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@shamus
"I’ve not made any loss. But you definitely have it’s plain to see in your chat history."
IQ level 160. You mean the post where I literally just told you how much I was down by? Wow you are some kind of sherlock Holmes.
Its a paper loss.
You SOLD at 33p. I have not sold yet. You have LOST money, I have not. Last time I can bear explaining this.
Shamus his investment is around 15k at around 65p.
But there is no need for this kind of macho man behaviour.
Our resident village plonker aka Shamus lad has a lot to learn... if you made a loss, just hop on, no point in being bitter about it! How’s the beans on toast?
I literally just told you, scroll down.
And as m00la pointed out, we are down by £0. We have not yet sold. You sold and lost money. None of us have.
Careful not to make your opinion even more worthless shamus.
The only proof we have of you doing any dealings with cine was when you bottled it and sold out at 33p. It was literally within 1p of the lowest this price has been since the breakdown on March 16th.
Since then you have constantly deramped, probably due to regret at selling so cheap. You are a special kind of deramper, you want the SP to fall so that you can buy back in and hopefully regain the chance of reaching your original share price sell point.
Even without knowing you personally, I can guarantee that you put in less than 1k, and lost about half of your money. Its small money pal, a few less takeaways per month and within a year you will have your losses back.
Shares are deffo not for you my young friend, move along.
@Shamus - If it makes you feel better saying you made money when you actually made a big and rather silly loss of your life savings then carry on fella!
No idea why you still post here Shamus, are you so paralyzed with fear from your loss that you can't move on to another stock?
@Prayfor - that’s evident, poor bitter Shamus, lost all his life savings, now eating beans on toast everyday and posting bolox to make himself feel better!
Paper loss of 4k here. If i sold at 33p like you did, I'd have cemented a paper loss of over 7k. Thank god I was born with a backbone, unlike you.
Genuinely feel bad for you, selling a day before the gradual gain of 90% must have hurt.
I'm not down by anything, I havent sold. How much you lost?
I must have posted something with value if it got Shamus the rueless wonder to post five times in as many minutes. He's like a chicken with his head cut off, just keeps going.
@boix - I see a trend in your posts about the world ending... you been chatting with NASA? Should we all be looking out for a meteor that’s headed in our direction... keeps us in loop fella!
@Shamus
On the other hand you have meatspin.com
Want to know whether a stock will rise on its earnings results? Goldman Sachs says the shares' performance going into the event could provide a valuable clue.
After performing a long-term study of pre- and post-earnings behavior, Goldman's options team found that "stocks that underperformed in the two weeks ahead of the event tended to have stronger positive reactions on earnings day."
More generally, the investment bank noticed that stocks tend to rise after reporting earnings, which means that a basic options strategy of buying calls on all stocks set to report works well. But selecting only those names that have tumbled into their big day is an even better play.
"On average, call buying on stocks that underperformed ahead of earnings profited 18 percent, which was 4 percent greater than without the filter," strategists Katherine Fogertey and John Marshall wrote in a Wednesday report.
What explains the trend?
Goldman posits that on the whole, "investors reduce stock positions ahead of an event to avoid risk, and reinvest in the stock when the uncertainty of the earnings report is removed."
Along the same lines, "those stocks that underperform the most ahead of earnings may have lower expectations, explaining their stronger positive reaction on earnings," Fogertey and Marshall continue.
Such an explanation makes sense to David Seaburg, head of equity sales trading at Cowen and Co.
“If there was extreme selling in a name and the news is not as bad as expected, there tends to be a very significant snap-back rally,” he said Wednesday on CNBC’s “Trading Nation.” “Downside sell-offs [and] massive pressure because of fear can really dislocate a name.”
And while Seaburg wouldn’t pursue a pre-earnings call-buying strategy per se, he does believe that the market as a whole could be set for a bounce.
“We’re coming into an earnings cycle where expectations are already super, super low and compressed,” he observed.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2020/09/17/second-lockdown-uk-new-rules/amp/