- Joined
- 8 January 2015
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- 7
I am still here and watching with interest....
On the 22/09/15 I said I would not buy at this point in time because the stock was still trending down and could not tell how further it was likely to fall at that point the stock was at $2.41.As we now know it continued down till 30/09/2015 at $2.21 or 8%...
And after bottoming at $2.21, it is up over 20% in just over 2 months - 120% return on an annualized basis. If it was cheap at $2.40, it was even cheaper at $2.21.
Whether one bought the stock or not is a matter for the individual concerned. But I really don't understand the rationale behind an approach that agrees that the stock is fundamentally cheap (or at least not fundamentally expensive) but then waits until everybody starts buying, thereby making the stock more expensive, before one starts buying oneself.
By your reasoning, one should only buy a stock once it is really expensive because by then everybody is buying and pushing up its price.
...
Trading 06/10/15 @ $2.40.......
Exited trade and money in the bank 19/11/15 @ $2.76........6 weeks =130% annualised...
Where are you getting $2.76 from? On 19 November 2015 GMA's price closed at $2.87.
In any event, if you bought at $2.40 and sold at $2.76, that's a 13.05% return over 6 weeks. A 13.05% return over 6 weeks does not work out to be 130% annualised. It works out be about 113% annualised. Are you saying you earned the difference between 113% and 130%, i.e. 17%, in interest? In which bank?
And after bottoming at $2.21, it is up over 20% in just over 2 months - 120% return on an annualized basis. If it was cheap at $2.40, it was even cheaper at $2.21.
Shame you pissed off a valued contributor to this forum.
Ok I'll play
$1000
it's lower than $2.44 in 12 mths.
If I lose Joe gets a grand.
If you lose you send Joe a grand.
Is anyone else in this stock? On my calculations it is incredibly cheap and to all appearances a solid company.
I have been steadily building a position in it since it dropped below $2.70. It is now trading at just over 60% of book value.
GMA closed at $3.10 on 23 May 2016 after earlier reaching a high of over $3.16.
In light of the proposed capital reduction and share consolidation, it is probably appropriate to draw a line under the bet that tech/a offered to make with me on 25 September 2015.
The return from the low on 25 September 2015 to the high on 12 May 2016 works out to be around 20% with the dividends and return of capital included. It's more, of course, if you annualise it.
Now, I hope this serves as a lesson to the newbies. That anyone with any experience of markets would offer to make a bet as to whether a stock that was as cheap as GMA was in the last quarter of 2015 and, what's more, was paying the enormous yield that GMA was paying (and has continued to pay by way of the recent return of capital to shareholders) in an environment where bond yields are barely above 2% shows you just how dumb some people are.
Oh, and before I forget... Tech/a, you can make out that cheque to my favourite charity and to your old school: Midvale, School for the Gifted.
View attachment 66918
In light of the proposed capital reduction and share consolidation, it is probably appropriate to draw a line under the bet that tech/a offered to make with me on 25 September 2015.
Not sure why there's a need to bag the guy. I know Rainman is pretty arrogant Tech/a, but you too have been the same in some cases IMO. You're like a Fundie / Techie reverse of each other. Passionate, stubborn, ruthless, and call a spade a spade.
But hasn't this company paid out $0.532 per share (plus franking credits of $0.082 per share) or so in cash since the bet started?
Also issued shares got reduced in quantity by a multiple of 0.8555.
Think the bet was at $2.44.
So basically if you purchased at $2.44 you currently have the following:
$0.532 per share cash in the bank. Plus $0.082 per share in tax credits you can use against your taxable income.
And shares that are trading on the market at the equivalent of $3.22. This is calculated by dividing the current market price of $2.755 by the share consolidation multiplier 0.8555.
Unrealised market gain of $0.78 + $0.532 cash + $0.082 tax credits = $1.394 per share gain current.
$1.394/$2.44 = 57.1% return in about 7-8 months.
Not bad. I don't know if the current valuation is sustainable as I haven't looked at the fundamentals for a while, mind you. But those are the facts to date, whatever method you used to buy.
So I have!!! Thanks mate.No this is incorrect. You've calculated the consolidation the wrong way.
So at this time anything under $2.70 is great buying.
You valued it at $4.50.
Stock reaches $2.81 and your crowing loudly.
Back to mid $2s and your silent.
Ok I'll play
$1000
it's lower than $2.44 in 12 mths.
If I lose Joe gets a grand.
If you lose you send Joe a grand...
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