Gregmal
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Everything posted by Gregmal
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The answers to Lynch's theoretic query can be summed up in as little as 3 words and as many as one sentence. 3 words: supply and demand. bonus word: catalyst One sentence: take everything people apply to gold, and it applies to BTC but put on steroids, with one notation; replace the physical brick and mortar aspect with a digital one.
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Clustered Regularly Interspaced Short Palindromic Repeats
Gregmal replied to Gregmal's topic in General Discussion
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020-12-05/crispr-gene-editing-shows-promise-in-blood-disease-study-updates -
My guess is that when that happens it will look like some of the posts/posters on end of page 94/ start of page 95 of this thread....and that will mark another bottom. I always enjoy seeing the "I told you so's". They usually end up being a contrarian indicator.
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Haha yea. I mean if thats the thought process just short 4-5 shares of TSLA for every 100 shares of BRK/b you buy on your own and not deal with Prem's antics.
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Predicting trends(really just momentum), and especially behavior of the masses is actually quite easy once you figure out what to look for. If you are not in the markets to make money you should not be in the markets at all. If you are not able to adapt, well, you'll be like Einhorn, Pabrai, Klarman, Watsa, Tilson, Lampert, Cooperman, etc, etc, etc. I could go on and on. And while for most its comforting being in the same camp as all those guys and their current net worths, stalely quoting dated aphorisms from 50 year old books is often the biggest hurdle for folks to get over if they truly wish to consistently make money. The secret isn't quoting old books and 90 year old men, but maintaining flexibility and fluidity with respect to the current market and its conditions. Thats why Tepper is in a league of his own. "I know this is going to go up but I think its a bubble/scheme/poor valuation" is the dumbest thing I consistently hear from smart people. Either they are full of it, or just not cut out to invest. Because if you know something is going up, and you refuse to take advantage of it, thats stupidity.
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Lots of money can be made in bubbles. And realistically, people call bubbles all the time but dont really even know what they're talking about until its too late. Same with recessions. Amazon was called a bubble stock its entire existence until the bubble callers got tired and just bought it about 3 years ago and now call it a legit investment. Tesla is still called a bubble. Who cares? I'm only interested in being on the side that makes money. I get no more satisfaction or money out of getting 10% on a long term held, vs a short term trade or merger arb, a loan, or flipping potatoes....only thing that matter is the P&L...and frankly, the folks who spend a decade missing out so they can have their 6-12 months of "I was right" can have it, I'd rather make money. This is another instance where the bubble can burst, my current BTC goes to zero, and I still have made out better than folks who sat on the sidelines scoffing and doing nothing.
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Yup, and unless you have been to the sausage factory, you are prone to underestimate the inevitability of this continuing and accelerating. As more and more institutions begin to get in, which in large part simply means offering "product", this is going to get fun. Why? Because product sellers dont give one shit about price. Druckenmiller and friends might, although its hard to talk about valuations with something like this, but the institutions putting together a crypto ETF or BTC offering? $10k, $50k, $100k, $1M per coin? Makes no difference. They'll be buying as long as demand continues. Buying will beget more buying. Momo will take over. Real float is maybe 12M. I mean you dont even really have widespread, easy + direct access products for retail investors at the brokerages houses yet. And we already know this will work. Look at what indexing and ETF products did for FANGs...
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There's few aspects that you kind of have to assess on a personal comfort level but generally speaking: 1) no. It makes zero sense IMO to assess a spac IPO on an individual basis, at least in terms of when I look back at years worth of buying them. I do look at the prospectus occasionally for a few things, but there's been ones where Ive said to myself, this looks boring, and demand is great and the end result is good, and ones where I've thought, this one is really exciting, and its been a dud. Ive never seen one, period, that hasn't provided the opportunity for at least a 2-3% exit, usually within a couple months. Back in the day, a lot of the institutional folks would simply sell the warrants and then down the line redeem the shares. Warrant was considered your "profit". I think the same logic applies to post iPO. You're really just banking on the mechanics of time value on the warrants separating from the pile of cash. You can, such as recently with something like RBACU, IPOA/B?now C I think or SPNVU look at the headliners there and conclude that its probably a safe bet the thing gets a nice pop on deal announcement. RBACU I remember being able to buying for a few weeks at 10.1 or less. Same for SPNVU until a couple weeks ago. If you're in it for the risk free 2-5% then it doesnt matter. If you are looking for a kick ass risk adjusted speculation, you have to be a bit more diligent and willing to pay the premium; ie usually those are trading at 10.4-11 on the units. The big thing now is to look for anything tech or green new deal marketable and then hope for a deal. Although the market is adjusting in that now almost all the ones IPO-ing are with that focus. They used to be very diverse in terms of their purposes. Latin American Construction focused, Distressed Housing, Life Science Royalties, etc. Now the prospectuses basically just say "tech" or "energy" and when the acquisition is announcements its kind of a reach but nobody cares. 2) For allocation purposes its tough and personally I just look at my available liquidity. You can put in for $50k and get all of it, or you can get $5k filled. Depends on demand obviously. In open market, I kind of weigh what my overall allocation looks like and also what opportunities are there, along with time horizon. I have no issues dumping these on the spot if I find a real investment and need the capital. If you stay disciplined in terms of buying close to $10 you obviously have minimal downside and the rare instance where maybe you have better use for the capital and take a 1% loss is more than made up for elsewhere. You can also just kind of trade the fluctuations. If a ran a "vagina fund" as I refer to them, of mostly super conservative objective, I'd probably just trade fluctuations on spac as you can pretty routinely clip .5-1.5/2% just trading these back and forth on market and supply/demand fluctuations.
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Yea, that's basically what I do with the margin. As to the potential short term downside, I've been doing these for years and typically hold about a dozen at any given time, although with the spac boom of late they are being issued much more frequently and currently I'm sitting on closer to two dozen. I think the March meltdown is as good a proxy as any. From the ones I held, the biggest intraday decline was to 8.99 and most was 9.80s. Most of those ticks were opening trades on big gap downs and not more than a couple hundred shares. By the close all were within a % or so of the $10 mark.
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Ive never reversed course in the same day either, but if your info processing/realization of the situation happens to change I see nothing wrong with adjusting. Generally speaking I try not to have any attachment to any company, period. Which does not mean you cant have long term holds, I have plenty of them...but the only objective is to make money. I can look at GOOG or BRK or many in between a see how they do well. With managers, there's too many layers of hard to account for variables. If you're bearish and you assume FRFH is a good way to play that but he still got it wrong, well that sucks and thats an added layer of risk. If I 'm bearish I rather leave the ball in my own hands with investments/instruments that assure if I am right, that I am rewarded. FRFH has dropped the ball there a few too many times for my liking.
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I'm not up to date on my SPACs. What's the deal with PTICU? Nothing special. Last Proptech deal bought Porch which is a bit of a turd but I did alright with it. I have certain relationships with book runners for these and have been doing them for years(well before the spac mania started). Part of the deal is that its kind of pay to play. If they can count on you to take a few thousand shares you'll keep getting allocation; so I do. Its nearly impossible to lose money on just the units at a $10 price. What Ive found is there is almost a guaranteed 2-3% you'll make simply holding from IPO through day 50 when the warrants separate. So I do. Simple, and not worth overthinking.
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Took down some PTICU IPO
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Is a MicroCapClub subscription worth the investment?
Gregmal replied to Arski's topic in General Discussion
I think doing it once is worth it as you get access to a great catalogue and then after that, once having familiarized yourself with the content, what works, how folks source ideas, etc, you should be able to take the training wheels off. Just my 2c. -
Trimmed the GEOS and some more CRSP, paid down some margin and bought a little GS.
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Its really not that outrageous, is it? Information changes, you reassess. Its also how you avoid sitting on a turd like this for 10 years hoping and praying while everyone else in the market feasts...
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https://seekingalpha.com/news/3641411-cryptocurrency-indexes-coming-to-s-and-p-dow-jones-in-2021 This is one of the greatest front running opportunities Ive ever seen, happening in slow motion, right in front of everyones faces over the past 12 months and likely to continue for the next several years. The greater the popularity, the more the institutional demand, the tighter the free float gets, so on and so forth. As a wise man once said, to infinity, and beyond!
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I second GEOS. Bought a little bit and followed Gregmal into this. It's great little trade sized at 1%. That's exactly what it should be, no more no less. Trade up 15-20%, dump it. Trade down, buy a little more. Liquidation is $11, but you know what they say about cigar butts. Sheet, man. I guess you know what I did with a nice chunk of my position today then....
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I haven't had the issue yet as I've been lucky to locate and retain longer term tenants. But if I had the issue, I'd politely let the occupant know that they signed a lease that allows me(or my agents) right of entry to show it provided I give reasonable notice and if they dont like that, one of the benefits of all my units is that they have basements...go there for 15 minutes. Everything will be fine.
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Added a few more GEOS, SWKH, OPK calls, sold a few more PSTH puts, and started some DKS.
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Fidelity forced conversion of international shares to ADR
Gregmal replied to thepupil's topic in General Discussion
I was bored and made a call to one of the guys at one of the trading desks at one of my clearing firms to ask about this and the response was that most likely the firm has inventory of said security on hand. Makes sense because Ive had orders filled for tickers on others exchanges without seeing a corresponding volume bump the same way I would if say I bought 500 shares of GRIF(just an example as its something you can clearly see your own volume in) or something in the open market. -
Fidelity forced conversion of international shares to ADR
Gregmal replied to thepupil's topic in General Discussion
Ive had it happen a few times. Was a pain because with some managed accounts we have outside compliance. They are big pussies and only worry about regulatory CYA stuff. So in the couple instances, IIRC, it was with Razer, Hamilton Thorne, and Xiaomi...I put the orders in through the trade desk and we get filled on the specific exchanges. And then a day later all of which are listed in the accounts as the US pink sheet ADRs. And the compliance guys are having a heart attack because "do you know how bad it looks to regulators buying pink sheet penny stocks!!!!!".....I never really got an answer why this occurs, and even after explaining to the tards in compliance that the businesses are all legit and that the ADRs are no big deal, it still continued being a headache. So yea, no idea why it happens, but it does. When selling its just the reverse process and equally no big deal, at least when dealing with the trade desk. Not sure how simple it would be if you are putting the order in yourself as the ADR is likely trading during different hours than the ticker on its native exchange. -
I think its different when you are one of the people making the rules. I had a similar experience on a volunteer HOA board once. There was, like with many HOAs, stupid procedural rules required if one wanted to have satellite tv. The install needed to be approved by the board, through the management company. On a regular basis certain trustees, all of whom had satellites, would vote against others having it because "it was dangerous if it fell", "it doesnt look good", etc. I get to have what I want, but I get to tell you what you can have, is absolutely despicable behavior.
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It doesnt matter if they were "following the rules" at the time. Personally, I think this is unconstitutional to make these sorts of "rules". But regardless, its the entire premise. In the instance of Ms. Piggy... If its unsafe, why are you dining? And if it isn't, why are you banning folks from doing it and shutting down businesses?
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Kuppy said it better than I! LMFAO
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Sold 1/3 of BEAM, for the third time, in less than 3 months, and still have more than 2/3 of my original position! Math!