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So far, no one has mentioned price action.What should I look for in a Company?
Hi Julia,So far, no one has mentioned price action.
So far, no one has mentioned price action.
Sir O has helped me with this dilemma.
He says I can purchase a Put Option!
How does anyone buy an unlisted company?
Did the OP stipulate he was talking about an unlisted company?
I didn't read it as such.
My comment was fairly obviously about listed companies. I'd assume if he wanted to find out anything about unlisted companies - something that I don't recall seeing much of on this site - he would have specified this.No. But neither did he stipulate listed companies.
My point was that if price action is something that one must look for then how do people buy and sell unlisted companies?
My comment was fairly obviously about listed companies. I'd assume if he wanted to find out anything about unlisted companies - something that I don't recall seeing much of on this site - he would have specified this.
And I didn't say price action is something one MUST look for. Some fundamentalists seem to not regard it as at all important. I simply remarked that no one had mentioned price action, this being one of the main factors I personally consider.
Happy for no one else to agree.
Not sure why you are making an issue out of this.
No. But neither did he stipulate listed companies.
My point was that if price action is something that one must look for then how do people buy and sell unlisted companies?
Those that buy into unlisted companies tend to be institutional investors - think private equtiy funds, investment banks and pension funds (etc) or strategic investors. Obviously price doesn't play a role in the process in the same way it would with a listed company as you don't have the market bench mark.
So how do these guys make a decision? There's not too much magic too it - the investors themselves look at the macro situation, the market and the company (through desktop and on site due diligence). They'll troll through files, interview management, speak to competitors etc etc before coming to a decision.
Probably the best way to answer that is to look at what institutional investors look at when taking a stake in a listed company. From what I've seen, it depends how big the investment is relative to market cap, the liquidity of listing and how you're buying the stake (on market, off market, placement). If you're looking to buy a 30% stake for $50mm in a listed company that trades on average $2000 a day, the market price probably conveys very little information (their are some accounting challenges to overcome though). But if you're spending $50mm on a 5% stake in a company that trades in the millions each day, then it becomes a whole lot more important.Now the debate is, given that price action does exist for listed companies, does that mean we should or shouldn't take that into account? I have my view but people will have others...
Hi skc,... Price to me is not something in a company... it is something that is external to a company. ...
High level dissection, your portfolio has the payoff of a long call.
Alot depends on the premium you pay for the put. Best not to get flood insurance after a flood.
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