$NKE

I wish there was a way to do it more accurately, but as I said its a mute point. I'll sell at intrinsic in August. If I have to dump it before then, we could probably use an option pricing tool that takes into account IV, days to expiration etc. to get it close. Those thinly traded DIM options are all like that. I have traded them quite a bit. A month and a half out on a stock like that there's certainly a bit of extrinsic. I have no reason to artificially inflate the trades. It is paper after all. I'll make sure they're all time-stamped... and on the liquid ones, like MGM was today, thats pretty accurate when there's only a few pennies on the spread. I don't cheat, don't have to.

ttyl

1.602B shares outstanding (buy-backs); not 1.62B. I didn't have shares outstanding data in front of me and on my phone. I figured restricted/ESOP shares would be nominal. Boo hoo. Next time reply with an accurate figure.
 
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Just Undo It

The mayor of Kenner, a suburb of New Orleans, banned the recreation department from buying Nike products, after the company ran advertising featuring the knee-taking NFL star Colin Kaepernick. But then Ben Zahn had to do a u-turn, rescinding the order on the advice of the city attorney. Zahn: "My patriotism will not waiver, but my focus needs to be on the city of Kenner and the many great projects we have in store for our city." NBC
 
Nike Controversy

That Kaepernick campaign controversy is still going. USA Gymnastics' new interim president and CEO, Mary Bono, has apologized after people picked up on a tweet she emitted shortly after Nike started using knee-taking NFL star Colin Kaepernick in an ad campaign. The now-deleted tweet showed a crossed-out Nike logo on a pair of golf cleats. "I regret the post and respect everyone's views and fundamental right to express them," Bono said. Fox Business
 
UNC extends deal with Nike, worth more than $60M
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The University of North Carolina, Michael Jordan's alma mater, has just announced a 10-year extension of its apparel deal with Nike. According to Forbes, the new deal will average $6.27 million USD per year and will catapult UNC onto the most valuable college apparel deals in history. The publication goes on to state the Tar Heels "will average $2.87 million USD in wholesale product allotment and $3.4 million USD in cash annually from their new deal." (Hypebeast)
 
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