ArchAngel,
thanks for the long explanation -- very informative.
but i stand behind my point: there is a fundamental difference between buying stock and buying a futures contract. after you have bought stock you actually own part of the company. after buying a futures contract you "own" nothing -- you have merely entered a contract with some anonymous seller. that's the very reason you don't have to "borrow" futs to short them.
i just picked an ambiguous term ("intrinsic value") to describe the difference -- my bad.
i'm i right or i'm i right?
- jaan
thanks for the long explanation -- very informative.
but i stand behind my point: there is a fundamental difference between buying stock and buying a futures contract. after you have bought stock you actually own part of the company. after buying a futures contract you "own" nothing -- you have merely entered a contract with some anonymous seller. that's the very reason you don't have to "borrow" futs to short them.
i just picked an ambiguous term ("intrinsic value") to describe the difference -- my bad.
the classical explanation is that is that i'm buying the assets (book value) PLUS all expected future dividends of that company, in present value. for example, if a company has expected revenues of $1m a year and zero assets, then its market capitalisation (i hope i'm not using wrong term again!) should be around $20m, given 5% inflation. therefore, given the assets, share price, float, and inflation % you can derive the current poular expectation of company's future profits.Originally posted by ArchAngel
So when you buy JNPR @ 24 when it has a dubious $2.55/share book value (dubious because their balance sheet has a lot of worthless "asset" value on it), revenue of $3/share, and marginal to negligible net income - what's the real "intrinsic value" you're buying for your $24?
i'm i right or i'm i right?

- jaan