Cav,
You'll forgive me if I don't read the link on your previous post.
I realize you presently don't own TCBG (as you said you sold for what sounded like a net profit a while back, damn smart) so what's the panic?
I know you're great at hyping stocks up and down, but my gut says you're still maybe a little early for this one. If you get on now, and you're in for at least a couple of boring weeks of whining. To us. Hopefully TCBG will be ready in two or three weeks (if, of course, Robby, isn't unemployed by then).
I recall back in the days when you were 'long TCBG', one day you claimed 'I have all my money in TCBG' and the very next day you said you were leaving for a few days to play another stock 'but you weren't selling any of your TCBG stock'. I appreciate your many semivalid miniconcerns about TCBG, but frankly, I have trouble getting too worked up over them, especially when I don't understand your actual motives. Daytrading is great, misrepresenting yourself is, umm, confusing.
Feel free to sweat it out with others, however. You do unravel some cool info on occasion.
I expect that four roto-gravure drums are probably being etched for WalMart about now, and 2-layer laminated film will be scheduled for the press in a week. Print time: One day. Laminate ship time: Two days. Eight drums will probably be needed for the Winn-Dixie artwork (two different diameters for two package heights). Sorry, this is all just concocted from my imaginination, but it's also partly why I enjoy following this stock. I like gizmos.
Take a break, Robby. The season's over. Robby will cost more to sponsor during next year's contract negotiations because he has demonstrated he can skillfully drive. And he ain't a hothead. Many companies will now be interested in him, and I doubt that WalMart will foot the bill for TCBG another year. But then, that was the plan all along. Again, this paragraph is all just my hypotheses.
Here's hoping TCBG ramps up quickly enough to afford Robby in a winning year. Assuming, of course, TCBG doesn't go out of business.
As always, penny stocks are really risky and this one ain't no different. Not much different, at least.
Shoe. |