lil smoke said:Is it considered "insider" if you worked for a company in the past? Not even for the company, but through a license agreement?
Well IOW... same company, license is gone. Can I safely buy shares of the comapny that we had a license with?
Saerk said:What do you guys think of Washington Mutual. It's real low right now 12.50ish (WM)
Financials? Well yes.thegreyfox said:Is the information public?
argon said:As always, do your own research on these, but I thought I'd mention some interesting stocks.
Sotheby's (BID) - Fine art auctioneer, inflation/recession resistant.
American Apparel (APP) - Small cap, sweatshop-free clothing manufacturer
Frontline (FRO) - Oil tanker shipping with huge dividend (~17%)
*Bolt Technology (BOLT) - Develops marine seismic products for oil industry.
*Liquidity Services (LQDT) - Online auction house for government surplus / salvage
Manitowoc (MTW) - Manufactures commerical cranes. Think Dubai..
Kinder Morgan Energy Partners (KMP) - The best play in the natural gas sector, IMHO
* = stock I own.
Ouch! And it's not just a big % drop, that's $23. 0_0argon said:I hope nobody owns Bear Stearns shares.. down 47% today.
Yeah, that is freaky . . . $4 billion in market cap just vanished into thin air. Wow.argon said:I hope nobody owns Bear Stearns shares.. down 47% today.
Ether_Snake said:Yeah this fucking sucks, no one is making except out of total luck these days, or shorting.
sonarrat said:There's two sides to that. If you wait for signs of recovery, then you don't get the maximum gain. Of course, you don't get the extreme downside risk, but that's why prices are so depressed in the first place. People are scared. It's a vortex, and the only way to profit from it is to see through the BS and realize which stocks are falling for no good reason, just as they used to rise for no good reason.
Ether_Snake said:Yeah but how do you really put a price on that? PE alone is not enough. At some point the cash value of the shares mean nothing, so even after all is said and done you still can't know when to really get in. It's really chance when the whole market works on emotions. You might not, but if most investors do, then emotions drive the price.
stormer said:question: Isn't it a good time to buy certain stock, if you are thinking long term? Right now there is no bottom to be seen. But if you buy a stock thats fairly low now, and you expect to hold it for awhile, couldn't this cash you in say 2 years down the line?
Soka said:I'm buying now, hoping for payoffs a few years down the road. This is not short term purchasing that I'm doing, at least, not intending to do. Buy low, sell high. We're low now, we might get lower, but I felt like LPX was low enough to purchase, and that it'd go back up enough a few years from now, that I'd be more than happy with taking such a risk.
Besides, dividend payments aren't so bad; LPX is something like 6.4% I believe, and WB is 9.4% which is incredible.
JPMorgan Closer on Deal for Bear StearnsJPMorgan Closer on Deal for Bear Stearns
Sunday March 16, 4:59 pm ET
JPMorgan Moves Closer to Deal to Buy Ailing Bear Stearns
NEW YORK (AP) -- Wall Street is waiting for word that JPMorgan Chase & Co. reached an agreement to acquire wounded investment bank Bear Stearns Cos.
The two sides reportedly want a deal locked up before investors can put pressure on both of their stocks once Asian markets open for business. The Wall Street Journal reports the two banks were close to a deal for JPMorgan to buy Bear for $20 a share, or $2.2 billion.
The government, which on Friday helped facilitate a deal to provide funding to Bear Stearns through JPMorgan, continues to monitor the situation closely.
JP Morgan Offering $15-$20 A Share for Bear Stearns JP Morgan Chase is offering to buy Bear Stearns for between $15 and $20 a share, CNBC has learned. Bear's board is currently meeting to discuss the proposal
JP Morgan Chase is offering to buy troubled investment bank Bear Stearns for between $15 and $20 a share, CNBC has learned.
Jin Lee / ASSOCIATED PRESS
Bear Stearns
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bear's board is currently meeting to discuss the proposal, which based on the 118 million shares outstanding, would be valued at between $1.8 billion and $2.4 billion.
A deal in principle could be announced Sunday night, although the agreement would still need shareholder approval.
Here's what makes this a tricky situation: without shareholder approval, there is no real deal, so other banks and clients may be reluctant to deal with Bear on Monday unless it's part of a well capitalized JP Morgan.
Because of this, most executives inside Bear believe the Federal Reserve and Treasury will play some role in making sure there is a backstop if the shareholder approval isnt reached.
Of course, the deal itself could fall apart at the last minute, which would mean Bear would have to find another buyer, possibly JC Flowers.
An offer of $20 or less would be well below Bear's closing stock price of $30.85 on Friday, which was already down 47% for the day. As one senior Bear executive--who like most of the senior team is paid and continues to hold Bear stock--puts it: "based on the information i'm getting, lets just say I wont be retiring early."
A JP Morgan spokeswoman could not be reached for comment.
On Friday Bear Stearns Bear Stearns, the fifth largest U.S. investment bank, said a cash crunch forced it to turn to the Federal Reserve and JPMorgan JPMorgan Chase & CoJPM
for emergency funds, intensifying fears of a widening global credit crisis and driving its shares down as much as 50 percent. It also stepped up efforts to find a buyer.
On the same day S&P lowered its long-term counterparty credit rating on Bear to "BBB" from "A," and it placed long-and short term ratings on credit watch with negative implications.
Because of that S&P downgrade, bankers came to the conclusion that a deal must be done by Monday morning because no one on the street will trade or lend to Bear Stearns, which is rated a notch above junk bond levels. If the downgrade hadn't happened, Bear management would have had more time to work the Street for a deal, sources said.
As reported earlier, Bear Steans department heads met with officials of JP Morgan and JC Flowers on Saturday afternoon to give an overview of Bear's business divisions, including headcount and profit and loss positions.
The deal will likely lead to massive layoffs at Bear as JP Morgan consolidates businesses. But Bear isnt alone.
Sources tell CNBC that CS First Boston will be cutting jobs this week in its investment banking department and big cuts are looming at Merrill Lynch Merrill Lynch & Co where middle managers are bracing for cuts of 10 percent across the board. Also sources say Lehman Bothers Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc will likely be in for turbulence given its own holdings of risky commercial real estate bonds.
Bear, however, will dominate headlines on Monday. Aside from the financial fallout of a major firm disintegrating, there will likely be massive legal issues.
Executives inside Bear are bracing for major lawsuits from investors, and not just over the public comments made by the CEO Allen Schwartz and CFO Sam Molinaro to CNBC last week where they sought to calm the markets about Bear's financial status. There also is worry about lawsuits claiming general mismanagement of the firm by top executives, like Chairman Jimmy Cayne and others .
The biggest loser in all of this are the 14,000 employees of Bear. Employees own close to 25 percent of the firm, meaning top execs net worth has been nearly destroyed in recent months. And if the sale price is in the $15 to $20 a share range, these employees will be left with next to nothing.
teh_pwn said:I don't think we're low. We're lower than we used to be. But we're still overpriced, especially in real estate, and we've got a real financial problem as a country. All of my Roth IRA contributions are foreign right now, and I'm thinking about tweaking my future 401k contributions to be about 75% foreign...the problem is the funds I have access to are severely limited with 401k.
But for long term investing your plan is good. It's much better than getting overly emotional and solidifying your losses (ahem, ether_snake, lol)
http://www.federalreserve.gov/newse...y/20080316a.htm
Press Release
Release Date: March 16, 2008
For immediate release
The Federal Reserve on Sunday announced two initiatives designed to bolster market liquidity and promote orderly market functioning. Liquid, well-functioning markets are essential for the promotion of economic growth.
First, the Federal Reserve Board voted unanimously to authorize the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to create a lending facility to improve the ability of primary dealers to provide financing to participants in securitization markets. This facility will be available for business on Monday, March 17. It will be in place for at least six months and may be extended as conditions warrant. Credit extended to primary dealers under this facility may be collateralized by a broad range of investment-grade debt securities. The interest rate charged on such credit will be the same as the primary credit rate, or discount rate, at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Second, the Federal Reserve Board unanimously approved a request by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to decrease the primary credit rate from 3-1/2 percent to 3-1/4 percent, effective immediately. This step lowers the spread of the primary credit rate over the Federal Open Market Committees target federal funds rate to 1/4 percentage point. The Board also approved an increase in the maximum maturity of primary credit loans to 90 days from 30 days.
The Board also approved the financing arrangement announced by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and The Bear Stearns Companies Inc.
MobiusPigeon said:wtf? so the company lost like 90% of its value in 2 days? :lol holy crap.
_Frank_ said:i bought a gold company on thursday. IMG at 8.17. That's the only stock left in my portfolio. Glad i bought it and cashed out everything else!
_Frank_ said:lol, thats a 40 years chart.....
teh_pwn said:But for long term investing your plan is good. It's much better than getting overly emotional and solidifying your losses (ahem, ether_snake, lol)
YYZ said:What kind of process do you have to go through to open an account for stocks? I'm assuming everyone here is American?