I hope not, plenty of evidence of the damage TS's do to portfolios. There is actually a good thread on here somewhere that comes to the conclusion that even for traders they are damaging - let alone investors.
I reckon that requires and extremley broad definition of a TS, to suggest that Buffett uses them because he sells a company if the fundamentals change sufficiently is a very, very long bow!!
The day you can make more money than the most successful investor in history you will be well entitled to suggest he totally drops his strategy and adopts one that is the opposite of everything he believes!
Hi Galumay.
Maybe not so long really - If you are wrong you get out - Universal rule really. Just the definition of wrong varies.
Maybe you missed the last line and wink.
I sort of get your point, but I think the accepted meaning of 'trailling stop" is a million miles from deciding a valuation is no longer valid. Buffett might be as poor as you and I had he used "trailling stops" in his investment career!
No, i saw it, hence the lighthearted response, maybe i needed an emoji too!
I hope the shorters have been scared off. If the price rise is due to stimulus then I want some of the same. Actually this price rise is stimulating enough and the div a bonus.
:cuckoo:The increase in Black Rock’ share holding to more than 20% of the voting power in the Company was a result of index tracking and not an intention to hold more than 20% of the voting power of the Company. Upon becoming aware of the fact that Black Rock’ share holding had reached 20.77% of the voting power of the Company, Black Rock promptly sold shares in the Company to reduce its voting power in the Company to less than 20%
Fairly sobering chart in MND's FY results today. Maybe I'm missing something because that chart alone hardly inspires a 5% rally in the stock.
Agree this news is reflected in the down trending share price but a day range of 5% is common with MND on a trading basis.Fairly sobering chart in MND's FY results today. Maybe I'm missing something because that chart alone hardly inspires a 5% rally in the stock.
Fairly sobering chart in MND's FY results today. Maybe I'm missing something because that chart alone hardly inspires a 5% rally in the stock.
When you marry it up to this, a picture of O&G helping soften the loss of revenue from iron and coal emerges. What happens if that anticipated cut in energy investment plays out?
No surprise the company expects margins to stay under pressure.
You have to give it credit though.... it's financials are deteriorating much slower than many of its peers.
No argument there. It seems, along with WOR, to be one of the few mining service companies that were beyond the cycle during the boom. I don't think there's any chance of them going bust, but the tide is about to really start running out. Interesting times to watch and learn!
I made that comment thinking this... that management has done great doing what it's supposed to do... i.e. win projects and build them profitably without stuffing up. Picking a company with great track record helps in the downturn of the cycle, but only on a relative basis. It's up to the investor to decide how they'd deal with the cycle. Hopefully I will learn a thing or 2 and be in position to benefit more from the next boom / bust cycle.
I am starting to think MND looks attractive below $6.50. But the question is how bad can it get?
That is a quantitative question. You could try to model a range of MND's revenues and operating margins to get an indication of the point at which MND's current "cheapness" begins to look expensive. But MND does not have historical earnings covering a full boom-bust cycle. It is also a different company from what it was at the beginning of the current cycle.
The analysts listed on CommSec have MND's EPS collapsing to 0.841 for FY 2016 and to 0.772 for FY 2017. But even at 0.772 that still puts MND on a current earnings yield of 12.1%. There is quite a margin of safety in that - assuming of course that things don't get too much worse beyond 0.77 per share.
May be you can take a copy of analyst's report for MND 3 years ago and see what EPS was forecasted for FY15... and compare that to what they reported...
It is not a task that lends itself to mathematical precision - more an attempt to arrive at a level where one can comfortably conclude: "Ok, from here, it might go lower - but not much lower".
Agree. And I highly doubt we are anywhere near that level.
Really? On what basis?
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