Round and Long....I cant help to notice most of your post have more thumbs DOWN then up.Hummmm... maybe you should go for a Drive down the road and throw YOURSELF out the window....Or at least get a life and if Sirius is not for you.....
On Jan 04 08:13 AM Round & Long wrote > Sorry Tyler, even the investors that bought at $1.00 have a poor > opinion on SIRI. Only the ones that got in at .12 to .08 feel halfway > good and they are just gambling. The real longs lost all their money > because they got out a long time ago. How many shares do you own > Tyler? This stock should not even be considered as speculative. Drive > down the road and throw your money out the window. You will make > someone happy.
Sirius' Future Looks More Promising Than Ever [View article]
You dont have to read about sirius now.... you can go jump off your roof and do us all a favor!
On Jan 02 09:38 AM Davis Freeberg wrote:
> Considering the drivel that you write, it's no surprise that you > get attacked. In the last 2 years you've been churning out article > after article clinging desperately to some kind of pipe dream and > yet you've consistently been wrong. How much money have people lost > by listening to your advice so far? The mere fact that you view this > as at "12 cent stock" instead of taking a cold hard look at the real > underlying enterprise value, only demonstrates how little you really > know about investing. You complain often about manipulation, but > the only one I see manipulating anything is Sirius Buzz who day after > day continues to publish misleading articles like this one. > > The reason why the stock fell so much post merger has nothing to > do with some Sith lord controlling the price of the stock. The blame > falls on Karmazin who recognized that the stock was wildly over valued, > so he proposed an all stock deal for XM. By doing so, he was able > to sucker in arbitrage buyers pre-merger who maintained the inflated > stock price for far too long. Once the merger was complete, they > exited the market, the false value was destroyed and now we see a > true reflection of Sirius/XM's intrinsic worth. To act like "short > sellers" are the ones to blame suggests that you are incredible naive > about investing or a liar. > > Instead of trying to defend a broken business model with a broken > balance sheet, why don't you address the VALUATION of Siri/XM. When > SIRI dropped below a buck you made a big deal about how it was being > unfairly punished and at these "penny stock" levels it was a great > buy, but you continue to ignore the billions in debt outstanding > and the fact that even at a measly 12 cents a share, it's still trading > at a market cap of over $400 million. You're entitled to your opinion > of course, but when I look at consumers being more careful with their > money, an auto industry in disarray and debt coming due that SIRI > has no credible way to pay for, I can't help but disagree about their > prospect for bankruptcy. You may or may not actually believe that > the listeners will step in and save the company, but I'd argue that > it's going to take more then an NPR pledge drive to actually get > these guys back on solid footing. At least once they do go bankrupt, > I won't have to continue to read about how awesome you think they > are every day.
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Latest | Highest ratedSirius XM: An Equity Adrift [View article]
On Jan 04 08:13 AM Round & Long wrote
> Sorry Tyler, even the investors that bought at $1.00 have a poor
> opinion on SIRI. Only the ones that got in at .12 to .08 feel halfway
> good and they are just gambling. The real longs lost all their money
> because they got out a long time ago. How many shares do you own
> Tyler? This stock should not even be considered as speculative. Drive
> down the road and throw your money out the window. You will make
> someone happy.
Sirius' Future Looks More Promising Than Ever [View article]
On Jan 02 09:38 AM Davis Freeberg wrote:
> Considering the drivel that you write, it's no surprise that you
> get attacked. In the last 2 years you've been churning out article
> after article clinging desperately to some kind of pipe dream and
> yet you've consistently been wrong. How much money have people lost
> by listening to your advice so far? The mere fact that you view this
> as at "12 cent stock" instead of taking a cold hard look at the real
> underlying enterprise value, only demonstrates how little you really
> know about investing. You complain often about manipulation, but
> the only one I see manipulating anything is Sirius Buzz who day after
> day continues to publish misleading articles like this one.
>
> The reason why the stock fell so much post merger has nothing to
> do with some Sith lord controlling the price of the stock. The blame
> falls on Karmazin who recognized that the stock was wildly over valued,
> so he proposed an all stock deal for XM. By doing so, he was able
> to sucker in arbitrage buyers pre-merger who maintained the inflated
> stock price for far too long. Once the merger was complete, they
> exited the market, the false value was destroyed and now we see a
> true reflection of Sirius/XM's intrinsic worth. To act like "short
> sellers" are the ones to blame suggests that you are incredible naive
> about investing or a liar.
>
> Instead of trying to defend a broken business model with a broken
> balance sheet, why don't you address the VALUATION of Siri/XM. When
> SIRI dropped below a buck you made a big deal about how it was being
> unfairly punished and at these "penny stock" levels it was a great
> buy, but you continue to ignore the billions in debt outstanding
> and the fact that even at a measly 12 cents a share, it's still trading
> at a market cap of over $400 million. You're entitled to your opinion
> of course, but when I look at consumers being more careful with their
> money, an auto industry in disarray and debt coming due that SIRI
> has no credible way to pay for, I can't help but disagree about their
> prospect for bankruptcy. You may or may not actually believe that
> the listeners will step in and save the company, but I'd argue that
> it's going to take more then an NPR pledge drive to actually get
> these guys back on solid footing. At least once they do go bankrupt,
> I won't have to continue to read about how awesome you think they
> are every day.
Ten Micro Predictions for 2009 [View article]