jp, unlike you I find that the property is my first consideration, not something following the other "usual factors." And the property has to be evaluated by some measure, or measures
BTW, aren't you contradicting yourself. "In the case of TWG, don't like management, but like the property." Yeah, what property is that? You've bashed Jackson Inlet and Torngate. As you've also bashed management, the locations (JI & Torngat), finances, historic performance, and prospective costs, what's left for you to like?
"So, what's your evaluation of the grade so far?"
You don't want to know because you've already faulted the process applied by Vaughn and WillP.
You still have not offered your "evaluation model" for diamond exploration companies. How do you decide, based on numbers, whether or not to get into, stay with, or sell a mining company stock if it's not a process similar to that applied by WillP and Vaughn? You can't fault them with any credibility until you show your measures.
Hey, even home buyers use a type of quantitative evaluation and comparative analysis when deciding which home to buy among those that are otherwise similar and in the same price range. They may not put it down on paper, nor even consciously be aware of the process, but it's there. I'm thinking you should be capable of quantifying the process whether it regards home purchases, or buying stock in a public company. I'm asking how you do that, or are you saying you don't use quantitative measures, or even comparative analysis? |