RE: the visa IPO....run away.
I see. I wish I could understand a bit better..
RE: the visa IPO....run away.
I have not been trading this week. I'm slammed at work and its finals week @ B school. (shudder) Not to mention I just moved into the new condo. Dealing with work/class/moving/shitty weather and customer service at movers/utility/insurance/bank/post office is a pain. I don't think I've ever had a more stressful/sleepless two weeks.
I have a short in on BIDU that i should have taken profit on when it tanked 10 bucks last Friday. But thanks to my local cable provider I can't trade while i'm at home because they refuse to get their asses out here and set up my access in a timely fashion. I'm getting killed on it today as you can see. All in due time, though.
RE: the visa IPO....run away.
I see. I wish I could understand a bit better..
So funny you say that I too have not been getting much sleep lately either. I got crushed today on aapl shorting at 124.84 and covered it at 125.80. :frown: I jumped back in and had a few 1k trades made up most of the loss then I uncovered my MSFT and sold that off too. Just a few more postions to trim and then I will cicrle waiting for the kill.
I'm glad Jan and Feb were so lucrative. Nice to know you can always sit back and let the dividends roll in.
Sorry man, I have to disagree. I think if you can get in on that deal then you should take it. From a value perspective, it is more attractive than Mastercard and and it dominates the space. There is also an obvious short supply of MA stock out there, so V can soak up some of that demand.Visa's revenue is based on processing fees they charge to use their network. In a nutshell, less consumers swiping = less $$.
Mortgage defaults are skyrocketing. Credit Card defaults will soon follow.
Though the card issuing banks will take the brunt of the charge offs, the masses in fear of a recession will quit swiping their cards. Banks will lower credit limits and increase lending standards. The masses that default on their card agreement won't have cards. See where I'm going?
Amex will suffer from defaults. Visa and MC will suffer from decreased processing fees. And lawsuits.
Run.
I'm fortunately net long (so today was nice), after this rally I'm pretty much delta neutral. Google was gettin' a little hairy for my bull put credit spread down at 370/360, so this short squeeze was a nice little boost... I'm going to ride these March puts out and just let theta and volatility kill these options prices this week.Hope you guys playing the short side did not get hurt, I got long the US$ on several pairs and did very well I do have to say a close about 12k is pretty bullish but need to see what the rest of the week brings out.
Sorry man, I have to disagree. I think if you can get in on that deal then you should take it. From a value perspective, it is more attractive than Mastercard and and it dominates the space. There is also an obvious short supply of MA stock out there, so V can soak up some of that demand.
Visa's payment network is also much larger than MA, and in fact spans the globe. It isn't just the US making transactions on their visa cards, its every developed and emerging market - think global.
I'm not saying that a dip in US consumerism won't affect their earnings, because it will - just not as bad as what you may have calculated in your analysis. What I am saying is that their valuation is already better than Mastercard and when you throw a "good" value play out there who's genre is in short supply, has a lot of hype, and has momentum buyers chompin' at the bit, you get a winning stock.
Sure, this is a crap environment for them to go public into, but I'd be very surprised if this stock didn't bring leadership to the group.
Just my $0.02 :smile:
Yeah I am keeping all the dividen paying stocks and looking at picking up some of SFI when and if it gets hammered. Did you see how it bounced off 15ish?
SFI has gotten hammered. Off 50% in the last 4 months.
The C and NLY I bought are way back in the green, and NLY even raised their dividend by 20%. I can hear the pennies trickling in....:wink:
What's your take on TMA? Think its going belly up?
LOL. Steve, you're just like me. I play $1K lotto tickets every month on some DOTM options in my personal account. I don't expect to win, but it keeps me interested while I monitor my boring OTM credit spreads. I've won a couple earnings plays (RIMM [calls], MOV [puts]) during the last 12 months but generally lose it all. The RIMM play made me a metric butt-load of points though, so it can actually pay off (probably not in the long run).I remember seeing the div on that thing was above 100% or some crazy crap like that... LOL. I also tried to see if there were some cheap options on either side but nope. I don't know I think it might be too late for TMA but as a prue 1k lotto ticket it might be worth a shot. I am guessing 90% chance of going to ZERO.
are you buying?
Anybody planning on playing the banks on the long side heading into OE?
Also long C.Long NCC/FITB/C.
GS is on my radar when this rally runs out of steam.
I agree with everything you said, except I don't mind building a long position in GS. But that is because it is only in my "retirement" account which is now terribly underweighted in financials and I benchmark it to the MSCI.The investment banks are far better positioned than commercial or retail banks. Not only do they not hold these shitty loans, but they can participate in future restructuring advisory and equity cap markets work.
That said, I still wouldn't buy any of 'em now. Not at all...
Also:
Dividends can, and will, be cut...
I'd stay invested if I were in your position. Too tough to call a bottom and a lot of equities are very cheap if we don't go into recession (or get a very mild one). You also must remember that Wall Street is 6 to 9 months forward looking, so if you think we'll have a path to resolution 18-21 months from now then you should stay put.So for the non daytrader. People with mutual funds, 401k's, etc. What do youguys think, cash out for the next 12 months?
The investment banks are far better positioned than commercial or retail banks. Not only do they not hold these shitty loans, but they can participate in future restructuring advisory and equity cap markets work.
That said, I still wouldn't buy any of 'em now. Not at all...
Also:
Dividends can, and will, be cut...
Congrats! In contrast, what was your biggest loss ever? Those are the interesting stories! :biggrin:Covered my eurjpy short for +233 pips! My bigged FX win ever! WOOOHOOO!!!
C holding up nicely, this is quite bullish considering Carlyle. I'm slightly delta positive with short condor on C, so I'm not really rooting for a big jump anyhow.SilverStone05 said:I hope C will stay pat.
Congrats! In contrast, what was your biggest loss ever? Those are the interesting stories! :biggrin: