Ether_Snake
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So STP has been up almost 20% in the past three days. I want another 7$ a share before I sell
Soka said:COOL is now facing de-listing.
http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/majesco-entertainment-company-receives-nasdaq/story.aspx?guid={1A69BE1A-1E0A-4AA1-89F7-139DDC796849}&dist=hppr
Any thoughts? I feel like bailing out now might be my only chance to save some face, but I hate selling out at a loss.
Yup, I made about $120 off of that. Lunch money!Ether_Snake said:Nintendo jumped 10% yesterdayProbably why COOL rose.
Yeah I am concerned with this as well, however as long as these products can be taxed, they'll always be there. And there has been growth in some tobacco companies overseas. Then there are the aerospace and defense sectors.Soka said:These worry me, personally. I see little that could ever cause a rapid upswing for these stocks, but I see all sorts of increasingly strict laws and regulations that will start to hinder sales for these companies, at least in the U.S.
They already banned smoking in all public buildings, or within 15 feet of the entrance of any such building, in the state of Illinois, and I know that has already occurred and is spreading to other states.
mackaveli said:hey guys got a quick stock question, why are the opening prices of most stocks different then the price traded @ 9.30
for example, if you look at Google today, it says it opened at 460. But if you look at the trading chart for today at yahoo finance or AOL finance, the first price it shows @ 9.30 is 458.68 with volume traded of 84,648. Why is this the case?
if i wanted to sell my google stock as soon as the market opened today @ 9.30, do i get to sell it at 460 or 458.68?
Thanks guys.
kathode said:Most likely the opening price is what resulted from the last trade of pre-market trading. The actual 9:30 price comes from the first sale of the day, which people queue up for execution as soon as the market opens.
As always, you get whatever price someone else is willing to pay. If you put in a market order, the way I understand it is the computer just tries to link you up with the lowest ask price available for the number of shares you want. If you ever want a specific price, use a limit order instead of a market order.
mackaveli said:Are you saying about a market order, if i have a stock for like a week and i want to get rid of it in the morning as soon as the market opens at market price. if 3 guys are willing to buy it at 2.85, 3.00, and 3.15 and everyone else sells it at 3 and buys it at 3. If i put a market order would i be matched up at 2.85 or 3.00?
also, i dont want to go through all the posts, is there a good website that could teach me about option trading? it seems quite a few posters here make a pretty good % return.
RSTEIN said:If everyone wants it at $3.00 and sellers are willing to part with it at $3.00 then that's the market and you'll get hit at $3.00 because that's the current bid. When you place a market order you're simply saying "I will accept whatever the best bid or ask is at this very second." So, basically there's a whole list of buyers and sellers behind the quotes you see on your screen. If the stock is, say, $3.00, it may look like this:
STOCK: $3.00
BID:
2.99 x 4000
2.94 x 10000
2.90 x 15000
2.85 x 10
2.82 x 13000
ASK:
3.01 x 10000
3.05 x 1100
3.10 x 15000
3.50 x 14
So, right now, the best bid (i.e. the maximum amount a purchaser is willing to pay) is $2.99. Someone out there wants 4000 shares @ 2.99. This could be one individual or a broker representing a number of individuals/institutions. If you put a market order in to sell your shares, this is the price you're going to get because that's the best bid. Buying works the same way. If you want to buy then you're going to get hit at 3.01, which is the best ask at the moment.
This can get tricky when you're talking about thinly traded stocks or options. Options have big spreads - sometimes 20% of their current price. A thin stock could have a huge spread. You want to stay away from market orders because the price you're going to get is going to be vastly different from the one you see on your screen.
Options trading is very, very tricky. If you don't mind the idea of losing all your money very quickly then it could be for you. Unfortunately I don't know of a single website that teaches one how to trade options effectively. There are numerous websites out there that talk about options strategies (e.g. bull spread, butterfly, etc.). But trading is a whole different thing.
mackaveli said:You said stay away from market orders, is that only when it is a thin stock that you were saying doesn't trade that much or does it apply to all stocks in general? Like a stock at $2.50 trades about 5,000,000 shares a day and at open it trades 500,000 and i only own 5,000 shares. If i did a market order should i be getting roughly the price it says on the computer or should i not rely on market orders period?
and also, how did you learn to do option trading? Through school? or reading online and books dedicated to options?
mackaveli said:and also, how did you learn to do option trading? Through school? or reading online and books dedicated to options?
Zhuge_Xing said:so if i want to buy a chinese stock (like chinese oil company). can i do it through td ameritrade?
is selling and buying the same as any stock in the USA?
also TD ameritrade offers like $10 straight comission, will this apply?
and lastly another info i need to know?
big thanks.
Ether_Snake said:Let's go back over 12000:|
RSTEIN said:Tech is the best trade right now. I just loaded up on TXN and IBM calls.
I bought Nintendo off of TD, don't know if that helps. As far as I know the 9.99 comm. does apply.Zhuge_Xing said:so if i want to buy a chinese stock (like chinese oil company). can i do it through td ameritrade?
is selling and buying the same as any stock in the USA?
also TD ameritrade offers like $10 straight comission, will this apply?
and lastly another info i need to know?
big thanks.
RSTEIN said:Tech is the best trade right now. I just loaded up on TXN and IBM calls.
Ether_Snake said:Supposedly EA is pulling off their TTWO offer. I knew they wouldn't go through with it, it was always a bad idea and they have bigger fish to try. It would have been a "throw money away to eliminate some competition" instead of investing in giving the company stronger foundations.
kathode said:It's still officially on the table, but looking less and less likely. With TTWO's excellent results yesterday, they'd have to move the bid up to around $28 IMO, and I'm not sure they're willing to go that high. I'd like it to go through simply because I think with TTWO, ERTS is worth a good $5-10 per share more than they are right now.