The Babe's Trades

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  • riverbabe
    Senior Member
    • May 2005
    • 3373

    Originally posted by Deaddog View Post
    Gotta register to read the whole thing.
    Too Bad!!!
    Actually, you don't and this was publically published this AM.

    James Altucher: Why The Stock Market Is A Sucker's Game Right Now (And What Stocks I Own)
    Apr 30 2013, 11:53 | 148 comments | includes: CGIX.OB, CRRS.OB, NEON, PTRC.OB, TROV, VRNG
    Disclosure: I am long CRRS.OB, PTRC.OB, VRNG, NEON, CGIX.OB, TROV. (More...)

    People have called me a "perma-bull" forever. Mish Shedlock called me a "wacko." Zerohedge has called me insane. Nouriel Roubini has laughed in my face. My daughters still quote Don Luskin when he was on CNBC shaking his head and saying, "James, James, James..." while laughing after I said the market was going to hit new highs.

    Well, the market has hit new highs. That's ok for those guys. I'm sure they all do well on their newsletters. I have no newsletter. I only invest with my own money. I live and die in the markets and I don't depend on anyone else.

    Is there a reason to change my mind? Not really. Eventually, the market will be higher than it is now.

    But for the first time in a long time, I'm not a super bull on the overall market (although I like certain smaller stocks, see below).

    The overall market (let's say, the S&P 500) price is a function of supply and demand. I know people know this from Economics 101 and they view this as a micro-economic principle but it's also macro-economic. It's not only the price of Oranges determined by supply and demand, the aggregated price of every company in the world is also determined by this.

    So what is "Supply" in terms of the stock market? Answer: It's the total number of shares outstanding.

    What is "Demand"? It's the appetite to buy shares.

    Supply is going down. This is both a good thing and a bad thing.

    The good: Companies have enormous profit margins and are using their excess cash to buy back shares. This, of course, reduces shares outstanding. When companies with $100 billion in cash like Apple buy back shares, this reduces supply for the big mutual funds, etc.

    Also good: When supply goes down, price goes up. This is why the stock market right now is at all-time highs.

    But then there is the BAD: I am seeing first hand within the private companies that I am invested in: nobody wants to go public. How come? Private markets are valuing companies higher than the public is.

    That's really funny: the PUBLIC is actually smarter than the supposed smart money. Look at Facebook (FB), Groupon, and Zynga (ZNGA) for examples.

    And even the companies that want to go public: it's pretty damn hard. I can't quote you statistics. I only see this because I'm getting all the calls from brokers. If a broker is calling me to dump their little shitty IPO, it means they can't get institutions in.

    How come?

    Demand: Everyone is still pretty nervous.

    Someone asked me the other day: when will this recession be over?

    Guess what? It's been over for four years.

    But people don't seem to know that?

    How come? Because they feel like shit. Because people are getting jobs less than what their skillset suggests they should get. Because people are taking jobs for pay that doesn't match what they would've gotten ten years ago. Underemployment, as this is called, is supposedly around 20% but my guess is it's more like 30-40%.

    Things feel like they suck.

    Nobody feels like the stock market is back. Or that housing is starting to creep up. Or that America is starting to insource manufacturing again because globalization has crept up prices worldwide.

    People look at their crappy jobs and salaries and say, "I don't feel so good". And so they get a scarcity mentality and don't want to buy shares.

    I don't blame them.

    Meanwhile, supply is going to flatten out. There's only so much stock that people can buy.

    So Demand will probably remain the same, but now Supply will stop going down.

    What happens then? Stocks go down. Or struggle to stay afloat.

    My solution: I am buying smaller stocks where I am not competing for information against massive hedge funds and mutual funds that do everything they can to cheat the system (insider trading, manipulative trading, high frequency trading, special access to secondaries, etc).

    I also invest in long-term demographic trends that I believe in. These companies will do well regardless of the overall stock market. It's why microcaps always outperform large caps in the long run.

    So I'm invested in

    Petro River (PTRC.OB) - America is the new Middle East in terms of oil. All of the oil that we stopped drilling for in 1971 because the technology was not there, we are now drilling for. Fracking is here to stay and will drill up the several billion barrels of oil underneath the Mississippi Lime.

    Corporate Resources (CRRS.OB) - I'm on the Board of Directors so can't say much. Needless to say, no company wants to deal with the red tape of Obamacare. It's a nightmare. Even Democrats now admit it. Google it. I'm not political. I haven't voted since 1991. But a total of zero companies want to deal with Obamacare. So what do they do? They fire everyone and outsource to temp staffing companies. That's why I like being on the board. So I can see first-hand what is happening in this industry.

    Trovagene (TROV) and Cancer Genetics (CGIX.OB) - We all know three things about healthcare over the next 10-30 years:

    - taxes are going up on medical devices. So this will be detrimental to the 77 million aging baby boomers who have just started retiring.

    - "prevention is the cure." People have ignored this for the past century but they can't anymore. Lifespans have gone up. People need good diagnostics to prevent cancer and other diseases that are common killers. I can go into details on why these two are the best and I will at some point (I already have repeatedly on TROV when it was half the price it is now).

    - Lifespans are going up. The average lifespan was 61 60 years ago. Now it's 79 and going higher. So people will need medical care. Since people can no longer afford medical care, they will need prevention. The FDA, drug companies, insurance companies, and the government, have made medical care too expensive. So diagnostics, which are easier to get approval for, are the answer.

    Vringo (VRNG), Neonode (NEON) - I own these for the patent plans which I've described in multiple articles.

    And that's it. My wife owns a handful of other big cap stocks but in small amounts.

    What I don't do: I never daytrade. I used to and I used to make a good living at it. But in the link above I describe why I don't.

    And I will not own the broader market here. It's a criminal enterprise. That's a sucker's game at this point.

    Additional disclosure: I have no intention of selling any of these stocks any time soon.

    (This is the link to "It's a criminal..." http://www.jamesaltucher.com/2012/03...n-wall-street/)
    Last edited by riverbabe; 05-01-2013, 12:33 PM.

    Comment

    • Deaddog
      Senior Member
      • Oct 2010
      • 740

      Thanks RB.
      It is hard to find the Truth when you start your search with a preconceived notion of what the Truth will be.

      Comment

      • antioch6
        Senior Member
        • Apr 2013
        • 411

        Yes!!!

        Originally posted by riverbabe View Post
        Actually, you don't and this was publically published this AM.

        James Altucher: Why The Stock Market Is A Sucker's Game Right Now (And What Stocks I Own)
        Apr 30 2013, 11:53 | 148 comments | includes: CGIX.OB, CRRS.OB, NEON, PTRC.OB, TROV, VRNG
        Disclosure: I am long CRRS.OB, PTRC.OB, VRNG, NEON, CGIX.OB, TROV. (More...)

        People have called me a "perma-bull" forever. Mish Shedlock called me a "wacko." Zerohedge has called me insane. Nouriel Roubini has laughed in my face. My daughters still quote Don Luskin when he was on CNBC shaking his head and saying, "James, James, James..." while laughing after I said the market was going to hit new highs.

        Well, the market has hit new highs. That's ok for those guys. I'm sure they all do well on their newsletters. I have no newsletter. I only invest with my own money. I live and die in the markets and I don't depend on anyone else.

        Is there a reason to change my mind? Not really. Eventually, the market will be higher than it is now.

        But for the first time in a long time, I'm not a super bull on the overall market (although I like certain smaller stocks, see below).

        The overall market (let's say, the S&P 500) price is a function of supply and demand. I know people know this from Economics 101 and they view this as a micro-economic principle but it's also macro-economic. It's not only the price of Oranges determined by supply and demand, the aggregated price of every company in the world is also determined by this.

        So what is "Supply" in terms of the stock market? Answer: It's the total number of shares outstanding.

        What is "Demand"? It's the appetite to buy shares.

        Supply is going down. This is both a good thing and a bad thing.

        The good: Companies have enormous profit margins and are using their excess cash to buy back shares. This, of course, reduces shares outstanding. When companies with $100 billion in cash like Apple buy back shares, this reduces supply for the big mutual funds, etc.

        Also good: When supply goes down, price goes up. This is why the stock market right now is at all-time highs.

        But then there is the BAD: I am seeing first hand within the private companies that I am invested in: nobody wants to go public. How come? Private markets are valuing companies higher than the public is.

        That's really funny: the PUBLIC is actually smarter than the supposed smart money. Look at Facebook (FB), Groupon, and Zynga (ZNGA) for examples.

        And even the companies that want to go public: it's pretty damn hard. I can't quote you statistics. I only see this because I'm getting all the calls from brokers. If a broker is calling me to dump their little shitty IPO, it means they can't get institutions in.

        How come?

        Demand: Everyone is still pretty nervous.

        Someone asked me the other day: when will this recession be over?

        Guess what? It's been over for four years.

        But people don't seem to know that?

        How come? Because they feel like shit. Because people are getting jobs less than what their skillset suggests they should get. Because people are taking jobs for pay that doesn't match what they would've gotten ten years ago. Underemployment, as this is called, is supposedly around 20% but my guess is it's more like 30-40%.

        Things feel like they suck.

        Nobody feels like the stock market is back. Or that housing is starting to creep up. Or that America is starting to insource manufacturing again because globalization has crept up prices worldwide.

        People look at their crappy jobs and salaries and say, "I don't feel so good". And so they get a scarcity mentality and don't want to buy shares.

        I don't blame them.

        Meanwhile, supply is going to flatten out. There's only so much stock that people can buy.

        So Demand will probably remain the same, but now Supply will stop going down.

        What happens then? Stocks go down. Or struggle to stay afloat.

        My solution: I am buying smaller stocks where I am not competing for information against massive hedge funds and mutual funds that do everything they can to cheat the system (insider trading, manipulative trading, high frequency trading, special access to secondaries, etc).

        I also invest in long-term demographic trends that I believe in. These companies will do well regardless of the overall stock market. It's why microcaps always outperform large caps in the long run.

        So I'm invested in

        Petro River (PTRC.OB) - America is the new Middle East in terms of oil. All of the oil that we stopped drilling for in 1971 because the technology was not there, we are now drilling for. Fracking is here to stay and will drill up the several billion barrels of oil underneath the Mississippi Lime.

        Corporate Resources (CRRS.OB) - I'm on the Board of Directors so can't say much. Needless to say, no company wants to deal with the red tape of Obamacare. It's a nightmare. Even Democrats now admit it. Google it. I'm not political. I haven't voted since 1991. But a total of zero companies want to deal with Obamacare. So what do they do? They fire everyone and outsource to temp staffing companies. That's why I like being on the board. So I can see first-hand what is happening in this industry.

        Trovagene (TROV) and Cancer Genetics (CGIX.OB) - We all know three things about healthcare over the next 10-30 years:

        - taxes are going up on medical devices. So this will be detrimental to the 77 million aging baby boomers who have just started retiring.

        - "prevention is the cure." People have ignored this for the past century but they can't anymore. Lifespans have gone up. People need good diagnostics to prevent cancer and other diseases that are common killers. I can go into details on why these two are the best and I will at some point (I already have repeatedly on TROV when it was half the price it is now).

        - Lifespans are going up. The average lifespan was 61 60 years ago. Now it's 79 and going higher. So people will need medical care. Since people can no longer afford medical care, they will need prevention. The FDA, drug companies, insurance companies, and the government, have made medical care too expensive. So diagnostics, which are easier to get approval for, are the answer.

        Vringo (VRNG), Neonode (NEON) - I own these for the patent plans which I've described in multiple articles.

        And that's it. My wife owns a handful of other big cap stocks but in small amounts.

        What I don't do: I never daytrade. I used to and I used to make a good living at it. But in the link above I describe why I don't.

        And I will not own the broader market here. It's a criminal enterprise. That's a sucker's game at this point.

        Additional disclosure: I have no intention of selling any of these stocks any time soon.

        (This is the link to "It's a criminal..." http://www.jamesaltucher.com/2012/03...n-wall-street/)
        Agree with this post all the way!

        Comment

        • riverbabe
          Senior Member
          • May 2005
          • 3373

          Thanks, antioch6.

          Comment

          • riverbabe
            Senior Member
            • May 2005
            • 3373

            neon

            Just took another 8.21% out of NEON in one day. (Bot 5.24, sld 5.66 av).

            Comment

            • riverbabe
              Senior Member
              • May 2005
              • 3373

              Just took another 8.83% out of NEON. Bot 5.099, Sold 5.55.

              Comment

              • tiedyed1
                Senior Member
                • Jun 2009
                • 599

                look at VPHM

                Originally posted by tiedyed1 View Post
                I'm still in ARNA and holding a bit longer. (As previously mentioned if I had my full position i would have sold off half already; but my sights are on $11.40.) Many biotechs showed super strength today (i.e. look at VPHM which I mentioned earlier, up 8% today).

                -Adam

                1/18 update: grabbed the profit and got out of ARNA at 10.62. (I saw 11 in sight and got greedy but stopped out and happy it did.) I am decent at spotting breakouts but knowing when to get out is always the toughest for me.
                River, take a good look at VPHM. I have owned this for quite some time and continue to accumulate it. Big pop on big pharma eyeing an acquisition, but I see a significant upside without a buyout (and would actually prefer to keep holding it for another 10 years).

                VPHM is not a speculative one hit wonder and has a numerous money makers just starting to be recognized.

                -Adam

                p.s. on a whole separate topic, anyone looking to get back into ARNA at these (<$7.50) levels? I do not see the Consumer Report article holding that much weight (pun intended) when it comes down to the consumer who will want BELVIQ. Thoughts?

                Comment

                • riverbabe
                  Senior Member
                  • May 2005
                  • 3373

                  Took another 12+% out of NEON yesterday in one day. Still swing trading it. Bot @ 7.10 this AM. Now at 7.39. Early HOD @ 7.73. Volatile but not boring.

                  Comment

                  • tiedyed1
                    Senior Member
                    • Jun 2009
                    • 599

                    Vphm

                    Originally posted by tiedyed1 View Post
                    River, take a good look at VPHM. I have owned this for quite some time and continue to accumulate it. Big pop on big pharma eyeing an acquisition, but I see a significant upside without a buyout (and would actually prefer to keep holding it for another 10 years).

                    VPHM is not a speculative one hit wonder and has a numerous money makers just starting to be recognized.

                    -Adam

                    ViroPharma Said to Hire Goldman Amid Interest From Sanofi
                    ViroPharma full value up to $52 per share in right situation, says Deutsche Bank

                    Well it looks like Big Pharma is now in play and probably going to buy VPHM. This was not my preference but am not complaining!

                    -Adam
                    tiedyed1

                    Comment

                    • riverbabe
                      Senior Member
                      • May 2005
                      • 3373

                      tiedyed, completely missed your post on VPHM. Really sorry. But big congrats on today's HUGE GAIN!

                      Comment

                      • billyjoe
                        Senior Member
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 9014

                        River, I always read "The Babe's Trades" at least I thought I did. I missed the NEON posts. Glad you are doing well. I buy a basket of stocks and really can never predict which ones will do the best. Maybe it's those with the least hoopla. My 3 latest dandies BWEN +59.85%, BLOX +47.01%, and MX +42.83%. Someone mentioned them, I researched, bought them, and got lucky. Really didn't have great hopes for any of these just wanted a gain.

                        --------------------billy

                        Comment

                        • mimo_100
                          Senior Member
                          • Sep 2003
                          • 1784

                          Originally posted by billyjoe View Post
                          River, I always read "The Babe's Trades" at least I thought I did. I missed the NEON posts. Glad you are doing well. I buy a basket of stocks and really can never predict which ones will do the best. Maybe it's those with the least hoopla. My 3 latest dandies BWEN +59.85%, BLOX +47.01%, and MX +42.83%. Someone mentioned them, I researched, bought them, and got lucky. Really didn't have great hopes for any of these just wanted a gain.

                          --------------------billy
                          Billy,

                          You wrote ... "Someone mentioned them" ...

                          Too bad you didn't record who it was - I would love to track their current/future picks.
                          Tim - Retired Problem Solver

                          Comment

                          • billyjoe
                            Senior Member
                            • Nov 2003
                            • 9014

                            mimo, I've got to keep better records as to what strategy was used to find these stocks. When a stock is touted by anyone I look at the chart and the fundies and usually don't buy. I bought a years membership in Morpheus Trading, a year of premium research from Zacks ($199), and month to month from Vectorvest ($59/month). FINVIZ, Dividend Channel, and BigCharts are my favorite free sites. MX was mentioned by Morpheus as a possible set up in early May. They never bought it. I really liked the chart and fundies. Bought May 15th at 16, now 22.86. BWEN was also mentioned by Morpheus. I don't know if they bought it since it's not on current holdings and not far enough back to show up in their archives. I bought 8/7 at 4.80 now 7.69. BLOX was sent to me in an e-mail during a free trial at Zacks. Then I also found it at Vectorvest but I didn't keep track of the screen they were using at the time. Bought BLOX 7/16 at 30.20 now 44.49. One of my favorite current screens is for DMA above 10 day and 65 day with uptrending earnings at 9 month high as well as RT at 9 month high. Being in the top 3 in industry group also helps.
                            Also I try to keep stops no higher than 8%. With a basket of stocks there's usually something to dump but not much lately. Sometimes I'll sell a laggard just to get $$ to buy a hot prospect.
                            Have only sold 4 stocks in last 2 months and hold 52 positions in 33 stocks with 44 positive and 8 negative. Around 30 positions are in high div. payers that are long term holdings. Most of the shorter term trades are in my wife's account. Maybe that's why she is within $100 of her all time high and I'm a few thousand away from my high of May 22nd.

                            -------------------billy

                            Comment

                            • mimo_100
                              Senior Member
                              • Sep 2003
                              • 1784

                              Originally posted by billyjoe View Post
                              mimo, I've got to keep better records as to what strategy was used to find these stocks. When a stock is touted by anyone ....e that's why she is within $100 of her all time high and I'm a few thousand away from my high of May 22nd.

                              -------------------billy
                              billy,
                              I have the same record-keeping dilemma that you have. I recently purchased a pocket-sized spiral notebook from the Dollar Store (where everything is a dollar). I date and record prospective stocks and where they came from, along with the current price. It is kind of working. I like reading the Morpheus thread here. Their explanations are simple and thorough.


                              I will look at the screens. What is RT? I assume you look at a negative DMA, correct?

                              Tim
                              Tim - Retired Problem Solver

                              Comment

                              • billyjoe
                                Senior Member
                                • Nov 2003
                                • 9014

                                mimo, The RT is a proprietary number ranging on a 1-2 scale from VV that measures timing. I was mistaken, the DMA is actually a simple MA based on the stop price that is continually raised as the stock's price increases.

                                ----------------billy

                                Comment

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