waiting for the other foot to fall
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SNFCA - needs to pop +65% to have yesterday's P/E.
Bet some shorts cover
SNFCA Industry Percentile
Average in Industry
Market Capitalization $81.54M $1.02B 47th
Beta (1 Year Annualized) 1.92 0.93 54th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 09/30/2012 $1.01 $0.85 68th
AS OF 12/31/2012 $1.65
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 03/28/2013 7.57 37.78 22nd
AS OF 03/29/2013 4.58
Dividend Yield (Annual) -- 3.77% --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 09/30/2012 $215.23M $3.03B 85th
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +41.03% +13.66% 96th
Shares Outstanding 11,356,000 185,833,808 61st
Shares Short*
936.61K -- --
Short interest 8.2%
Institutional Ownership 10.20% 53.89% 29th
SNFCA - needs to pop +65% to have yesterday's P/E.
Bet some shorts cover
SNFCA Industry Percentile
Average in Industry
Market Capitalization $81.54M $1.02B 47th
Beta (1 Year Annualized) 1.92 0.93 54th
EPS (TTM)
AS OF 09/30/2012 $1.01 $0.85 68th
AS OF 12/31/2012 $1.65
P/E (TTM)
AS OF 03/28/2013 7.57 37.78 22nd
AS OF 03/29/2013 4.58
Dividend Yield (Annual) -- 3.77% --
Total Revenue (TTM)
AS OF 09/30/2012 $215.23M $3.03B 85th
Revenue Growth
(TTM vs Prior TTM) +41.03% +13.66% 96th
Shares Outstanding 11,356,000 185,833,808 61st
Shares Short*
936.61K -- --
Short interest 8.2%
Institutional Ownership 10.20% 53.89% 29th
SNFCA $1.65 EPS
$16.7M net earnings, mostly from real estate which is picking up.
$12M positive cash flow
+/- $4M settlement with Lehman Bros surviving entity would be a big decider in direction.
http://ih.advfn.com/p.php?pid=nmona&article=56965918
Diesel engines can burn a wide range of oils. Highway spec fuel has additives. Tax exempt heating oil has dye. Overlapping hydrocarbon range though.
Maybe (cracking polymers suggests it) but the creation of coke and other issues suggest they obtain the hydrogen from the plastic and produce net carbon solids.
My thesis advisor always said a good thesis raised more questions than it answered. On the other hand he was in the business of producing students, not answers.
I the Chinese taxes were paid on the (fake or not) stated income, no one in China cares if foreigners were scammed.
In fact it seems that is praised as long as the Party gets its cut.
I only have one question. Was the student required to buy JBII stock to pass their thesis defense?
still the end of the trading week.
you know they only need to sell shares because Joe hates them :)
I did a "no look" purchase of 500 @ $3.15 on your alert.
cool, published in multiple venues you are....,
Nope. Busy today
Here to learn... Thanks!
So he calls that a moral compass?
Like UTSI going private offer just days after I bailed? At least I missed the RS
consolidating nicely on one of my entry prices... now it needs to go well above the last two.
a slow day that started very red but suddenly most of my positions are up for the day (many south of entry, but up...)
exceptions are SNCFA finding new bottoms; URRE as well; and FSLR making sure the support bends just a little...
sigh.
I need a few of these:
EXIT SIGN
solars:
IEEE spectrum online --> /energywise/energy/renewables/the-suntech-bankruptcy-bad-or-good-news
Predictably, the Suntech collapse has undammed a flood of instant commentary, some of it somewhat self-contradictory.
There are those who argue that the Suntech bankruptcy and others soon to follow will relieve a glut in the global photovoltaics market, leading to supply being more in line with demand and prices stabilizing at a somewhat higher level, giving a badly needed incentive to innovators. And then there are those—sometimes the same those—who say the shakeout will be brutal indeed, with no end in sight.
Whatever the situation, though it may now be a necessary one, it is hardly the best of all possible worlds.
Taking a relatively optimistic line, the Financial Times's prestigious "Lex" team asserts that "the end of the [solar] misery is almost in sight. Crippled balance sheets have brought growth in capacity to a halt. And demand is recovering. China’s Golden Sun solar subsidy scheme will double installed solar power capacity in the country to 10 gigawatts this year." Warren Buffett is investing in solar in the United States, and profitability could return to the industry "as early as" next year.
Yet just two days before a Beijing correspondent for the paper reported that "Chinese solar-panel makers are set to follow the lead of Suntech as the solar industry enters a difficult period of consolidation and "adjustment.' " The clear implications were that a lot of PV makers will go down the tubes too, and that is won't be any easy adjustment.
Earth2Tech's Katie Fehrenbacher, like Lex, declared the Suntech bankruptcy "a good thing." But she went on to cite a Technology Review estimate that "hundreds of solar companies need to fail"; as many as 180 PV panel manufacturers may go under by 2015, she said.
One of the more drastic estimates of the global situation comes from Keith Bradsher of The New York Times: "The industry’s problem is that most of the cost of a solar panel lies in building the factory, not in operating the equipment. So when the industry has severe overcapacity, as it does now, each company continues running its factories to cover its tiny operating costs, and at least a small part of the interest on the loans it took out to buy the costly factory equipment. But when every company pursues that strategy, the whole industry loses money and virtually no business is able to cover its full interest costs."
Maybe the most balanced assessment was in the Wall Street Journal's "Heard on the Street": Chinese companies like LDK Solar, with balance sheets known to be weak, will go under too; stronger companies like Trina Solar and Yingli Green Energy will prosper.
tells me January pumpers all left in February and the stock is tightly held. Still bidding $1.42 on 600 for now.
I had a lower bid and had to raise it. there was a lot of dancing on the bid and I finally gave in.
that I don't know. Smart routing is not always so smart... some MM's will post you as the bid, others will wait for a matching ASK to fill you...
JAXB -- damneditall it got support out of nowhere and jumped up to 1.58
I just want out. not calling anyone back in. still in from 5.80.
100 at $8.36 with a $10 commission (&^%$@#@!)
looking like I could get an opportunity to cut my losses -- or lose my head -- on skul
as long as they are in need of financing, it is not the shares of SIAF that is the tradable commodity, it is the number of Swedish investors that is.
skul moving.
ha
well Fidelity turned 8.35 into effectively 8.44... I need to get options permission at IB and move all my money there. Fidelity commissions are killing me.
filled DMD.
aside from FSLR, I am in September GEVO $2.50's because the company just was shown not to infringe Butamax's patents and is now suing Butamax for infringement. Also the infringement was the holdup for production.
That said, I prefer swings that I can set up on limits and still do my day job ;)
just getting into options and trying to run a few plays at a time while I learn. just 2 contracts of April SFLR and 12 contracts of GEVO September. Will watch a few of yours while I learn but need to keep the options a small part of portfolio until I do.
Also, Fidelity will let me trade options (at $9.75 each way) but Interactive Brokers wants 100 trades under my belt before I can use them (and $1 + exchange fees)...
call it the cost of tuition!
The key points from that article were that
GEVO is now asserting an infringement case on Butamax - one has to assume because the facts raised in the dismissal of Butamax's assertions against GEVO implicated Butamax as infringing GEVO's patents.
It may be a better use of time and money for Butamax's owners to just buy GEVO and own both sets of patents.
bidding SYNM, VLOV, DMD, and JAXB today
put a different way, I have a bid in for more.
the company is burning cash to get to operational income. Companies that burn cash faster than the market expects go down in price.
Most investors will not touch a stock under $1 (many under $5). The RS is essential.
FSLR bouncing off a support uptrend, grabbed some April calls at $27.50 strike.