In hindsight, Amazon was a great play.
Amazon started off with long strings of losses. 12 years ago, you guys would have been screaming from the rooftops to kill Amazon investors.
Show me a trading algo which is 100% right doing technical analysis then.Many, many trading algorithms would disagree with you.
The subjectivity of value isn't industry dependent.valuating a company you plan to acquire by looking at its assets and a multiple of its yearly revenue is the most common process for valuating a company outside of the tech world. Why tech companies get to write their own rules in terms of valuation is what I'm concerned about.
The problem is, a lot of people are stupid and take positions where they claim to be smarter than everyone else. Not have better facts, which is possible, but have better opinions, which is impossible.Nah, guerilla is right.
People like to use logic and math to come up with what something is "suppose" to be worth. The markets don't give shit, they follow their own method of madness. The ticker and the chart will tell you what something is worth. When we get arrogant and think we are smarter than the market is when trading accounts get blown up.
Dorks and old people have more purchasing power than young people chasing trends.Only dorks and old people still use FB. :banana_sml::2gunsfiring_v1::ak::music06:
Classic pump and dump
Nah, guerilla is right.
People like to use logic and math to come up with what something is "suppose" to be worth. The markets don't give shit, they follow their own method of madness. The ticker and the chart will tell you what something is worth. When we get arrogant and think we are smarter than the market is when trading accounts get blown up.
My Euro long is doing nicely today, just popped another 15 pips. Greece still blows. Spain still sucks. The Euro is not "suppose" to go up, but time and time again you can see how the funnymentals will lead you astray.
The markets are about trading hope and fear, human emotions, not some definable nor rational mathematical constant. The most famous trading quote of all time:
"The markets can stay irrational much longer than you can remain solvent."
The subjectivity of value isn't industry dependent.
You have a real problem with people doing things you don't agree with or don't approve of. Tolerance is your word for today.
how is the price of a company's stock dropping 11% in its first two days of public trading ever something you can firmly stand by as proof that the stock market is what determines the value of a company and the company's actual financial reports have no bearing on that?
If Facebook makes about 1 billion per year in profit which is about what I can figure out they make based on Q1 2012 net income of 200ish million, then wouldn't a fair price for the stock be based on 5-10x yearly earnings? That would value the company at 5-10 billion. SInce there are 2.74billion shares out there wouldn't a fair stock price be $2-$4?
Im no stock expert, just trying to make sense of it all.
so what accounts for the 11% drop in value of Facebook in the last 4 days? What actions did the company take that caused their value to drop 11%? How is that drop a reflection of the actual health of the company? Did revenue drop? Site go down? New competitor emerge?
The price of the stock dropping is in no way connected with the actions the company itself is taking. It has fluctuating valuation if you follow that school of thought for valuation.
If a company's financials don't change, yet the value of it is going up and down because of stock pricng, what can actually be trusted at that point? Before Facebook went public, was their private value also fluctuating wildly?
how is the price of a company's stock dropping 11% in its first two days of public trading ever something you can firmly stand by as proof that the stock market is what determines the value of a company and the company's actual financial reports have no bearing on that?
This is incorrect.The argument is on the definition of 'value'. Guerrilla defines 'value' as simply whatever people will pay for something else at a given time. I'm sure he stands by this definition even if the company withholds major information from their stockholders that would devalue the stock if it were known.
This may make people feel good, but it's a canard.I think the definition you're looking for is something more solid and less subjective - it's 'true' value or value range.
How are the other tech stocks doing? I would love to get my hands on some discounted amazon/google stocks.
The argument is on the definition of 'value'. Guerrilla defines 'value' as simply whatever people will pay for something else at a given time. I'm sure he stands by this definition even if the company withholds major information from their stockholders that would devalue the stock if it were known.
I am suprised that some people here thought FB might be a good buy. FB was made by young people using it - mainly college kids. FB is no longer cool and young people will switch to the newest coolest thing.
It was like a 2 year old who watched Barney but when they become 4 years old they were embarrassed they ever watched Barney.
How many people, especially young people, are still using MySpace? like zero?
Facebook is old news. People are on to Pinterest, Twitter, Tumblr and others. Only dorks and old people still use FB. :banana_sml::2gunsfiring_v1::ak::music06: