you want to invest in good soil (strategy). Accordingly, you can expect there to be some rainy days (bear market) with the sunny (bull market). Both are needed for overall growth. Once a garden (money) starts to grow, dont uproot it and replant, lest it wither and die. Set up your investment wisely and then let it grow.
Academic research creates good soil. The body of knowledge about the market goes through a rigorous review process where primary goal is truth or knowledge rather than profit. Thus, the information is disinterested - something you should always look for in life to make wise decisions.
Greatly distilling this body of knowledge, here are a few key points to remember when it comes to investing in the stock market .
Risk and Return
This concept is similar to the saying there is no free lunch. In money terms, if you want more return, you are going to have to invest in funds that have a greater probability of going south (high risk). Thus, the law of large numbers really comes into play here, since investing in small, unproven companies may yield better potential returns, while larger companies which have already undergone substantial growth may not give you comparable results.
Market Efficiency
This concept says that everything you need to know about conventional investments is already priced into them. Market efficiency supports the concept of risk and return; thus, dont waste your time at the library with a Value Line investment unless it provides entertainment value. Essentially, when you look at whether or not to invest in a large corporation, it is unlikely that you are going to find any information different from what others have already found. Interestingly, this also gives insight into how you make abnormal returns by investing in unknown companies like Bobs Tomato Shack, if you really have the time and business acumen to do the front-line research.
Modern Portfolio Theory
Modern portfolio theory (MPT) basically says that you want to diversify your investments as much as possible in order to get rid of company- or stock-specific risk, thus incurring only the lowest common denominator - market risk. Essentially, you are using the law of large numbers in order to maximize returns while minimizing risk for a given market exposure.
Now here is where things get really interesting! We just found the way to optimize your risk-return tradeoff for a given market level of risk by being well diversified in your investments. However, you can further adjust the investment risk downwards by lending money (investing some of it in risk-free assets) or upwards by borrowing it (margin investing).
Best Market Portfolio
Academics have created models of the market portfolio , consisting of a weighted sum of every asset in the market, with weights in the proportions that the assets exist in the market. Many think of this as being like the S
NITE-LYNX $RFMK BarChart Technical Analysis
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Investors should always carefully review the financial information of issuers before making investments. Many OTC equities are issued by small companies with limited histories or in economic distress.
Alternative Assets For Average Investors
Alternative assets can bring significant benefits to investment portfolios through diversifying exposure away from traditional fixed income and equity assets. Moreover, alternative assets are no longer the exclusive province of the super-wealthy; if fact, the average retail investor can avail him- or herself of a wide range of alternative asset strategies through traditional vehicles, including mutual funds, exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and exchange-traded notes (ETNs). This article will serve as a guide to understanding the different types of alternative assets, and how they can be effectively used to enhance portfolio diversification. (For more on the basics of asset allocation, read Asset Allocation Strategies.)
Defining Alternative Assets
Whats an alternative asset? We can, perhaps, start by explaining what an alternative asset is not: it is not a direct fixed-income or equity claim on the assets of an issuing entity. For example, a holder of a senior secured bond owns a claim on certain specified assets of the issuer, like residential property or farm equipment. In the event of liquidation, an issuers secured and unsecured bondholders are paid off according to the seniority of their claims. Equity investors, by definition, own a claim on the residual net worth of the company after all its liabilities have been paid off, whether this amount is a lot or nothing at all.
Single-Asset Alternatives
Alternative assets are none of the above, which is why they are called alternative. An example of an alternative asset is a commodity futures contract. The contract gives its owner the obligation to take delivery of some object of value, like gold or pork bellies or Japanese yen, at some specified point in the future. An option on this futures contract would confer the right (not the obligation) to exercise the contract at one or more defined times during its life, or to let the option expire as worthless. Options and futures are derivatives: they derive their value from an underlying source, such as gold or pork bellies. (To learn the basics of derivatives, read The Barnyard Basics Of Derivatives and Are Derivatives Safe For Retail Investors?)
Pooled Vehicles
In addition to single-asset instruments, the term alternative assets also refers to pooled investment vehicles (multiple investors money is pooled by one manager) constructed to possess a different risk and reward matrix from traditional debt or equity investments. Pooled alternative vehicles can come in the same forms as their traditional counterparts - such as SEC-registered mutual funds or separately managed accounts (SMAs). They can also be unregistered vehicles like hedge funds, venture capitals or private-equity funds. These funds typically employ a combination of securities, some standard and some alternative. (For more on SMAs, read Separately Managed Accounts: A Mutual Fund Alternative.)
Low Correlation and Absolute Return
Alternative assets come in many varieties, but a common thread is their low correlation coefficients with both equities and fixed income. Consider the following chart:
Figure 1
Source: Zephyr
NITE-LYNX $WNYN BarChart Technical Analysis
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Taking A Look Behind Hedge Funds
Once dismissed as secretive, risky and only for the well-heeled, hedge funds represent a growth industry. They can promise higher-than-average market returns in a downtrodden market, but despite the allure of these alternative investment vehicles, investors should think twice before taking the hedge fund plunge.
What Are Hedge Funds?
Hedge funds are privately offered investments that use a variety of non-traditional strategies to try to offset risk, an approach called - you guessed it - hedging.
One such technique is short selling. Hedge fund managers identify a stock in which price is likely to decline, borrow shares from someone else who owns them, sell the shares and then make money by later replacing the borrowed shares with others bought at a much lower price; buying at this lower price is possible only if the share price actually falls.
Hedge fund managers also invest in derivatives, options, futures and other exotic or sophisticated securities. Generally, hedge funds operate as limited partnerships or limited liability companies and they rarely have more than 500 investors each. (For more read Getting To Know Hedge-Like Mutual Funds.)
Arguments for Hedge Funds
Some hedge fund managers say these funds are the key to consistent returns, even in downtrodden markets. Traditional mutual funds generally rely on the stock market to go up; managers buy a stock because they believe its price will increase. For hedge funds, at least in principle, it makes no difference whether the market goes up or down.
While mutual fund managers typically try to outperform a particular benchmark, such as the S
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Be wary of buying stocks on margin. Make sure you understand how a margin account works, and what happens in the worst case scenario before you agree to buy on margin.
Interest Rates And Your Bond Investments
Most investors care about future interest rates , but none more than bondholders. If you are considering a bond or bond fund investment, you must ask yourself whether you think interest rates will rise in the future. If the answer is yes then you probably want to avoid long-term maturity bonds or at least shorten the average duration of your bond holdings; or plan to weather the ensuing price decline by holding your bonds and collecting the par value at maturity. (For a review of the relationships between prevailing interest rates and yield, duration, and other bond aspects, please see the tutorial Advanced Bonds Concepts.)
The Treasury Yield Curve
In the United States, the Treasury yield curve (or term structure) is the first mover of all domestic interest rates and an influential factor in setting global rates. Interest rates on all other domestic bond categories rise and fall with Treasuries, which are the debt securities issued by the U.S. government. To attract investors, any bond or debt security that contains greater risk than that of a similar Treasury bond must offer a higher yield. For example, the 30-year mortgage rate historically runs 1% to 2% above the yield on 30-year Treasury bonds.
Below is a graph of the actual Treasury yield curve as of December 5, 2003. It is considered normal because it slopes upward with a concave shape:
Consider three elements of this curve. First, it shows nominal interest rates. Inflation will erode the value of future coupon dollars and principal repayments; the real interest rate is the return after deducting inflation. The curve therefore combines anticipated inflation and real interest rates. Second, the Federal Reserve directly manipulates only the short-term interest rate at the very start of the curve. The Fed has three policy tools, but its biggest hammer is the federal funds rate, which is only a one-day, overnight rate. Third, the rest of the curve is determined bysupply and demand in an auction process.
Sophisticated institutional buyers have their yield requirements which, along with their appetite for government bonds, determine how these institutional buyers bid for government bonds. Because these buyers have informed opinions on inflation and interest rates, many consider the yield curve to be a crystal ball that already offers the best available prediction of future interest rates. If you believe that, you also assume that only unanticipated events (for example, an unanticipated increase in inflation) will shift the yield curve up or down.
Long Rates Tend to Follow Short Rates
Technically, the Treasury yield curve can change in various ways: it can move up or down (a parallel shift), become flatter or steeper (a shift in slope), or become more or less humped in the middle (a change in curvature).
The following chart compares the 10-year Treasury yield (red line) to the one-year Treasury yield (green line) from June 1976 to December 2003. The spread between the two rates (blue line) is a simple measure of steepness:
Consider two observations. First, the two rates move up and down somewhat together (the correlation for the period above is about 88%). Therefore, parallel shifts are common. Second, although long rates directionally follow short rates, they tend to lag in magnitude. Specifically, when short rates rise, the spread between 10-year and one-year yields tends to narrow (curve of the spread flattens) and when short rates fall, the spread widens (curve becomes steeper). In particular, the increase in rates from 1977 to 1981 was accompanied by a flattening and inversion of the curve (negative spread); the drop in rates from 1990 to 1993 created a steeper curve in the spread, and the marked drop in rates from March 2000 to the end of 2003 produced a very steep curve by historical standards.
Supply-Demand Phenomenon
So what moves the yield curve up or down? Well, lets admit we cant do justice to the complex dynamics of capital flows that interact to produce market interest rates. But we can keep in mind that the Treasury yield curve reflects the cost of U.S. government debt and is therefore ultimately a supply-demand phenomenon. (For a refresher on how increases and decreases in the supply and demand of credit affect interest rates, see the article Forces Behind Interest Rates.)
Supply-Related Factors
Monetary Policy
If the Fed wants to increase the fed funds rate, it supplies more short-term securities in open market operations. The increase in the supply of short-term securities restricts the money in circulation since borrowers give money to the Fed. In turn, this decrease in the money supply increases the short-term interest rate because there is less money in circulation (credit) available for borrowers. By increasing the supply of short-term securities, the Fed is yanking up the very left end of the curve, and the nearby short-term yields will snap quickly in lockstep.
Can we predict future short-term rates? Well, the expectations theory says that long-term rates embed a prediction of future short-term rates. But consider the actual December yield curve illustrated above, which is normal but very steep. The one-year yield is 1.38% and the two-year yield is 2.06%. If you were going to invest with a two-year time horizon and if interest rates were going to hold steady, you would, of course, do much better to go straight into buying the two-year bond (which has a much higher yield) instead of buying the one-year bond and rolling it over into another one-year bond. Expectations theory, however, says the market is predicting an increase in the short rate. Therefore, at the end of the year you will be able to roll over into a more favorable one-year rate and be kept whole relative to the two-year bond, more or less. In other words, expectations theory says that a steep yield curve predicts higher future short-term rates.
Unfortunately, the pure form of the theory has not performed well: interest rates often remain flat during a normal (upward sloping) yield curve. Probably the best explanation for this is that, because a longer bond requires you to endure greater interest rate uncertainty, there is extra yield contained in the two-year bond. If we look at the yield curve from this point of view, the two-year yield contains two elements: a prediction of the future short-term rate plus extra yield (i.e., a risk premium) for the uncertainty. So we could say that, while a steeply sloping yield curve portends an increase in the short-term rate, a gently upward sloping curve, on the other hand, portends no change in the short-term rate - the upward slope is due only to the extra yield awarded for the uncertainty associated with longer term bonds.
Because Fed watching is a professional sport, it is not enough to wait for an actual change in the fed funds rate, as only surprises count. It is important for you, as a bond investor , to try to stay one step ahead of the rate, anticipating rather than observing its changes. Market participants around the globe carefully scrutinize the wording of each Fed announcement (and the Fed governors speeches) in a vigorous attempt to discern future intentions.
Fiscal Policy
When the U.S. government runs a deficit, it borrows money by issuing longer term Treasury bonds to institutional lenders. The more the government borrows, the more supply of debt it issues. At some point, as the borrowing increases, the U.S. government must increase the interest rate to induce further lending. However, foreign lenders will always be happy to hold bonds in the U.S. government: Treasuries are highly liquid and the U.S. has never defaulted (it actually came close to a default in late 1995, but Robert Rubin, the Treasury secretary at the time, staved off the threat and has called a Treasury default unthinkable - something akin to nuclear war). Still, foreign lenders can easily look to alternatives like eurobonds and, therefore, they are able to demand a higher interest rate if the U.S. tries to supply too much of its debt.
Demand-Related Factors
Inflation
If we assume that borrowers of U.S. debt expect a given real return, then an increase in expected inflation will increase the nominal interest rate (the nominal yield = real yield inflation). Inflation also explains why short-term rates move more rapidly than long-term rates: when the Fed raises short-term rates, long-term rates increase to reflect the expectation of higher future short-term rates; however, this increase is mitigated by lower inflation expectations as higher short-term rates also suggest lower inflation (as the Fed sells/supplies more short-term Treasuries, it collects money and tightens the money supply):
An increase in feds funds (short-term) tends to flatten the curve because the yield curve reflects nominal interest rates: higher nominal = higher real interest rate lower inflation.
Fundamental Economics
The factors that create demand for Treasuries include economic growth, competitive currencies and hedging opportunities. Just remember: anything that increases the demand for long-term Treasury bonds puts downward pressure on interest rates (higher demand = higher price = lower yield or interest rates) and less demand for bonds tends to put upward pressure on interest rates. A stronger U.S. economy tends to make corporate (private) debt more attractive than government debt, decreasing demand for U.S. debt and raising rates. A weaker economy, on the other hand, promotes a flight to quality, increasing the demand for Treasuries, which creates lower yields. It is sometimes assumed that a strong economy will automatically prompt the Fed to raise short-term rates, but not necessarily. Only when growth translates or overheats into higher prices is the Fed likely to raise rates.
In the global economy, Treasury bonds compete with other nationss debt. On the global stage, Treasuries represent an investment in both the U.S. real interest rates and the dollar. The euro is a particularly important alternative: for most of 2003, the European Central Bank pegged its short-term rate at 2%, a more attractive rate than the fed funds rate of 1%.
Finally, Treasuries play a huge role in the hedging activities of market participants. In environments of falling interest rates, many holders of mortgage-backed securities, for instance, have been hedging their prepayment risk by purchasing long-term Treasuries. These hedging purchases can play a big role in demand, helping to keep rates low, but the concern is that they may contribute to instability.
Conclusion
We have covered some of the key traditional factors associated with interest rate movements. On the supply side, monetary policy determines how much government debt and money are supplied into the economy. On the demand side, inflation expectations are the key factor. However, we have also discussed other important influences on interest rates, including: fiscal policy (that is, how much does the government need to borrow?) and other demand-related factors such as economic growth and competitive currencies.
Here is a summary chart of the different factors influencing interest rates:
$HCBP BarChart Technical Analysis NITE-LYNX
http://www.barchart.com/technicals/stocks/HCBP
OTC Markets has determined that there is a public interest concern regarding the security. Such concerns may include but are not limited to promotion, spam or disruptive corporate actions even when adequate current information is available.
How To Efficiently Read An Annual Report
A companys annual report is the single most important way for it to convey itself to potential investors. As such, it should come as no surprise that an annual report serves to present the company in best light possible without violating any Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulations. Unfortunately, many investors read annual reports but fail to read them effectively. In other words, while annual reports are clearly prepared without any intent to deceive or reflect dishonesty about the business, investors should always read them with a sense of skepticism. In other words, learn how to read between the lines and decipher the actual condition of the company. Annual Report Vs. 10-K Filing
Typically, a company will file both an annual report and 10-K report to the SEC. An annual report is the shorter version that often comes with pictures, nice glossy color pages, a letter from the Chairman/CEO and an overview of the financials.
The 10-K is the black and white, no color pictures document that is submitted to the SEC. Very often, a business will simply file the 10-K as its annual report since that document is mandatory for every public company. So guess which one carries more significance to the investor - the longer and more boring 10-K filing. Think of the glossy annual report as informative marketing material. If a company does file both reports, use the annual report as a great first look at a business before tackling the 10-K filing. Very often, the annual report and 10-K are merged into one document, with the annual report at the beginning to provide an overview of the years results.
The Components of an Annual Filing
If you are interested in investing in a public company you can not avoid examining and reading the 10-K filing, which I will now refer to as the annual report.
The 10-Ks begin with a detailed description of the business, followed by risk factors, a rundown of any legal issues, and, finally, the numbers and financial notes in the back. Oftentimes, the most essential components of the annual filing are the following items:
• Item 1: Business - a description of the companys operation
• Item 1A: Risk Factors
• Item 3: Legal Proceedings
• Item 6: Selected Financial Data
• Item 7: Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition
How to Tackle
People read annual reports in different ways. Some investors even prefer to start at the back and work their way to the beginning. It makes no difference how you read them, as long you absorb the essential points of the business and its financial condition. However, there is a good way to tackle these reports that is both most efficient and most effective.
Without question, you should first read Item 1, which is the business description. You cant possibly go any further in your research without knowing what the company does! Also, by getting to know the business first, you can then determine if you need to go any further. That determination is simple. Just ask yourself if you understand what the company does, who its customers are, and the industry it operates in. If you answer no, youre done. Move on to the next business.
Next, you should jump to Items 6 and 7 and examine and analyze the financial data . How has the company performed over a period of years? Has the balance sheet gotten stronger or weaker over time? Look over the cash flow statement and see if the business has been a generator of cash or a user of cash. Its possible for businesses to report net income while at the same time remaining cash flow negative. Compare the income statement with the cash flow statement for any red flags. If you like what you see, move on and if not, move on to the next company.
Afterwards its time to determine if any hidden surprises may lurk beneath the surface. So you must now go back and read the risk factors section and the legal proceedings section, if any legal matters exist. Because this is a filing to the SEC, the risk factors will be very detailed and include risks like our industry is highly fragmented with lots of competitors or our stock price may experience periods of volatility. While these are important risks to consider, they should not significantly reduce the desirability of the business.
Instead, focus on any unusual risk factors, such as if the company generates a substantial portion of its revenues for one or two customers. In addition, the Legal Proceedings section will alert you if any significant lawsuits are in the works. Again, dont ignore any legal liabilities, but if youre looking at a billion dollar company and it has a pending lawsuit against it for damages of $10 million, thats not uncommon. Pfizer, one of the largest drug companies in the world, will also have patent lawsuits and drug liability claims that may exceed hundreds of millions of dollars. But thats part of the normal course of business for any major pharmaceutical company, and a drop in the bucket for Pfizer when you see that the company has over $50 billion in cash and short-term investments on the balance sheet.
Focus on What You Know
We all have different ways of deciphering and storing information. Feel free to read the annual report in a way that works for you. But learn to concentrate on the most important aspects of a companys 10-K filing. By doing so, you will avoid wasting unnecessary time on companies that do not meet your investment suitability. But always remember that just because you arent investing in that particular business that you have wasted your time. Investing is a discipline that rewards those who are continuously learning.
NITE-LYNX $UCHC BarChart Technical Analysis
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Liquidity follows transparency. Companies that provide current disclosure either through a regulator or directly to OTC Markets Group experience significantly greater levels of liquidity, improved price discovery, and more efficient trading.
Determining Risk And The Risk Pyramid
You might be familiar with the risk-reward concept, which states that the higher the risk of a particular investment, the higher the possible return. But, many investors do not understand how to determine the level of risk their individual portfolios should bear. This article provides a general framework that any investor can use to assess his or her personal level of risk and how this level relates to different investments.
Risk-Reward Concept
This is a general concept underlying anything by which a return can be expected. Anytime you invest money into something there is a risk, whether large or small, that you might not get your money back. In turn, you expect a return, which compensates you for bearing this risk. In theory the higher the risk, the more you should receive for holding the investment, and the lower the risk, the less you should receive.
For investment securities, we can create a chart with the different types of securities and their associated risk/reward profile.
Although this chart is by no means scientific, it provides a guideline that investors can use when picking different investments . Located on the upper portion of this chart are investments that offer investors a higher potential for above-average returns, but this potential comes with a higher risk of below-average returns. On the lower portion are much safer investments, but these investments have a lower potential for high returns.
Determining Your Risk Preference
With so many different types of investments to choose from, how does an investor determine how much risk he or she can handle? Every individual is different, and its hard to create a steadfast model applicable to everyone, but here are two important things you should consider when deciding how much risk to take:
• Time Horizon
Before you make any investment, you should always determine the amount of time you have to keep your money invested. If you have $20,000 to invest today but need it in one year for a down payment on a new house, investing the money in higher-risk stocks is not the best strategy. The riskier an investment is, the greater its volatility or price fluctuations, so if your time horizon is relatively short, you may be forced to sell your securities at a significant a loss.
With a longer time horizon, investors have more time to recoup any possible losses and are therefore theoretically be more tolerant of higher risks. For example, if that $20,000 is meant for a lakeside cottage that you are planning to buy in ten years, you can invest the money into higher-risk stocks because there is be more time available to recover any losses and less likelihood of being forced to sell out of the position too early.
• Bankroll
Determining the amount of money you can stand to lose is another important factor of figuring out your risk tolerance. This might not be the most optimistic method of investing; however, it is the most realistic. By investing only money that you can afford to lose or afford to have tied up for some period of time, you wont be pressured to sell off any investments because of panic or liquidity issues.
The more money you have, the more risk you are able to take and vice versa. Compare, for instance, a person who has a net worth of $50,000 to another person who has a net worth of $5,000,000. If both invest $25,000 of their net worth into securities, the person with the lower net worth will be more affected by a decline than the person with the higher net worth. Furthermore, if the investors face a liquidity issue and require cash immediately, the first investor will have to sell off the investment while the second investor can use his or her other funds.
Investment Risk Pyramid
After deciding on how much risk is acceptable in your portfolio by acknowledging your time horizon and bankroll, you can use the risk pyramid approach for balancing your assets.
This pyramid can be thought of as an asset allocation tool that investors can use to diversify their portfolio investments according to the risk profile of each security. The pyramid, representing the investors portfolio, has three distinct tiers:
• Base of the Pyramid– The foundation of the pyramid represents the strongest portion, which supports everything above it. This area should be comprised of investments that are low in risk and have foreseeable returns. It is the largest area and composes the bulk of your assets.
• Middle Portion– This area should be made up of medium-risk investments that offer a stable return while still allowing for capital appreciation. Although more risky than the assets creating the base, these investments should still be relatively safe.
• Summit– Reserved specifically for high-risk investments, this is the smallest area of the pyramid (portfolio) and should be made up of money you can lose without any serious repercussions. Furthermore, money in the summit should be fairly disposable so that you dont have to sell prematurely in instances where there are capital losses.
Personalizing the Pyramid
Not all investors are created equally. While others prefer less risk, some investors prefer even more risk than others who have a larger net worth. This diversity leads to the beauty of the investment pyramid. Those who want more risk in their portfolios can increase the size of the summit by decreasing the other two sections, and those wanting less risk can increase the size of the base. The pyramid representing your portfolio should be customized to your risk preference.
It is important for investors to understand the idea of risk and how it applies to them. Making informed investment decisions entails not only researching individual securities but also understanding your own finances and risk profile. To get an estimate of the securities suitable for certain levels of risk tolerance and to maximize returns, investors should have an idea of how much time and money they have to invest and the returns they are looking for.
Feast thine eyes upon $FLRE BarChart Technical Analysis NITE-LYNX
http://www.barchart.com/technicals/stocks/FLRE
From a trading perspective, liquidity is the ability of a security to be bought or sold without causing a significant movement in the price of the security. Liquid securities may be bought and sold in large numbers without a dramatic movement in the price of the security.
NITE-LYNX $ECPN BarChart Technical Analysis
http://www.barchart.com/technicals/stocks/ECPN
All corporate actions, including: symbol changes, venue changes (new to the OTC), OTC Tier changes, Caveat Emptor status changes, Splits, Dividends, and Deletes are available within the Corporate Actions section.
This link will help thou $HKWO BarChart Technical Analysis NITE-LYNX
http://www.barchart.com/technicals/stocks/HKWO
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TMXN is going to make an epic run
You may not know what the executives of a company know but here is how you can determine if they have faith in their company.
Do you want to know what the executives of RMHB think of the value of the company?
RMHB - Here are some stats you should be aware of. Kind of makes you wonder where I can find more money and buy the hell out of RMHB stock:
Just acquired -- Total holdings
7,000,000 ------ 24,658,097 Michael Welch
8.000.000 ------ 22.845,074 David Seeberger
3,500,000 ------ 15,464,901 Walter Smith
3,500,000 ------ 13,129,000 Winton Morrison
5,000,000 ------- 7.250,250 Jens Mielke
The above are the executives of the company. What will be their net worth in the next few years?
Don't you think its a good idea the investors should copy them?
VATE nice entry point plenty of upside
VATE nice entry point plenty of upside
Hast thou perchance looked @ the $TMXN chart yet?
http://stockcharts.com/h-sc/ui?s=TMXN
I hath received some emails on $TMXN
$TMXN profile on PennyStock Tweets - http://www.pennystocktweets.com/stocks/profile/TMXN
$GCEI ALERT>SHORT SELLERS BEWARE : Why You Should Never Short- Sell Stocks.
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/why-you-should-never-short-sell-stocks-2015-11-19 (below)
But if you have a short position, there’s no limit to how much money you can lose if the shares rise. If the share price increases soon after you place a short position, you could quickly “cover” by buying back the shares and returning them to the investor you borrowed them from. If you’re lucky, you might not lose very much.
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Go GREEN with Global Clean Energy a Enviromentally Friendly Waste Tires to Fuel & Algae to Products Company.
glta
Be sure ye check out $TMXN ’s filings, they can be got on OTC Markets.
$TMXN weekly candlestick chart
[img]stockcharts.com/c-sc/sc?s=TMXN
$HIHI - thinnest trip stock around...WITH NEWS...only 170m float!
$TMXN is gracing the pages of facebook also
ENRJ .228 Holy Monster Buys, NYSE!!
$GEVO $.59 AND GOING UP! KISS GOODBYE TO SHORTIES 2018 imo
$PPPMF COMING BOUNCE BACK
$TMXN Blending fine quality oils and butters that deeply nourish the body
The BitTraderLive.com site says $ADAC's CryX coin is slated to launch this month!
http://www.bittraderlive.com
$TMXN It's About To Get Hott In Here!!! ~ Can You Handle The Heat?
PP CQ .22 getting bought up on website update. might be solar RM finally taking place. went to 1- 3 bucks before. if something announced could be next .20 to 1.00s mover. Only 5 mil OS with insiders owning a good bit
CEO Owns 4 mil of 5 mil OS
Total 5% Shareholders
4,000,000
77.38
%
http://premierpacific.net/solar-efficiency/
$TMXN Profile on PST - For All Your DD Use More
http://www.pennystocktweets.com/stocks/stockprofile/TMXN
$WCTXF ~ Cobalt And Lithium Miners are looking to Cash In on Increasing Demand in the Growing EV Sector
https://www.barchart.com/story/stocks/quotes/WCTXF/842196/cobalt-and-lithium-miners-looking-to-cash-in-on-increasing-demand-in-growing-ev-sector
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821321
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03/04/10
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Moderator PhotoChick | |||
Assistants Nilbud ManicTrader |
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