Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.
I am currently looking to add a foreign currency fund to a portfolio. Does anyone currently have one they favor, or any suggestions?
I am looking at MERKX - if anyone has an opinion on that one.
http://www.merkfund.com/fund/performance/index.html
Matched trades got me thinking. I wonder if some of the late trades here and on other PS are, rather, Crossed Trades. Nearly always, the late trades have been at the low of the day and frequently lower than the closing price.
"The prohibited practice of offsetting Buy and Sell orders Without recording the Trade on the exchange, thus not allowing other Traders to Take advantage of a more favorable price."
http://www.trading-glossary.com/c0573.asp
Indeed, Shorts repeats the same two things time after time.
Company Diluting
TA Gagged
I fail to see how the company can make it any clearer that they are not in the business of diluting.
And I don't give a flip about the TA - what is important is that JB is moving forward with exactly what he said would be done.
There are so many things to look forward to. Those who simply want to make negative posts day after day - well - IF they ever owned shares, they should have sold long ago. Since most do not - their posts are irrelevant to those of us who actually are shareholders who have done our DD and are willing to wait for a prosperous outcome.
Maybe we'll get that, maybe not. However, it would seem that those of us who bought PHGI after doing our DD will find no need to blame others if it fails. The philosophy is simple - you pay your money and take your chances based on your best DD.
The best course is to ignore those who must always find a scapegoat.
Best to all,
Cat
Early - You did better than me - I sold part at 16.68 - still have more though. Also ELN trading shares gone at 19.25.
Well, Astrom either had restricted shares that he got changed to free-trading or he had free-trading shares that JB & Co didn't know about. Do we know that those are all gone now?
On Dilution. I for one, in my opinion only, do not believe that's what is occurring. However, if it is - we should get news of a tangible acqusition soon. JB has issued restricted shares in order to acquire assets, yes. Perhaps we have another one on the way.
And Shorts - back up your opinion-stated-as-a-fact with real facts - your opinion is worth exactly what we paid for it - as is mine!!
Not even theories, merely opinions.
hamvestor - just a reminder - DSX will be pricing their shelf registration on Thursday. Might provide a good opportuity to add.
Regards,
Cat
New Index Symbol
The NASDAQ Stock Market is adding the following two indexes to its NASDAQ Index Dissemination Service (NIDS) data feed:
Beginning Tuesday, September 25, 2007, NASDAQ NeuroInsights Neurotech Index will be disseminated under the symbol "NERV".
Beginning Monday, October 1, 2007, NASDAQ Next-Q Index will be disseminated under the symbol "NXTQ".
No - it is not a fact. Assays have been done. There is value there. There are no revenues until it's mined, but there IS value.
poiuyt20011 according to this post, insiders are not buying at this time.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=22815709
earlylight I took some ELN at 18.36. Hoping it's a day trade.
OT CT- I've bee waiting for A Dance with Dragons for longer than I've been waiting for RPRX to find a partner.
PQL, It was written last year. I will run down a date if you want. I was not implying that TXP's financing was toxic, but rather that - really - Cornell Partners have not changed that much, and the perception of them, by investors, has changed little, if at all.
Regards,
Cat
I'm hoping your're right on "no cut", but I'm not holding my breath............
Well - I don't know, but it has to be a part of it. I would like to add, but I have so much that I can't justify it with the market as it is. Not selling even one share, though.
It is no wonder investors shy away from anything that has the word "Cornell" anywhere in the financing. It is hard, often, for the average investor to sort out which type of financing the particular comapany has.
Bolding mine.
Brokerages/Wall Street
Death Spiral Convertible Just Refuses to Die
By Matthew Goldstein
Senior Writer
The "death spiral convertible" might sound like your last car, but it's a bond -- and it's making an unlikely comeback on Wall Street.
These much-maligned securities, whose conversion into common shares can be triggered by precipitous drops in a company's stock, all but disappeared from the market three years ago. The near extinction occurred as investors got wise to the deleterious impact an endless flood of new shares can have on price.
Subsequent allegations of manipulative trading by some of the hedge funds that invested in these deals looked to be the death knell of the death spiral convertible. Those allegations ultimately spawned a regulatory investigation that led to a number of enforcement actions against hedge funds accused of illegally profiting from declines in stock.
Over the past year, however, there's been a surprising revival in the market for death spiral convertibles -- known officially on Wall Street as "floating convertibles.'
In particular, small, cash-strapped companies with market capitalizations often under $100 million are selling these bonds to hedge funds in deals covered by the Wall Street acronym PIPEs, or private investments in public equity. The resurgence in death spiral deals may be an indication that tiny, cash-strapped companies are finding fewer options for raising money.
This year, 10% of the 478 completed PIPE deals brought to market have been death spiral transactions. By comparison, just 1.9% of all PIPE deals in 2003 were categorized as death spirals, according to research firm PlacementTracker. (PlacementTracker officially calls them floating convertibles).
Last year, death spirals accounted for 6.4% of the $20 billion-a-year PIPEs market. Death spiral deals peaked in 1999, when they represented 20% of all PIPE transactions.
Some of the companies that have done death spiral PIPE deals with floating conversion prices this past year include Generex (GNBT:Nasdaq) and Vasomedical (VASO:Nasdaq) , according to PlacementTracker.
So far, two hedge funds are leading the way in investing in death spiral deals. Over the past 12 months, Cornell Capital Partners has emerged as the top investor in death spiral transactions, sinking $175 million into 42 deals. In second place is NIR Group, which has invested $77 million in 40 transactions.
No other hedge fund comes close to Cornell Capital or NIR, says Robert Kyle, executive vice president of Sagient Research, the parent company of PlacementTracker.
Mark Angelo, the founder and president of Cornell Capital, a $500 million fund located in Jersey City, N.J., declined to comment. Corey Ribotsky, the manager of Roslyn, N.Y.-based NIR Group, did not return several phone calls. NIR Group has $486 million in assets under management.
PIPE deals, of course, come in all shapes and fashion. But almost every deal involves the sale of discounted shares to a group of hedge funds.
Death spiral PIPEs got their unsavory reputation because, unlike typical convertible bonds, which get converted into shares only when a stock rises to a fixed price, the conversion price for these notes keeps getting adjusted downward whenever the underlying stock falls. The drop in the stock price also means the buyers are entitled to receive more shares when the conversion occurs.
The floating convertible feature is intended to be an embedded hedge to protect investors in the event the stock doesn't rise in price after the deal. But, in the past, some unscrupulous hedge funds that bought the bonds saw the floating conversion feature as an invitation to make money by literally shorting the stocks to death. In many cases, those hedge funds violated contract provisions forbidding any shorting of the company's stock. (Nobody has lodged such allegations about Cornell or NIR.)
A short sale is a market bet that a stock will fall in price.
To some degree, every PIPE deal, not just death spirals, is a bit of a Faustian bargain for a company. In selling discounted stock or a bond that converts into discounted shares, the company hopes all the extra shares coming into the market won't depress the price of its stock.
PlacementTracker reports that six months after a death spiral convertible is placed, the stock of the issuing company is down, on average, 7%. Yet, ironically, death spirals are not the worst-performing PIPE deals.
PlacementTracker says companies that sell bonds with a so-called "convertible reset' conversion provision often see their shares plunge by 26% six months after doing a deal. A convertible reset PIPE is a modified death spiral that doesn't have an endless conversion feature.
Indeed, the NIR Group, which mainly invests in death spiral PIPEs, reports having some stellar annual returns. The NIR Group's AJW Offhore hedge fund is up 6% this year, after rising 17% last year, according to a report sent to the hedge fund's investors.
One hedge fund manager who didn't want to be identified says most investors in death spiral deals want a company's stock to go up. He says the floating convertible is intended to provide protection to investors. He says there's more money to be made from a company's stock rising than falling.
The hedge fund manager says death spirals unfairly got a bad reputation because of abusive short-selling by some rogue hedge funds.
Casper Hallas, a portfolio manager with Denmark's Scandium Asset Management, agrees with that sentiment. He says his fund invested with the NIR Group because he likes PIPE deals with a floating-conversion feature. He says the downward-conversion feature provides added protection for investors.
"If the market goes down, you convert at the lower rate,' says Hallas. "Having a floating rate is a little bit like riding a put.'
Carolina for week 3 please.
No, but you can place in plastic bag to avoid it. It goes directly from freezer to computer. We would have Ghost ready in order to image as much as possible as fast as possible
A trick I learned when I worked at MSFT for an HD that won't spin up is to put it in the freezer for 24 hours - it will generally compact it enough to spin up long enough for you to get critical data.
The call will be held at 12:00 p.m. Eastern Time on September 17, 2007. Investors can access the call by dialing 866-322-1159 (within North America) or 416-640-3404 (International). Investors can access a replay of the taped conference call until 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, September 19, 2007, by dialing 866-244-4494 (North America) and 416-915-1028 (International). The passcode is 805182. Investors can also access the replay via the Company's website at www.reprosrx.com.
anything? what OS you running?
I hope that statement *most kids other than vaccines barely need any healthcare* means you have been fortunate enough to never have a very sick child.
DSX - took my profit at 25.25 and will now wait for shelf pricing. Thanks for helping with a profitable trade!
DSX - out at 25.25 - planned exit point.
Yes, thanks to JLS and MA and you!
I rebought DSX this morning at 24.80 when it seemed to be stable. I may take small profit today and wait for shelf to be priced.
Thanks again!
Cat
DSX Nice on DRYS - I'm in DSX from 24.80 this am - it still hasn't made up it's mind for the day...........
shortsinthesand This was posted yesterday, thanks.
Yes, thank you. I was being lazy and didn't go look it up.
Cat
Photon_Load -Very cool - hope you get an interview - we'll meet for coffee!
Thanks much. It was intended to be a long term play, but when the shelf was announced, I decided to exit until I could find out what was behind it.
Well - as far as I can tell - they don't. Their last few quarters have been quite good and no reason why the current and future several shouldn't be also. This is all the news there was, and it specifically says they didn't say what the proceeds were for.
http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/070912/diana_shipping_stock_offering.html?.v=1
Anyone like to help me with DSX? They decided to offer another 10MM or so shares today and the stock got smacked upside the head. I owned it at the time and managed to exit with small damage, but I've no idea where a good entry is now.
Tia,
Cat
Hey - I'm really sorry about that. Especially since any of us reading your posts can tell you're great with your students!
What area do you live? What level do you teach? We'll help you
look!
Regards,
cat
ÉLAN Collaborator TTHI
http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/070912/to301.html?.v=23
I believe there is a rule something to the effect of stock repurchases are suspended in the event of any pending material events.
Seems like news should be coming our way soon.
y3maxx You seem determined to keep bringing this up.
http://investorshub.advfn.com/boards/read_msg.asp?message_id=22463858
Why? Is there some particular piece of knowledge you have that the rest of us do not? Would you be willing to share it?
Tia,
Cat
BIIB (partnered with ELN of which I'm a long time holder) generally moves with the company or various health seminar CCs. Of late they have also been driven by Ichan's purchases.
Back to lurking.
This monster still lurks in my holdings. He sleeps.......
Here - you can buy some and have it delivered to you.
http://www.tullys.com/shop/all.aspx