These common spelling mistakes cost investors millions each year
Automotive behemoth Ford Motor will release it’s Q3 earnings on October 24th, and when it does, countless investors will scramble to purchase shares of stock ticker “FORD.”
Only one problem…
“This is not the FORDyou’re looking for”
“FORD” is the ticker symbol for “Forward Industries,” a manufacturer of “carrying cases for medical monitoring systems” worth $10m -- not the$40B car companylisted under ticker symbol (F).
And we thought the newsletter industry was niche…
In fact,experts estimatethat this mistake costs investors an average $1m in trading fees alone. Most investors don’t even catch the mistake until at least a week later, and some never correct it at all, “they just rationalized the purchase as still being a good investment,”one researcher writes.
Other notable ticker travesties:
Even “robo investors” make mistakes
Big institutions that rely on algorithms to watch for big movements in stocks often get tripped up when a bunch of poor proofreaders dump money into the wrong companies.
Computers don’t askwhya bunch of investors are suddenly optimistic about a defunct stereo seller, they just execute. That means the responsibility falls on investors to “spellcheck” their holdings, whether they’re a basement daytrader, or a hedge fund hotshot.
Automotive behemoth Ford Motor will release it’s Q3 earnings on October 24th, and when it does, countless investors will scramble to purchase shares of stock ticker “FORD.”
Only one problem…
“This is not the FORDyou’re looking for”
“FORD” is the ticker symbol for “Forward Industries,” a manufacturer of “carrying cases for medical monitoring systems” worth $10m -- not the$40B car companylisted under ticker symbol (F).
And we thought the newsletter industry was niche…
In fact,experts estimatethat this mistake costs investors an average $1m in trading fees alone. Most investors don’t even catch the mistake until at least a week later, and some never correct it at all, “they just rationalized the purchase as still being a good investment,”one researcher writes.
Other notable ticker travesties:
- HP vs. HPE: “HP” stands forHelmerich & Payne, a drilling rig company, not Hewlett Packard (which trades under “HPQ”), or Hewlett Packard Enterprises, which trades under “HPE.”
- ZOOM vs. ZM: “ZOOM” is an obscure Chinese wireless company.“ZM”is a $25B video conferencing platform.
- TWRTQ vs. TWTR: “TWTRQ” is a bankrupt home entertainment retailer whose stockspiked1000% in 2013 after Twitter IPO’d under ticker symbol “TWTR.”
Even “robo investors” make mistakes
Big institutions that rely on algorithms to watch for big movements in stocks often get tripped up when a bunch of poor proofreaders dump money into the wrong companies.
Computers don’t askwhya bunch of investors are suddenly optimistic about a defunct stereo seller, they just execute. That means the responsibility falls on investors to “spellcheck” their holdings, whether they’re a basement daytrader, or a hedge fund hotshot.
