Quote from Daal:
stock almost certainly wont to go $0.00, meaning it wont be worthless(because they wont file for bankrupcty)
-shareholders can sue the government and get some kind of recovery
-if the treasury tries an acquisition bill miller and other managers will try to vote the deal down(claming the regulators,bernanke, paulson recently said they were solvent)
-if its preferred, there is still 'hope' that the stock one day will be worth something when housing recovers and the government is repaid. equity is supposed to be worth the cashflow you can take out over 50-100 years
Yea, it would seem that at these price levels shorts have a lot more to lose than longs. It wouldn't take much to cause a spike up (albeit temporary)....a carefully worded PR or perhaps even a rumor.Quote from SteveD:
I don't understand why people are still short these stocks....
If you have been short since $30, take your profit and move on...your additional profit is fixed at $4.50/share for FNM????
Take your profit and move on....
Quote from SteveD:
I don't understand why people are still short these stocks....
If you have been short since $30, take your profit and move on...your additional profit is fixed at $4.50/share for FNM????
Take your profit and move on....
SteveD
Quote from GTS:
Yea, it would seem that at these price levels shorts have a lot more to lose than longs. It wouldn't take much to cause a spike up (albeit temporary)....a carefully worded PR or perhaps even a rumor.
Quote from SteveD:
I don't understand why people are still short these stocks....
If you have been short since $30, take your profit and move on...your additional profit is fixed at $4.50/share for FNM????
Take your profit and move on....
SteveD
I disagree. Shorting from $1 to $0 produces the same profit as $30 to 0 but the risk of an sudden and large move against you is much worse when you short at $1 (e.g. a sudden move to $3) vs when you short from $30 (a sudden move to $90 is not likely)Quote from Cutten:
If the risk/reward from the current price is favourable, why would you not want to make that trade?
Shorting from $30 to $0 provides exactly the same profit as shorting from $4.50 to $0 - 100%. And of course you can use puts instead.
The numerical price of a stock is irrelevant - all that matters is the % move.
Quote from GTS:
I disagree. Shorting from $1 to $0 produces the same profit as $30 to 0 but the risk of an sudden and large move against you is much worse when you short at $1 (e.g. a sudden move to $3) vs when you short from $30 (a sudden move to $90 is not likely)
The absolute numbers do matter, especially when you are down in the low single digits.