It held its ground today with a small gain on lighter volume. That followed a "positive reversal" which was another encouraging sign of institiutional support after a brief violation of its 50-day moving average (DMA) line. However, it recently has encountered another dose of worrisome distributional pressure, and it needs more time to form a sound new base pattern. Any subsequent losses leading to deterioration below its short-term average would raise additional concerns and trigger a more worrisome technical sell signal. Keep in mind that its progress could be hindered by future share offerings. This Chinese Computer Software firm recently filed a registration of approximately 16 million shares for resale, and it also revealed a planned acquisition of another Chinese service provider.
The Magic Formula's Top 20 Price/Book Ratio Stocks [View article]
Cocerning TSCM...
For years, TheStreet's proprietary index was part of the daily analysis among other indices including the Gold & Silver ($XAU), Bank ($BKX), Broker/Dealer ($XBD), Networking ($NWX), Semiconductor ($SOX), Integrated Oil ($XOI), Biotech ($BTK), Healthcare ($HMO), Retail ($RLX), Oil Services ($OSX). It seems somewhat ironic that they would cease calculation of an index that had allowed investors to guage the performance of the very industry which that Internet - Content company resides. They must have had some good reasons for that decision.
Rebecca Updegraph, their IR contact at thestreet.com, said the index "wasn't being utilized" and she will get back to me with more information soon. Not being utilized, huh? There was suddenly a hole in my routine reports, and when I look at sites like Yahoo Finance to see the indices' data they provide, guess what? I still see the ^DOT finance.yahoo.com/indi... being utilized, although this is only because few seem to have noticed its abandonment.
Few headlines ever come up on any of the indexes, NONE ON THIS INDEX, IN FACT (finance.yahoo.com/q?s=... ) SO INVESTORS ARE LOST IF/WHEN they go looking! Doesn't anyone feel they have a fiduciary responsibility to help the lost investors?
I literally had to spend a fair amount of time to get this "story" while nobody else on the planet (other than an easy-to-miss announcement from Nasdaq OMX) bothered to even issue a press release on it.
CANSLIM.net, in keeping with its objective of providing superior fundamental and technical reports concerning stocks, industry groups, and the major averages most relevant for investors, has begun tracking the AMEX INTERACTIVE WEEK INTERNET Index ($IIX OR ^IIX) which is comprised of 40 stocks. This index will be analyzed in place of the recently abandoned TheStreet.com Internet Sector Index ($DOT) which contained 23-stocks.
The "Industry Group Watch" section of the CANSLIM.net After Market Update provides daily analysis on the performance of leading and lagging industry groups. It is part of a membership which includes ongoing reports designed to keep investors informed. We think that this change makes the most sense under the circumstances. I do not believe it was a component of its own proprietary index, at least not recently, but we are nonetheless intrigued as to why the folks at TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) decided that 2009 was the year that it would quit supporting their proprietary index which began on September 30, 1998.
Further on this point, the decision to abandon their proprietary index reveals several reasons for any current TSCM shareholder to be concerned. The action may be revealing that the company's directors are under-estimating its assets, neglecting them, failing to extract sufficient value form them, and/or having trouble exploiting any apparent advantages the company may still have.
First, for ksh777, I was in Las Vegas at the Money Show a few years ago when the top person at Yahoo Finance asked the biggest audience of the entire event if they knew what "enterprise value" was and nobody knew. Don't feel bad either, as I'm stumped by those acronyms you're asking about too! I believe he was bragging at the time that Yahoo Finance was the ONLY investment site providing that data, while arguing that the total value of its stock's market cap plus its the company's debt (bonds etc) was actually an important figure they were calling "enterprise value".
Now let's talk about TSCM...
I finally heard from thestreet.com's Rebecca Updegraph yesterday evening concerning inquiries I started making last week. For years, TheStreet's proprietary index was part of the daily analysis among other indices including the Gold & Silver ($XAU), Bank ($BKX), Broker/Dealer ($XBD), Networking ($NWX), Semiconductor ($SOX), Integrated Oil ($XOI), Biotech ($BTK), Healthcare ($HMO), Retail ($RLX), Oil Services ($OSX). It seems somewhat ironic that they would cease calculation of an index that had allowed investors to guage the performance of the very industry which that Internet - Content company resides. They must have had some good reasons for that decision.
Updegraph said the index "wasn't being utilized" and she will get back to me with more information soon. Not being utilized, huh? There was suddenly a hole in my routine reports, and when I look at sites like Yahoo Finance to see the indices' data they provide, guess what? I still see the ^DOT finance.yahoo.com/indi...
Few headlines ever come up on any of the indexes, NONE ON THIS INDEX, IN FACT (finance.yahoo.com/q?s=... ) SO INVESTORS ARE LOST IF/WHEN they go looking! I feel in my heart we have a fiduciary responsibility to help the lost investors!
I literally had to spend a fair amount of time to get this "story" while nobody else on the planet (other than an easy-to-miss announcement from Nasdaq OMX) bothered to even issue a press release on it.
CANSLIM.net, in keeping with its objective of providing superior fundamental and technical reports concerning stocks, industry groups, and the major averages most relevant for investors, has begun tracking the AMEX INTERACTIVE WEEK INTERNET Index ($IIX OR ^IIX) which is comprised of 40 stocks. This index will be analyzed in place of the recently abandoned TheStreet.com Internet Sector Index ($DOT) which contained 23-stocks.
The "Industry Group Watch" section of the CANSLIM.net After Market Update provides daily analysis on the performance of leading and lagging industry groups. It is part of a membership which includes ongoing reports designed to keep investors informed. We think that this change makes the most sense under the circumstances. I do not believe it was a component of its own proprietary index, at least not recently, but we are nonetheless intrigued as to why the folks at TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) decided that 2009 was the year that it would quit supporting their proprietary index which began on September 30, 1998.
Further on this point, the decision to abandon their proprietary index reveals several reasons for any current TSCM shareholder to be concerned. The action may be revealing that the company's directors are under-estimating its assets, neglecting them, failing to extract sufficient value form them, and/or having trouble exploiting any apparent advantages the company may still have.
Goldman Denies Madoff Due Diligence [View article]
I'll note that as a very professional retraction, Greg. It gets very complicated when talking about the syndication of certain deals and where the "blame" lies, and it seems that the "story" most investors are interested in gets lost along the way. One can never do too much when it comes to preaching the importance of sound risk management strategies and due dilligence. Investors beware, the market is full of investment peddlers who are not your friends, and not so trustworthy as one might wish!
I don't know how much difference anyone's ski vacation makes, but I will figure on hitting the slopes again this season...
This is probably more of a testament to the fact that most asset managers are doing a miserable job and having a difficult time in the current market environment. However, according to the data from my sources, Management of the company owns about 1% of FIG's shares. This is an example of rather unfortunate timing. Their great track record of steady and strong annual earnings growth prior to going public, coming to an abrupt end right after going public, surely must be attributed to bad luck!
Almost Family Reports Healthy Quarter [View article]
Having read the above comments, I will acknowledge I am not one to pore over cash flow statements, nor am I an expert on accounting rules. I believe this stock could easily be $30 tomorrow, or $50 tomorrow, but one fact I can point out is that it has traded up more than +122% since my first analysis on it in early June.
Uh Oh, There Goes the Bid in Treasuries [View article]
All of us who understand the current financial "problem" realize that the "only way out of it" our leaders can see is to take more of the same poison that got us here in the first place, so that means the US government will go deeper into debt. Other governments will too. As bad as the problem is here, other countries have worse financial problems!
Has mostly dirt-poor China been "socking it away", or are they actually digging a hole while trying to rapidly industrialize? Do they report their national budget and reveal any surplus/deficits? I realize we have an ongoing US/China trade deficit, but that's another issue entirely...
It is my understanding that the sovereign wealth funds of the world that that accumulate US treasuries are in effect buying into the "best of the worst", meaning that ALL world currencies and government bonds are uncertain, ours in the US have just the distinction of being considered the least uncertain. Treasuries yielding such a low percentage (2, 3, or 4%???) are being considered attractive, why? Because even if the investors who buy them in essence get back 90% of their money in the future, it is far better than only getting back 50-60% of their money or less, which is what history showed they'd likely get if they invested in government treasuries in unstable nations that might be paying a significantly higher "yield" on the face of it.
You've Gotta Have Friends: How Bear Stearns Dodged Misvaluation Charges [View article]
After a 21+ year career as a licensed stockbroker, I am now thoroughly convinced that we are destined to have "unprecedented" occurrances in the financial markets every several years. The regulators have repeatedly proven themselves (long before I came along) inept at protecting the public from suffering massive investment losses. The regulators show up with temporary fixes and hasty rule changes on short notice (without a period of taking input from the industry and the public) only after a crisis develops - their job is oversee that markets remain "fair and orderly", and they do a miserable job!
Yes, there is plenty of blame to go around. The fingers always point to "greedy Wall Street crooks" as the cause of the "problems" when things start unravelling. During the years of prosperity (on the way up) nobody from the media ever does a story praising the hard-working people on Wall Street for what they are doing.
Isn't it intesting how John Snow (former Treasury secy) , Alan Greenspan (former Fed Chairman), and a bunch of other very knowledgeable, respected, and well-connected people obviously saw long ago that sticking around was not the thing to do. Why decide to resign a very prestigious position? To go out on top, and be out of the public eye (and probably profiting immensely) while the proverbial stink hits the fan!
I'm new to this forum, so hopefully this is an ideal place to start with a comment.
If one were able to buy MVV or any of the 2X long ETFs on margin they'd in effect be 4X long the index. Correct? So, in the event the investor might time that purchase such that the index subsequently rallies +10% , the investor might be up about +40%. Of course, this assumes the risk that the index might continue falling, and they are on the hook X4 to the ongoing losses that index might continue sustaining. This is not for the risk averse investor, however it seems like it might be a tempting investment tactic for those who are able to handle the risk.
After seeing QLD fall from $83.55 on 8/15/08 (at its 200 DMA resistance) to the $40 area now, the probability of a +10% rally in the coming weeks seems rather good. Anyone?
I originally attempted to post this comment in response to the 7/11/06 article by Greg Newton seekingalpha.com/artic... which mentioned the then soon to be introduced 2X ETFs linked to the major indices
2x Long the NASDAQ-100 (QLD) 2x Long the S&P 500 (SSO) 2x Long the S&P MidCap (MVV) 2x Long the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DDM)
2x Short the NASDAQ-100 (QID) 2x Short the S&P 500 (SDS) 2x Short the S&P MidCap (MZZ) 2x Short the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DXD)
Sort by:
Latest | Highest ratedWhy I'm Buying Longtop Financial Technologies [View article]
The Magic Formula's Top 20 Price/Book Ratio Stocks [View article]
For years, TheStreet's proprietary index was part of the daily analysis among other indices including the Gold & Silver ($XAU), Bank ($BKX), Broker/Dealer ($XBD), Networking ($NWX), Semiconductor ($SOX), Integrated Oil ($XOI), Biotech ($BTK), Healthcare ($HMO), Retail ($RLX), Oil Services ($OSX). It seems somewhat ironic that they would cease calculation of an index that had allowed investors to guage the performance of the very industry which that Internet - Content company resides. They must have had some good reasons for that decision.
Rebecca Updegraph, their IR contact at thestreet.com, said the index "wasn't being utilized" and she will get back to me with more information soon. Not being utilized, huh? There was suddenly a hole in my routine reports, and when I look at sites like Yahoo Finance to see the indices' data they provide, guess what? I still see the ^DOT
finance.yahoo.com/indi... being utilized, although this is only because few seem to have noticed its abandonment.
Few headlines ever come up on any of the indexes, NONE ON THIS INDEX, IN FACT (finance.yahoo.com/q?s=... ) SO INVESTORS ARE LOST IF/WHEN they go looking! Doesn't anyone feel they have a fiduciary responsibility to help the lost investors?
I literally had to spend a fair amount of time to get this "story" while nobody else on the planet (other than an easy-to-miss announcement from Nasdaq OMX) bothered to even issue a press release on it.
CANSLIM.net, in keeping with its objective of providing superior fundamental and technical reports concerning stocks, industry groups, and the major averages most relevant for investors, has begun tracking the AMEX INTERACTIVE WEEK INTERNET Index ($IIX OR ^IIX) which is comprised of 40 stocks. This index will be analyzed in place of the recently abandoned TheStreet.com Internet Sector Index ($DOT) which contained 23-stocks.
The "Industry Group Watch" section of the CANSLIM.net After Market Update provides daily analysis on the performance of leading and lagging industry groups. It is part of a membership which includes ongoing reports designed to keep investors informed. We think that this change makes the most sense under the circumstances. I do not believe it was a component of its own proprietary index, at least not recently, but we are nonetheless intrigued as to why the folks at TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) decided that 2009 was the year that it would quit supporting their proprietary index which began on September 30, 1998.
Further on this point, the decision to abandon their proprietary index reveals several reasons for any current TSCM shareholder to be concerned. The action may be revealing that the company's directors are under-estimating its assets, neglecting them, failing to extract sufficient value form them, and/or having trouble exploiting any apparent advantages the company may still have.
Is TheStreet.com Cheap Enough Yet? [View article]
Now let's talk about TSCM...
I finally heard from thestreet.com's Rebecca Updegraph yesterday evening concerning inquiries I started making last week. For years, TheStreet's proprietary index was part of the daily analysis among other indices including the Gold & Silver ($XAU), Bank ($BKX), Broker/Dealer ($XBD), Networking ($NWX), Semiconductor ($SOX), Integrated Oil ($XOI), Biotech ($BTK), Healthcare ($HMO), Retail ($RLX), Oil Services ($OSX). It seems somewhat ironic that they would cease calculation of an index that had allowed investors to guage the performance of the very industry which that Internet - Content company resides. They must have had some good reasons for that decision.
Updegraph said the index "wasn't being utilized" and she will get back to me with more information soon. Not being utilized, huh? There was suddenly a hole in my routine reports, and when I look at sites like Yahoo Finance to see the indices' data they provide, guess what? I still see the ^DOT finance.yahoo.com/indi...
Few headlines ever come up on any of the indexes, NONE ON THIS INDEX, IN FACT (finance.yahoo.com/q?s=... ) SO INVESTORS ARE LOST IF/WHEN they go looking! I feel in my heart we have a fiduciary responsibility to help the lost investors!
I literally had to spend a fair amount of time to get this "story" while nobody else on the planet (other than an easy-to-miss announcement from Nasdaq OMX) bothered to even issue a press release on it.
CANSLIM.net, in keeping with its objective of providing superior fundamental and technical reports concerning stocks, industry groups, and the major averages most relevant for investors, has begun tracking the AMEX INTERACTIVE WEEK INTERNET Index ($IIX OR ^IIX) which is comprised of 40 stocks. This index will be analyzed in place of the recently abandoned TheStreet.com Internet Sector Index ($DOT) which contained 23-stocks.
The "Industry Group Watch" section of the CANSLIM.net After Market Update provides daily analysis on the performance of leading and lagging industry groups. It is part of a membership which includes ongoing reports designed to keep investors informed. We think that this change makes the most sense under the circumstances. I do not believe it was a component of its own proprietary index, at least not recently, but we are nonetheless intrigued as to why the folks at TheStreet.com (NASDAQ: TSCM) decided that 2009 was the year that it would quit supporting their proprietary index which began on September 30, 1998.
Further on this point, the decision to abandon their proprietary index reveals several reasons for any current TSCM shareholder to be concerned. The action may be revealing that the company's directors are under-estimating its assets, neglecting them, failing to extract sufficient value form them, and/or having trouble exploiting any apparent advantages the company may still have.
Goldman Denies Madoff Due Diligence [View article]
Wes Edens' Obama Waterfall [View article]
This is probably more of a testament to the fact that most asset managers are doing a miserable job and having a difficult time in the current market environment. However, according to the data from my sources, Management of the company owns about 1% of FIG's shares. This is an example of rather unfortunate timing. Their great track record of steady and strong annual earnings growth prior to going public, coming to an abrupt end right after going public, surely must be attributed to bad luck!
Almost Family Reports Healthy Quarter [View article]
Uh Oh, There Goes the Bid in Treasuries [View article]
Has mostly dirt-poor China been "socking it away", or are they actually digging a hole while trying to rapidly industrialize? Do they report their national budget and reveal any surplus/deficits? I realize we have an ongoing US/China trade deficit, but that's another issue entirely...
It is my understanding that the sovereign wealth funds of the world that that accumulate US treasuries are in effect buying into the "best of the worst", meaning that ALL world currencies and government bonds are uncertain, ours in the US have just the distinction of being considered the least uncertain. Treasuries yielding such a low percentage (2, 3, or 4%???) are being considered attractive, why? Because even if the investors who buy them in essence get back 90% of their money in the future, it is far better than only getting back 50-60% of their money or less, which is what history showed they'd likely get if they invested in government treasuries in unstable nations that might be paying a significantly higher "yield" on the face of it.
You've Gotta Have Friends: How Bear Stearns Dodged Misvaluation Charges [View article]
Yes, there is plenty of blame to go around. The fingers always point to "greedy Wall Street crooks" as the cause of the "problems" when things start unravelling. During the years of prosperity (on the way up) nobody from the media ever does a story praising the hard-working people on Wall Street for what they are doing.
Isn't it intesting how John Snow (former Treasury secy) , Alan Greenspan (former Fed Chairman), and a bunch of other very knowledgeable, respected, and well-connected people obviously saw long ago that sticking around was not the thing to do. Why decide to resign a very prestigious position? To go out on top, and be out of the public eye (and probably profiting immensely) while the proverbial stink hits the fan!
Tactical Asset Allocation, Part I [View article]
If one were able to buy MVV or any of the 2X long ETFs on margin they'd in effect be 4X long the index. Correct? So, in the event the investor might time that purchase such that the index subsequently rallies +10% , the investor might be up about +40%. Of course, this assumes the risk that the index might continue falling, and they are on the hook X4 to the ongoing losses that index might continue sustaining. This is not for the risk averse investor, however it seems like it might be a tempting investment tactic for those who are able to handle the risk.
After seeing QLD fall from $83.55 on 8/15/08 (at its 200 DMA resistance) to the $40 area now, the probability of a +10% rally in the coming weeks seems rather good. Anyone?
I originally attempted to post this comment in response to the 7/11/06 article by Greg Newton seekingalpha.com/artic...
which mentioned the then soon to be introduced 2X ETFs linked to the major indices
2x Long the NASDAQ-100 (QLD)
2x Long the S&P 500 (SSO)
2x Long the S&P MidCap (MVV)
2x Long the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DDM)
2x Short the NASDAQ-100 (QID)
2x Short the S&P 500 (SDS)
2x Short the S&P MidCap (MZZ)
2x Short the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DXD)