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All right just bought more shares!
Earnings coming soon strap on ur seatbelts this rocket is about to take off... Considering the Large short naked position we just need to get this over 1.80 and it takes off to 3 dollars
Agreed I am not buying at this level after a 30% run is due for a pullback... Trend on the lows puts the next buy signal at about 4.30
Fine dont listen to me 62 is overbought in my playbook look at the trajectory on the RSI a few more buys gets you to 70.. Good day traders can anticipate that's how we make money
I want SVFC to go up but it's unrealistic that it won't retrace before the next run... RSI shows overbought and the MACD is topping off... Every healthy and sustainable increase has to have red days in between... I could buy at 7 cents but why so that if I can at 6 cents tomorrow or Monday
APS starting to sound desperate
Correction time tomorrow. Made money today (who didn't) I will buy at 6 cents for the next dip and rip
Tomorrow in buying
I'm gonna hold.. No way I'm selling right now
When does the 10k come out?
1000 dollars not shares
Just put 1000 more on it today
This is a dip and rip a lot of shortin here but a lot of buying pressure once we get a green day shorts will start coverin it will put us at 2 real quick
Does this mean APS will close shop?
Nice article here
Walter Schenker, president of MAZ Capital Advisors, who owns IntelliCell shares, said his wife and daughter underwent treatment at the IntelliCell lab for knee ailments, which proved successful. “IntelliCell has an exciting technology that uses one’s own fat tissues for the incredible treatment or repair of damaged tissues,” says Schenker.
Dr. Victor says IntelliCell’s labs have treated more than 100 patients this year which all produced successful results. One such patient, Denise Aversano, underwent treatment at one of IntelliCell’s labs for severe and chronic back ailment which had been a source of incessant pain. Prior to the IntelliCell procedure, she had been in physical therapy for years, with no success of alleviating her misery.
Three days after her treatment at IntelliCell on April 22, the pain started to dissipate and eventually went away, to her surprise. Denise said she was able to roll out of bed in the morning for the first time in years. Shopping had always been difficult for her because of her constantly aching back. But after the surgery, she was able to go to the mall to shop for the first time in many years, without pain. ”I was able to enjoy shoping again and was able to pick up packages and carry them to my car with no help from anybody,” she said.
Breakout signal ascending triangle just bought more resistance will be at 7 cents then 10 cents
Easy 20% flips
I'm gonna hold to 10 cents this time. I ve flipped this 3 times already and keeps going up
I'll keep adding more with sell target $4 dollars
What I love about FNMA is the large volume
Bought more today
Just bought some more
If APS gets this over 43 cents it will literally soar to 60 cents quickly on the short squeeze
I'm buying more tomorrow
Looks like we might get to 40 cents tomorrow
This might actually make it to 50 cents
I'm not hating on SVFC I like what they do I am just a technical trader and the Elliot wave says it has to pull back a bit before runs again... Which it will
Made 600 so far I ll jump in again If it gets below 4 cents
It's an APS play and as such it cannot last more than 2 months once APS stops sending emails it's gonna crash like they always do
I will sell at 4 dollars
Xuii due for a crash
FNMA ready for the run
By they way last Friday a 500k buy order posted on the ask price that is almost 900k dollars....institutional investors and hedge funds are buying up Fannie
The Corker Warner has little chance of passing senate let alone the house. Think about it GSEs are writing 60 billion dollar checks which is keeping congress from having to debate on raising the ceiling which is something the republican house hates to see happen again.. Why shut down a cash cow? Fannie and Freddie will be "scrutinized" to prevent future mistakes but they re not going anywhere. Corker wrote this proposal to gain "bipartisan" status and attention that's all... Trust me Fannie and Freddie are not going anywhere. Once this "period o doubt" passes and investors gain confidence... The real valuation based on profitability will put Fannie and Freddie at least at $10 but in reality they should be at around $30
nice consolidation today!
2 dollars next week for sure
3 month buy signal: MACD coiled about to cross above zero, look at the charts people we're getting ready for the next run up to 3 dollars next week
interesting article, read here:
The U.S. government reported that it received a whopping $66.3 billion in dividend payments from the government-sponsored mortgage backers. Fannie contributed $59.4 billion, while Freddie Mac wrote a check to the U.S. Treasury for $7 billion.
Will the profits soon flow to shareholders?
The government’s cash cow
The U.S. government has turned Fannie and Freddie into cash cows. Following the 2008 financial crisis, the government seized control of the firms, placing them into conservatorship. The rights of common shareholders were suspended and the government issued itself warrants worth as much as 80% of each company.
The government became the new de facto owner of both Fannie and Freddie. At the time, it seemed necessary. Large mortgage losses would send Fannie and Freddie into insolvency, so this move ensured that losses would be backed by the U.S. Treasury – the only entity with a bankroll (printing press) sizable enough to cover potential losses.
In 2012, the rules of the game changed forever. Congress passed a law that would change the way Fannie and Freddie could repay the U.S. Treasury for being a financial backstop of last resort. You see, when the government saved the GSEs, it did so with preferred shares. Eventually, the GSEs were expected to rebound, repay the government, and exist again as public companies.
The government decided that such a policy was too forgiving. Rather than allow Freddie and Fannie to repay government, it now treats every payment made to the Treasury as “dividends” on its preferred stock. Thus, Fannie and Freddie deliver billions more than their minimum payments, yet the excess does not flow to repaying the debt. It’s akin to making a prepayment on a mortgage only to see the excess disappear. In reality, that money should be used to reduce the amount you (or, in this case, the GSEs) owe to the lender.
Why shareholder don't own the GSEs
Earlier this year, common shares of Freddie and Fannie rocketed as the two reported positive, multi-billion dollar net income. In any other situation, the shares would have kept their value. Fannie and Freddie are well into the black.
But holding common and even preferred shares of Fannie and Freddie is purely speculative at this point. Neither will have any true economic value, or any claim to the profits of either company, until the government allows its preferential preferred shares to be paid off. For now, the profits, no matter how large, are the U.S. Treasury’s and the U.S. Treasury’s only!
The only way that shareholders will profit is if a lawsuit can compel the U.S. government to allow Fannie and Freddie to repay the U.S. Treasury. Politicians aren’t so sure. Some want to simply allow the U.S. government to let the GSEs run off, eventually closing up the two firms as the mortgages they hold mature.
Others want to return Fannie and Freddie to public shareholders and remove some of the backing that the U.S. government provides them. A final group wants to simply allow the two GSEs to repay their debts and operate as a going concern with the help of the Treasury.
Certainly, there is ample money to be made from the GSEs, but it is very, very risky.
What we know
We know that the U.S. government will ultimately decide on a binary outcome: either the GSEs will be left as the Treasury’s cash cow, or returned to shareholders.
The best way to play this event is to move up the capital structure. Common stockholders are much more likely to get the screw than preferred shareholders. As such, one should consider playing Fannie Mae preferred stock alongside some of the world’s best hedge funds, who have every intention of bringing Fannie and Freddie back from their zombie status, much like AIG was brought back from the grave.
Fannie Mae’s 8.25% non-cumulative preferred shares (NASDAQOTCBB: FNMAT) trade hands at $7.40. If Fannie is released to shareholders, these should immediately trade at or above par, given their above-market interest rate.
Thus, it comes down to odds. The market currently prices Fannie’s preferred stock as if it is a one-in-three chance that the government sets Fannie free. I think the odds are better, given how many powerful hedge fund managers are in on the trade.
In a best case scenario, Fannie is returned to shareholders this year and investors turn their $7.40 investment into $25 in one year, for a 237% return. If it takes five years, then the compound annual return comes to 18.8%.
This is one of the rare cases where you get a binary outcome with a better than 50-50 payoff. If you believe hedge funds can ultimately convince the U.S. government to return the GSEs to their rightful owners following in the footsteps of AIG, this is the play of a lifetime.
confirmed 5 day upward channel, if it breaks 1.72 it will run to 1.83