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i agree in general , and have learned to be suspicious when a small under-performer hires a 'high-profile ' exec. , but investing is also about spotting the actual opportunity as well .
one factor that makes the Australian sector hard is the Australian Government keeps taking a slab of the steak ( from the cash-cow ) via selling wireless broadband spectrum , whilst dirtying the pool with the NBN@divs4ever I personally think the telco sector is one of the hardest sectors to do business in, a bit like the electrical power sector, a semi public service so highly regulated.
Telstra has shown how difficult it is , they still are no where near their final tranche float price and that is with a huge taxpayer injection through the NBN.
As I said only my personal opinion, but when all the competitors are selling the same product, it makes it hard for them to sell themselves other than on price, which ends up eating into their profits. Its just not a sector I can get excited about.
Just my opinion.
HOWEVER i do see gaps that a clever , well-run player could expand into ( but does Australia have a management them left that will want to negotiate the regulatory landscape as it currently exists . )
LOLOne always needs to assess if a company is 'investment grade'. When I was a young and beeuutiful lass, I would assess a bloke as in is he a long-termer, a mid-range squeeze or just good for a quick slap and tickle? This is what I do with stocks as well.
As far as TLS is concerned, I hold but I can see TLS is more your mid-range squeeze. I did a swing trade calc on it and have assessed a price and put a for-sale-sign out on it. There is a very long term falling overhead-trendline coming up shortly and it pretty much matched the swing trade calc. I think that is as far as it will go and have priced it for sale just under that line. If I am wrong, then nothing lost, I can go back in if it succeeds to maintain a level above the falling trendline. I doubt it though, I reckon it is headed in the same direction as AGL and all the other shorted-to-death stocks.
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Well, for what this is worth, when I was assessing the chart for ABB in preparation for buying it, my son who is an IT programmer/coder of clever stuff I can't understand, like doing stuff for the defence department, wandered in to home, saw what I was looking at and said it was a really excellent company but with limitations. I looked at him like WTF would you know about it....he said, "that is all part of what I do". OK, I said tell me about it. He said he felt its customer service was going to fall over as they were getting so big. Right I said, they just took over OTW would that make a difference...? Certainly looks like that may be the answer, he said.
That was not a deciding factor as I only buy from what I see on the chart but it made me feel quite comfy about it.
I have been with Westpac for some time but enough is enough. I have switched to Nabtrade for a few reasons:Currently, Westpac trading is down, guess they are taking the opportunity to blow some dust out of the servers.
sorry but i don't do that anymore , they went with different sub-contractors , and i am retired ( so i can't tell you if your theory is correct )Currently, Westpac trading is down, guess they are taking the opportunity to blow some dust out of the servers. Hopefully later today or perhaps tomorrow I will put up the little window doovie. However, all are doing OK, so far.
I have been with Westpac for some time but enough is enough. I have switched to Nabtrade for a few reasons:
so now I can have a good look at your OOO.
- WP Trader Pro has too much downtime due to Java problems;
- I have felt guilty using the complimentary Viewpoint from my full time broker while trading mainly on WP online;
- the NAB resources are far better than those on WP;
- NAB has Viewpoint which does not rely on Java and I can use on other platforms
I long held the same view, that the Weekend Warriors as you call them would work out orders over the weekend, then place their bids at 2-3 percent above last close (for buy orders) just to make sure they were filled. My view extended to the rest of the week, where I thought end of day traders would get home from work, and place their orders so that they would be filled at the next open, again at 2-3 percent above last close.No! I bloody traded on a Monday, I hate trading on a Monday, it is when all the weekend warriors have got themselves all excited and pushed up prices. I know better, so smacked myself for the rest of the week.
A long time ago, I gave up trying to either buy at the bottom or the top. If I am in the mood to buy and the price looks OK on the chart, I poke go. More often than not a day or two after, the price goes lower. I really couldn't give a toss as I have bought on a chart shape where I felt there was a potential upside, so if I have to suck up a bit of pain, so be it. I just can't be bothered obsessing.Maybe I think too short term. Yes, they are bad fills at the open, but after a few days or weeks the stock is either sold or the fill is forgotten.
Stockybailz, thank you very much for offering a suggestion, I love looking at new things and it may well have been something I had not considered, so I really appreciate your comment.Hi Ann, appreciate what your doing, and good to see that your stocks are improving, but can I please suggest a 30 weekly ema moving average. i find that stock moving above this line should be considered Bullish. Stocks below at a loss. This is probable as a long term position and i thought it may be something you would like to try as a support base line.
Anyway keep up the good work, I wish you all the best.
Ann thanks for the heads up, appreciate it. Good to see you are well accomplished in your trading. Got me thinking, I should consider reading those books. I'm sure others reading this thread would be more then interested. Thanks again. (Insight to technical chart trading)Stockybailz, thank you very much for offering a suggestion, I love looking at new things and it may well have been something I had not considered, so I really appreciate your comment.
...and I appreciate your contribution, who knows how many people are now going to look at the 30wema, and possibly Weinstein, awesome! Please come back any time.Ann thanks for the heads up, appreciate it. Good to see you are well accomplished in your trading. Got me thinking, I should consider reading those books. I'm sure others reading this thread would be more then interested. Thanks again. (Insight to technical chart trading)
The next one is CKF. I found this on a list of holdings of VHY back in 2020. The chart didn't inspire me, it looked like it was in a consolidation phase, I was after a bit of growth along with some divies back then. The next time I looked back in June '21 it looked like a bit of a bubble too far from the 200dsma. Recently I looked at it again and I see it plummeting back toward the 200dsma and the rising support line from mid March '21. So far it has displayed higher lows and higher highs, works for me I thought, so worked out a price I wanted to bid $12.05 just above the rising support and 200dsma. Later in the afternoon, it filled. Good, I thought, then I saw the news reports about KFC having supply chain problems and not having a full menu. Awesome I thought, here comes d'pain. It may well fall to the pivot level of $11.00. Tuff, I will just suck it up, it will pay me some rent with its divie while I wait for a recovery.
Although perhaps it will hold the 200dsma, let's see.
I should add this is one of your Warren Buffet sort of stocks for me, in as much as I like the product very much as it is the most protein intensive T/A food, too much starch makes me really crook, so having KFC is a really tasty treat which does no harm.
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