Bought 2 blocks at 17.43 on an oversold hourly ahead of the 9am research meeting occuring at Santa Clara Headquarters.
Quote from Jack Haddad, MD:
It is very evident now that Intel's price cuts are hurting AMD. Intel has priced its Pentium D and Celeron products below AMD's Athlon and Sempron. That said, vendors remain confident about a seasonal pick-up during the third-quarter due largely to Intel's new processor and platform launches, as well as price cuts.
Furthermore, Intel sold 14.7% of the world's microchips last year, according to Gartner, almost twice the share of No. 2 ranked Samsung Electronics and exponentially more than the 1.7% global share that AMD held. It will spend $5.6 billion on R&D this year, compared with $5.1 billion last year and $4.8 billion for 2004. AMD's R&D spending is expected to be around $1.1 billion this year, flat with last year and up from $934 million for 2004.
I understand the frustration that longs have experienced since January 17,2006 (When INTC surprised the street by dissapointing on both revenues an earnings without a prior warning). But, the stock is so unvervalued and cheap now that every dip is a buying opportunity.
Quote from Jack Haddad, MD:
I view today's upside as a chance to take out the 2.10 resistance. If 2.10 is taken out, the stock is in good shape to test the next resistance of 2.60. Thereafter, it looks like that gap on March 27, 2006 from 3.57 to 3.37 may fill and propel the stock higher. Shorterm is very critical...At 1.85, it appear that the stock closed on an inflection point. I would watch it very carefully tomorrow during the first 30min of trading.
Quote from Jack Haddad, MD:
I view today's upside as a chance to take out the 2.10 resistance. If 2.10 is taken out, the stock is in good shape to test the next resistance of 2.60. Thereafter, it looks like that gap on March 27, 2006 from 3.57 to 3.37 may fill and propel the stock higher. Shorterm is very critical...At 1.85, it appear that the stock closed on an inflection point. I would watch it very carefully tomorrow during the first 30min of trading.
Quote from cnms2:
I noticed that you wrote at least about another stock the same thing: "every dip is a buying opportunity". The problem is that you need to stay on a pile of cash to keep adding when these opportunities happen, like now when the market took a dive. You fill up and can't take more and even better "opportunities".
Would you care to share what positions do you have in your portfolio now, what's your investments' time horizon, what percentage of your account is in cash?