- Joined
- 21 April 2005
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- 5
ducati916 said:Happy & Snake
I take profits or exit at my profit target, which is the calculated "intrinsic value of the share.
As a minimum this must indicate at least a 50% return.
I prefer there to be a 100% return.
Every now and then you find an indicated return far greater than 100%
Did tecchies take a profit?
Most likely, they are a pretty clueless bunch after all.
jog on
d998
Thanks for your answer. I also notice you closed ISSC at a profit of 8.1%
What was the reasoning there, as I notice it doesn't quite fit in with your minimum requirement?
For you to determine a definative 30% + return you must then have established your exit figures.How youve been able to establish a timeframe of a year is interesting.
If however your valuation can vary from time to time how then can you determine a positive expectancy of 30% + ?
And if your wrong?
At what point do you determine your wrong or is that not a possiblilty? (That your valuation and indeed your determination of Goodvalue could be wrong).
__________________Duc,
That stock was over 50%! You didn`t sell.
Are you hoping, praying, or prophesising that you`ll get 100%?
What are your exit parameters exactly?
ducati916 said:For those that may be curious in regards to a Fundamental analysis;
Debt;
There is no long term debt, and non-significant bank lines due within the 12mths period.
The capitalization is therefore 100%
This provides less risk than a highly leveraged business.
Volatility;
As is the case generally with a bear price action, volatility increases even with reasonably stable business models. There is however great volatility within the earnings (-1.36)
This has in turn increased the volatility from 22% to 84% within the common.
Cash Position;
Strong, with $1.25/share of working capital
A Current ratio of 2.76
GAAP Earnings/Actual Earnings
$1.07/share as opposed to $1.51/share
Where's the cash?
In discretionary earnings.
Less $0.81/share of intangibles,
+$0.13/share within Cost of goods
+$0.82/share within Capital expenditures
These discretionary cash-flows allow the manipulation of GAAP earnings quite legitimately, allowing a safety factor for bad periods of business within the GAAP earnings, just the CapEx alone accounts for the intangibles, and is confirmed via the expansion of CapEx to depreciation.
Intrinsic Value based on GAAP earnings.................$16.63 - $21.45
Intrinsic Value based on Cash-flow earnings...........$24.00 - $30.28
jog on
d998
happytrader said:Hi Ducati
Just wondering if this portfolio would have covered this months costs of borrowings for those using leverage?
Cheers
Happytrader
Just as a comparison From 12/1 to tonight T/T has returned 15.5% on investment at 12/1.
Still reckon you should be executing a stop.
What would your return be with that stop if executed at 10% plus the opportunity cost lost of finding other out performers.
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