springhill
Make the drill work for YOU
- Joined
- 20 June 2007
- Posts
- 2,555
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- 11
Looks a disaster from a technical view.
Share has been in a solid down trend since listing.
Dropped from 25c to 8c after touching 7c.
Very little trading.
If they strike paydirt, or look like it, the chart will show it well before you hear about it.
May as well put your money on a "good thing" at Flemington or Randwick.
But in the end who knows ?
(Actually only responded to the thread to practice uploading a file.)
Springhill, a quick question from a beginner; why do you look for stocks with a low liquidity? Isn't that sort of a bad thing?
Approaching ever closer to cash value/ or a bottom.
One of the things i look for.... low liquidity
Which is why i enter stocks pre-drilling of prospectively good tenaments. Attempting to pre-empt the move.
Depends on how much money you are trading with.
Common rule of thumb that a lot of traders use is ten times the amount you are trading with on a daily basis.
i.e. If investment is $5000, would like to see a daily share turnover on the market of $50,000. But some traders are happy with 5 times, some want 20.
It's an individual thing.
But it's easy to become trapped in an illiquid share that doesn't trade on a daily basis.
Can be costly.
Springhill, a quick question from a beginner; why do you look for stocks with a low liquidity? Isn't that sort of a bad thing?
It may also point to the fact the directors are careful with their money and don't issue shares like lollies.
Not sure about that. It's not the directors money. Its the stockholders.
Most directors are issued shares free of charge, or at a nominal fee which becomes payable when they sell them, as part of their deal.
They don't issue them like lollies, more like confetti.
It may also point to the fact the directors are careful with their money and don't issue shares like lollies.
Not sure about that. It's not the directors money. Its the stockholders.
Most directors are issued shares free of charge, or at a nominal fee which becomes payable when they sell them, as part of their deal.
They don't issue them like lollies, more like confetti.
And if the shareholders aren't happy with director spending, they are free to sell en masse.
I'm more than happy to continue this topic elsewhere, but we are getting away from focus on the LCR thread, this is more of a generalised discussion. No offense
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