According to finviz AAPL has an average daily volume of about 30m shares.
Where I'm going with this is when you get such a huge buyer, he is able to move the price.
Float means the shares that are in the hands of public with no restrictions for selling or buying. Daily volume averages about 30 million shares or about 0.57% of float. If he spread his purchase over 3 months (the reporting period of SEC disclosure) you are talking about 40/(30*90) or his transactions represented 1.4% of daily volume. Not enough to push things up or down IMHO.Right, but how much of this is actually trading versus sitting for years in someone's account, or even a pension fund? It may be 0.76% of all shares, but if 80% of those shares haven't been traded in the past 6 months, then all of a sudden, this 40 million shares is a much bigger percentage of the shares available for trading. Each time they scoop up several thousand, its not like they dump it back onto the market in the afternoon. And they do this over several days or weeks, so I would think this has an affect, a fairly significant affect.
Lets assume that of the 80% of the shares are locked away. So of the 5 billion shares, maybe only 1 billion will actually trade over the next few months, and that even seems large to me. But now, those 40 million shares he bought represent 4% that he scooped up from what is trading, and like I say, I happen to think that the amount of shares that traded in the past 6 months is way less than 20%.
Normally 1.4% is well within the noise (standard deviations) of volume traded every day. However, a smart day trader with a sophisticated algorithm and a lot of computer power and able to access trading info and timeline... might pick up the small signal out of the large random noise data set. Maybe the expert day traders among us can shed some lights on this.Float means the shares that are in the hands of public with no restrictions for selling or buying. Daily volume averages about 30 million shares or about 0.57% of float. If he spread his purchase over 3 months (the reporting period of SEC disclosure) you are talking about 40/(30*90) or his transactions represented 1.4% of daily volume. Not enough to push things up or down IMHO.
However, a smart day trader with a sophisticated algorithm and a lot of computer power and able to access trading info and timeline... might pick up the small signal out of the large random noise data set.
He proved to be a genius for 40+ years.everybody is a genius in a bull market
He proved to be a genius for 40+ years.
From my understanding, at least in the later years, he also has very much control in running the companies, so he isn't exactly just a stock picker. From the articles I read, many of the companies that he buys he amalgamates, trims staff, etc, and this is part of the reason why whatever he touches seems to turn to gold. In fact, I remember even quotes going around that you don't want him buying the company that you work for because it will mean trouble ahead for the employees. Shareholders might love him, but no so much the workers.it's been a 40+ year bull market....anybody that bought dips is a genius