galumay
learner
- Joined
- 17 September 2011
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EDIT - EDIT - CCP fell a lot in 2007, from about $12 to $1 - in 2008 FY they announced falls in profit of about 50%, share price had already doubled and basically continued on its steady rise all the way up to $35 12 years later.
I seem to remember thats how Dodgy Roger burnt all his clients money, loaded up in the $12's and then got wiped out when it crashed to less than a dollar.
Good write up VH, on reading their announcements, Donald Mclay the chairman is obviously no muppet he sold quite a few in Jan/Feb.I still hold all of my shares in Credit Corp and its still my largest share position. Indeed its my single largest investment.
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I do not have any more cash left but if I did I would be buying more Credit Corp shares. Its a rock solid company (unless you think we are heading into another great depression and unemployment goes to over 20% and therefore people cannot pay back their debts).
From a low of $7.23 today to back to $11 as I type...somebody thinks so as well.
I’m in the same boat, and I think I will deploy more capital when the ship steadies.
I find this chart incredible, not because of the rise and fall but more so in the context of member's who's opinion I value seeing it as such a strong company.
Hoping all the best
The company fundamentals have changed.But how strong a company is has nothing to do with the price over the short term, only average prices over the long term.
Imagine CCP has a huge shareholder and they decide to get out at any price on a complete whim, they can offer shares all the way down until they are flat, nothing about the companies fundamentals has changed.
The company fundamentals have changed.
A lot of the loan book is unrecoverable.
The world had gone to ****, that's the problem.
Whoops sorry, announced today:
Donald Evan McLay
DOC 16th 17th Mar
25,000 shares bought on market
$514,034
I should think so
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