Jay, is $18 what your GeneNet heuristic predictive price process says or is that your guess?
While I won't be too puzzled, or even slightly puzzled, I'd prefer that not to happen. But, I am ready for it to happen and if it gets there because General Electric is showing off her hairy legs, JPMorgan isn't wearing a bathing suit as per Warren Buffett's "when the tide goes out, you can see who isn't wearing a bathing suit", and neither are many others, and the crowd is in panic at the sight, having also just seen a naked Su and Green$pan, then I will be taking the opportunity to altruistically rescue those who are desperate to sell their shares. We noble buyers of last resort, buying when nobody else will buy, should get awards.
With Uncle Al, our estimable hero, doing bonus share issues each day for his buddy Uncle Sam to spend on this that and the other [such as a brand spanking new USS Ronald Raygun and all who sail on her], which is shrinking the length of the US$ [at some stage, if not now because of increasing demand and ever more enthusiastic Made in China price cuts], the apparent size of a QUALCOMM share, bar of gold, cup of tea or Californian bungalow will increase as surely as if the length of an inch was halved and halved again. "Hey, this bar of gold is now 1000 feet long instead of 100 and my house is 5000 inches across and my QCOM 2000 inches long and my cup of tea seems to be 50 litres".
Uncle Al is avoiding the tide going out quickly. Giving many a chance to get bathing suits on.
The Q gets bigger than the G because while Uncle Al's theory of monetary relativity equation applies to both, the Q actually earns a LOT of money due to Chinese Maths combined with Indian quantum effects and all-in-one singularity effects as all is subsumed into the amazing CDMA2000 phragmented photon cyberspace realm of peace, light, harmony, happiness, health, longevity, prosperity, fun, love and It. Nirvana.
While the mob thrashes around, the relative prices might well see Q reach $18. Or not. Either way, I'm happy, but prefer never to see a drop below today's price. I like my heuristic predictions to be reached in a straight line, which I know doesn't happen in the fractalized reality of the markets.
Mqurice |