Drop to 225 only on 2000 shares
No worries
Drop to 225 only on 2000 shares
No worries
Dum de doo. Dum de day. Each day a step closer to my stop loss.
My largest TRA 'purchase' was after that, when the TRAHB bonds matured and I elected to have those converted to shares. This was at the conversion price of $2.85 IIRC. This was in effect a 'cash issue event' for TRA. Statistically buying in at 'cash issue time' is usually good timing. My last purchase on market was just before the last dividend. Statistically, once again, this is generally a good strategy because I would have expected the share price to slowly recover the amount of the dividend paid.
In both instances there was no share price recovery. But 'playing the odds', which is what I try to do, doesn't always come out in your favour. When that happens you have to take it on the chin. I don't regret either purchase, except with the benefit of hindsight, which no purchaser can have when they buy their shares.
I have held TRA for a few years, but a significant stake for only a few months. Despite the share price decline over the last six months. I was never going to be 'shaken out' within a few months. My purchasing of TRA shares is not finished yet either. If 'averaging across' at the current price makes sense, then I will do it. Contrary to what you think I do care about what price I sell my TRA shares at. But I don't have to sell any so I won't. And as the business cycle works its way through, I expect any on paper capital loss to disappear anyway.Quote:
Some people are retired and have a focus mainly on income and have more capital than they need so whatever approach works fine for them is their business, but I would think the vast majority on here care quite a lot about movements in the share price. Worth noting that the shares have been in a pretty steady downtrend from just on $3.90 in May 2017 to the current price and it keeps making new multi year lows. You think there might be reason for this? Like others I see no point in getting dividends if your capital gets seriously eroded in the process.
A trend will continue until it reverses. There is no guarantee a new uptrend will not reverse again. I prefer to buy at bargain prices according to my best judgement, even if I have to rewrite my bargain price level later. I don't believe any of my purchases have been risky given what has happened since I bought. Remember, unlike HGH, there has been no profit projection downgrade at TRA. It is only some analysts who have said profits will shrink and I am not sure they are right. From Turners themselves, the only statement has been that if certain market conditions occur, then lower profits can be expected.Quote:
At the risk of being dogmatic, this will be a good yield investment for most people when a new uptrend is confirmed. To buy before that is risky and the risk of further capital erosion should be obvious to anyone with even a rudimentary understanding of charts and TA.
You mean like after I bought into HGH and the share price sunk down to $1.31 and various posters predicted a cash issue and/or a cut to the dividend? I wasn't one of those that smelt that happening and it didn't!Quote:
If all people care about is the dividend then yes absolutely no argument that you are right that the lower the price the greater the yield, (assuming the business is not going so badly that future dividends may be lower which may be what the share price is suggesting).
Something is not right here and I am a little surprised a dog with your nose can't pick up the scent of trouble ahead.
SNOOPY
I didn't predict a cash issue for HGH or a dividend cut either but did manage to get a few at $1.31 and quite a lot at $1.33 :)
OI now have a very modest number of divee shares, MEL, GNE, SPK, CEN but to get anywhere near a decent income from them I would need to have a s**t load more than I have and that would stress the Bear out! :mellow::huh:
Oh and well done on what you have achieved Percy, you have my respect :)
Snoops, you may be right that technically Turners haven’t downgraded F19 earnings guidance ....just indicated that they might be lower.Quote:
Snoopy
. It is only some analysts who have said profits will shrink and I am not sure they are right. From Turners themselves, the only statement has been that if certain market conditions occur, then lower profits can be expected.
Wonder what disclosure guidelines say about such vagueness?
So statistically there’s still a high chance of them delivering $34m-$36m npbt .....yes?