It would have been nice if I had purchased that stock tomorrow morning
instead of today.
You know, that's true 50% of the time...
But a word of advice - NEVER buy right before earnings or a major announcement. It'll kick your ass almost every time. A few weeks ahead is usually okay, or right after depending on the snap decisions by the market, but never the day before. All the optimists have driven the stock too high and all the pessimists will bail the day after and kill you. Only when the news is good enough to turn pessimists into optimists do things turn out okay.
Apple is a particularly touchy stock. They're still the 4 year old kid in the lion cage. Doesn't matter how smart or well-equipped the kid is or how toothless that lion looks, you still expect the kid to become lunch - so every little movement on either side makes the markets pulse quicken. Holding Apple for less than 6 months is really asking to lose money, IMO.
I don't mean to be a jerk? But why IN THE HELL would you buy Apple stock? Anybody who spent 2 minutes learning how to invest would know better. Since my brain wants to explode I'll just tell you the stupid version "Buy low, sell high"
not "buy high, and hope for higher" That's what suckers do.
Another phrase common in trading circles to go with that one is: Buy on the hype, sell on the news.
Two points to note regarding this reported fall.
Firstly, even fairly small volumes done in after hours trading can skew the price, especially if there are few market makers quoting. Chances are that one of the large funds unloaded some Apple stock and moved the price quoted by whoever was landed with it. In which case they needed to offload it pronto and hence slashed their price. Tomorrow will give a more accurate reflection of the true reaction to the news.
Secondly, it's easy to say: buy low and sell high. In practice it is somewhat more difficult especially as every event related to a company is likely to affect it's future earnings and hence value. For all you know tomorrow's announcement may bring some wonder device that doubles Apple's earning potential. In which case yesterday's price may seem very low in comparison.
webmail, I expect you're still waiting for the price to drop back to $6. Well I wouldn't hold your breath.
i'd go in now if i can get $46 and then sell when it hits $60 at the end of january, selling it pre-macworldsf2006 maybe... hmm... now to convince my dad.
It was at $46 a month ago, what's the issue folks? It will crawl back up.
When a video iPod isn't released tomorrow I expect it will fall a bit more.
You have to remember the stock price isn't decided by what happened today, or yesterday, or what will happen tomorrow - the $56 that the stock was trading at a few days ago already included the 'much better than expected' performance this quarter, but Apple only delivered 'better than expected' performance, so it goes.
So, we're back at August levels... not all THAT bad. Really sucks to lose 10% (on top of the past week), but it gives you an idea of how quick AAPL has been moving up in the past month. It'll probably recover some tomorrow, and three months from now this will just be a bump on the road.
Guess the iPod lineup had stagnated a bit over the past 6+ months (I know I've personally been waiting for that 80GB update), I think that was the biggest factor to less-than-stellar sales, people have been "holding out". That seems to be a problem for Apple, people want the latest and the greatest, and they're willing to wait (a bit). That said, I think the nano, along with a refresh of the HD based iPods AND whatever tomorrow ushers in, will put AAPL in a great position for Q1. Mac sales might be a little soft next Q, as once again, people will be holding out for the Mactel updates, but switchers should help it balance out.
Apple's looking good... sequential growth that any company on the street would give a left nut for.
-To infinity and beyond
(edit) looks like TS just jumped on the iPod video rumor... who's knows we could be back at $52 by tomorrow's close
have you guys looked at the price to earnings ratio when it was around $55. it was pretty damn high. and the volumes traded in the past two weeks show a lot of speculation. \
have you guys looked at the price to earnings ratio when it was around $55. it was pretty damn high. and the volumes traded in the past two weeks show a lot of speculation. \
Well, forward PE is still 30, which isn't too bad since earnings numbers have consistently cranked higher.
There's clearly more trading of AAPL than we used to see. Also, notice the large 100K-200K buys almost every morning opening the stock $.50 higher than the previous close. Some folks are buying in for the long haul. My hope is that they're not phased by todays numbers and keep pushing in over the next week.
for us stock noobs what really does after-hours trading mean?
how long does it last? how much can they trade?
according to marketwatch.com AAPL after hours is $46.18 with a volume traded that is more than 1/4 of the volume traded during regular hours.
Pre-market: 8:00am to 9:30am EST
Regular session: 9:30 am to 4:00 pm EST
Extended session: 4:00pm to 5:30pm (ECNs) EST
As for your question of "how much can they trade?" - as much as the traders want, though pre-market and after-hours trading sessions are far less liquid (and hence more volatile) than regular session trading.
This just pisses me off. I finally have some money to invest so I buy 136 shares
at 51.19. Then the announcement of Apple's best quarter ever which I think
is great news, & now I hear there was a friggin' 11% slide in after-hours
trading! Fate & timing keep screwing with me. When the iMac first came out I
wanted to buy but I was a broke college student. I was going to buy Apple
stock when it was at $14 but then my car up & dies on me. So instead of putting
ten grand in stock I put a downpayment on a car. That ten grand would
be worth something like $100,000+ today. To this day... I curse my old car for
falling apart.
I hear you, but there are two techniques you could consider, one risky, one not so much.
For the less risky investment, use an opportunity such as this to "average down" on the stock. Never put all your money in a stock without some reserves to do this. Averaging down means buying more shares when the price goes down, so your overall target price for profit is lower. For example, if you bought 136 more shares now at, say, 47.00, then Apple stock would only have to return to 49.10 before you're even again (minus commissions, of course).
The riskier method but also the potentially more rewarding, is to trade Apple options instead. Explaining the options market is too much to go into here, but you could buy puts (a bet the stock will go down) and calls (a bet the stock will go up) at the same strike price, let's say 50 in this example, and hope that Apple stock moves enough in one direction or the other to cancel out the put or the call option that decreases in price. I won't know until the market opens tomorrow, but the 50 call will probably drop from 3.00 (cost $300 per call option) to under 1.00 (let's say to .50, call it a loss of $250). However, the 50 put option will likely increase from 1.45 (cost $145 per put) to well over 4.00 if Apple stock opens at $47 or lower. That's a profit of over $350 on the put, possibly even more if the stock trades lower. I'm just guessing here, but it illustrates the point. The more puts and calls you buy, the more money you can make (and lose). That's a very quick and dirty explanation, but hopefully it illustrates one way to beat a stock plunge on an earnings report, as well as profit from it if it goes up. This technique would have worked well after the April earnings report too when the stock tanked.
Now, before anyone gets into the options market I recommend highly that they read up about how to use them and what the risks are. You can lose all your money quickly. If you get into it without doing your due diligence first, then I can only say "a fool and his money are soon parted."
I don't mean to be a jerk? But why IN THE HELL would you buy Apple stock? Anybody who spent 2 minutes learning how to invest would know better. Since my brain wants to explode I'll just tell you the stupid version "Buy low, sell high"
not "buy high, and hope for higher" That's what suckers do.
was going to say that myself but you got there already.
my guess is that this stock drop has something to do with the news of Real and Microsoft settling their anti-trust lawsuit, which seems to be directly aimed at Apple, iPod, and iTunes. Microsoft will now be pushing Real Rhapsody music downloading service along with adding Real Player to all XBox's. Everyone wants to de-throne Apple in the MP3 wars, and it looks like it will take at a minimum, a "Dream Team" of companies to even attempt it. Its unfortunate, but with all these companies coming together to fight Apple and iTunes, they just might win in the long run. How can Apple defend against all these attacks from all sides? the music labels, sony, microsoft, Real, etc. etc.
The riskier method but also the potentially more rewarding, is to trade Apple options instead. Explaining the options market is too much to go into here, but you could buy puts (a bet the stock will go down) and calls (a bet the stock will go up) at the same strike price, let's say 50 in this example, and hope that Apple stock moves enough in one direction or the other to cancel out the put or the call option that decreases in price. I won't know until the market opens tomorrow, but the 50 call will probably drop from 3.00 (cost $300 per call option) to under 1.00 (let's say to .50, call it a loss of $250). However, the 50 put option will likely increase from 1.45 (cost $145 per put) to well over 4.00 if Apple stock opens at $47 or lower. That's a profit of over $350 on the put, possibly even more if the stock trades lower. I'm just guessing here, but it illustrates the point. The more puts and calls you buy, the more money you can make (and lose). That's a very quick and dirty explanation, but hopefully it illustrates one way to beat a stock plunge on an earnings report, as well as profit from it if it goes up. This technique would have worked well after the April earnings report too when the stock tanked.
Comments
Originally posted by mello
It would have been nice if I had purchased that stock tomorrow morning
instead of today.
You know, that's true 50% of the time...
But a word of advice - NEVER buy right before earnings or a major announcement. It'll kick your ass almost every time. A few weeks ahead is usually okay, or right after depending on the snap decisions by the market, but never the day before. All the optimists have driven the stock too high and all the pessimists will bail the day after and kill you. Only when the news is good enough to turn pessimists into optimists do things turn out okay.
Apple is a particularly touchy stock. They're still the 4 year old kid in the lion cage. Doesn't matter how smart or well-equipped the kid is or how toothless that lion looks, you still expect the kid to become lunch - so every little movement on either side makes the markets pulse quicken. Holding Apple for less than 6 months is really asking to lose money, IMO.
Originally posted by webmail
I don't mean to be a jerk? But why IN THE HELL would you buy Apple stock? Anybody who spent 2 minutes learning how to invest would know better. Since my brain wants to explode I'll just tell you the stupid version "Buy low, sell high"
not "buy high, and hope for higher" That's what suckers do.
Another phrase common in trading circles to go with that one is: Buy on the hype, sell on the news.
Two points to note regarding this reported fall.
Firstly, even fairly small volumes done in after hours trading can skew the price, especially if there are few market makers quoting. Chances are that one of the large funds unloaded some Apple stock and moved the price quoted by whoever was landed with it. In which case they needed to offload it pronto and hence slashed their price. Tomorrow will give a more accurate reflection of the true reaction to the news.
Secondly, it's easy to say: buy low and sell high. In practice it is somewhat more difficult especially as every event related to a company is likely to affect it's future earnings and hence value. For all you know tomorrow's announcement may bring some wonder device that doubles Apple's earning potential. In which case yesterday's price may seem very low in comparison.
webmail, I expect you're still waiting for the price to drop back to $6. Well I wouldn't hold your breath.
how long does it last? how much can they trade?
according to marketwatch.com AAPL after hours is $46.18 with a volume traded that is more than 1/4 of the volume traded during regular hours.
When a video iPod isn't released tomorrow I expect it will fall a bit more.
You have to remember the stock price isn't decided by what happened today, or yesterday, or what will happen tomorrow - the $56 that the stock was trading at a few days ago already included the 'much better than expected' performance this quarter, but Apple only delivered 'better than expected' performance, so it goes.
Guess the iPod lineup had stagnated a bit over the past 6+ months (I know I've personally been waiting for that 80GB update), I think that was the biggest factor to less-than-stellar sales, people have been "holding out". That seems to be a problem for Apple, people want the latest and the greatest, and they're willing to wait (a bit). That said, I think the nano, along with a refresh of the HD based iPods AND whatever tomorrow ushers in, will put AAPL in a great position for Q1. Mac sales might be a little soft next Q, as once again, people will be holding out for the Mactel updates, but switchers should help it balance out.
Apple's looking good... sequential growth that any company on the street would give a left nut for.
-To infinity and beyond
(edit) looks like TS just jumped on the iPod video rumor... who's knows we could be back at $52 by tomorrow's close
Originally posted by sunilraman
have you guys looked at the price to earnings ratio when it was around $55. it was pretty damn high. and the volumes traded in the past two weeks show a lot of speculation. \
Well, forward PE is still 30, which isn't too bad since earnings numbers have consistently cranked higher.
There's clearly more trading of AAPL than we used to see. Also, notice the large 100K-200K buys almost every morning opening the stock $.50 higher than the previous close. Some folks are buying in for the long haul. My hope is that they're not phased by todays numbers and keep pushing in over the next week.
Originally posted by sunilraman
for us stock noobs what really does after-hours trading mean?
how long does it last? how much can they trade?
according to marketwatch.com AAPL after hours is $46.18 with a volume traded that is more than 1/4 of the volume traded during regular hours.
Pre-market: 8:00am to 9:30am EST
Regular session: 9:30 am to 4:00 pm EST
Extended session: 4:00pm to 5:30pm (ECNs) EST
As for your question of "how much can they trade?" - as much as the traders want, though pre-market and after-hours trading sessions are far less liquid (and hence more volatile) than regular session trading.
Originally posted by mello
This just pisses me off. I finally have some money to invest so I buy 136 shares
at 51.19. Then the announcement of Apple's best quarter ever which I think
is great news, & now I hear there was a friggin' 11% slide in after-hours
trading! Fate & timing keep screwing with me. When the iMac first came out I
wanted to buy but I was a broke college student. I was going to buy Apple
stock when it was at $14 but then my car up & dies on me. So instead of putting
ten grand in stock I put a downpayment on a car. That ten grand would
be worth something like $100,000+ today. To this day... I curse my old car for
falling apart.
I hear you, but there are two techniques you could consider, one risky, one not so much.
For the less risky investment, use an opportunity such as this to "average down" on the stock. Never put all your money in a stock without some reserves to do this. Averaging down means buying more shares when the price goes down, so your overall target price for profit is lower. For example, if you bought 136 more shares now at, say, 47.00, then Apple stock would only have to return to 49.10 before you're even again (minus commissions, of course).
The riskier method but also the potentially more rewarding, is to trade Apple options instead. Explaining the options market is too much to go into here, but you could buy puts (a bet the stock will go down) and calls (a bet the stock will go up) at the same strike price, let's say 50 in this example, and hope that Apple stock moves enough in one direction or the other to cancel out the put or the call option that decreases in price. I won't know until the market opens tomorrow, but the 50 call will probably drop from 3.00 (cost $300 per call option) to under 1.00 (let's say to .50, call it a loss of $250). However, the 50 put option will likely increase from 1.45 (cost $145 per put) to well over 4.00 if Apple stock opens at $47 or lower. That's a profit of over $350 on the put, possibly even more if the stock trades lower. I'm just guessing here, but it illustrates the point. The more puts and calls you buy, the more money you can make (and lose). That's a very quick and dirty explanation, but hopefully it illustrates one way to beat a stock plunge on an earnings report, as well as profit from it if it goes up. This technique would have worked well after the April earnings report too when the stock tanked.
Now, before anyone gets into the options market I recommend highly that they read up about how to use them and what the risks are. You can lose all your money quickly. If you get into it without doing your due diligence first, then I can only say "a fool and his money are soon parted."
Originally posted by webmail
I don't mean to be a jerk? But why IN THE HELL would you buy Apple stock? Anybody who spent 2 minutes learning how to invest would know better. Since my brain wants to explode I'll just tell you the stupid version "Buy low, sell high"
not "buy high, and hope for higher" That's what suckers do.
was going to say that myself but you got there already.
And Apple fans are a bunch of suckers. Or at least for their company's stock.
Originally posted by Relic
F_ckit balls to the wind I'm short selling. Down, go down, down, down......
Clearly a dumb move.
Originally posted by Spork Heidelberg
The riskier method but also the potentially more rewarding, is to trade Apple options instead. Explaining the options market is too much to go into here, but you could buy puts (a bet the stock will go down) and calls (a bet the stock will go up) at the same strike price, let's say 50 in this example, and hope that Apple stock moves enough in one direction or the other to cancel out the put or the call option that decreases in price. I won't know until the market opens tomorrow, but the 50 call will probably drop from 3.00 (cost $300 per call option) to under 1.00 (let's say to .50, call it a loss of $250). However, the 50 put option will likely increase from 1.45 (cost $145 per put) to well over 4.00 if Apple stock opens at $47 or lower. That's a profit of over $350 on the put, possibly even more if the stock trades lower. I'm just guessing here, but it illustrates the point. The more puts and calls you buy, the more money you can make (and lose). That's a very quick and dirty explanation, but hopefully it illustrates one way to beat a stock plunge on an earnings report, as well as profit from it if it goes up. This technique would have worked well after the April earnings report too when the stock tanked.
In other words, a straddle.