Well get long then Tex.!We'll see 85 then 100. Stocks don't hang out at the highs that long to go lower. This will be another bear trap.
Herbalife is the NVDA of the multi-billion dollar powdered brocolli market. You can't lose!

Well get long then Tex.!We'll see 85 then 100. Stocks don't hang out at the highs that long to go lower. This will be another bear trap.

Well get long then Tex.!
Herbalife is the NVDA of the multi-billion dollar powdered brocolli market. You can't lose!![]()
Then you better stick to that Earl....I trade mostly oil and gas. I do it for a living.

Then you better stick to that Earl....
......re stocks hanging out at the highs not going lower.... tell that to the HTZ shareholders.
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Fundamentals do though.You need to take a statistics class at DePaul bud. Anecdotal data doesn't work well.
Fundamentals do though.
That may work for oil, but thats not the way stocks work. FCF is certainly one of the most important metrics when analyzing a company... what you're missing with our beloved pyramid company here... is future revenues are going to decline. Hence FCF. Hence, the multiple. Hence the stock price.You still need to understand statistics. Long term fundamentals are function of the present value of the future cash flows. But to calculate the proper discount rate to derive that PV you need to understand probability to properly value the variation in the cash flows.
That may work for oil, but thats not the way stocks work. FCF is certainly one of the most important metrics when analyzing a company... what you're missing with our beloved pyramid company here... is future revenues are going to decline. Hence FCF. Hence, the multiple. Hence the stock price.
Statistics has absolutely nothing to do with a dying business model.
OK, you're right. Companies with declining revenues, declining free cash flow, and declining earnings.... trend upward. That is until the statisticians wake up one day and realize that common sense trumps statistics.... and their stock has dropped 7%... like today.Huh? LOL.

OK, you're right. Companies with declining revenues, declining free cash flow, and declining earnings.... trend upward. That is until the statisticians wake up one day and realize that common sense trumps statistics.... and their stock has dropped 7%... like today.
Statistically speaking of course.