Winthrop:
Sorry I didn't get back to you sooner, but I just logged in, as I usually do, to periodically check on my investments. I have no idea what Mr. McNeil at TJOB will speak about early next week. I have no knowledge of any insider information. I'll repeat what I wrote at the RB thread, however, because it bears repeating.
>>TJOB will begin to talk starting 5/24 week.
Yes, for those of us who have done our research, we are comfortable with our investment in TJOB. I bought 1000 long at $12.50 last week. I will buy MCD on Monday if it stays below 40. Shorters tend to badmouth stocks they want to capitalize on - especially if they can create "doubt and fear". The bottom line in investing is the underlying belief that the stock will make us money. If anyone tells me that they have done their DD, and based on fundamentals (and all that other crap), they will "do well", I say it all comes down to taking the shot based on what your "gut" tells you to do. That "instinct" is what puts money in or takes it out of your pocket. No one has the "sure fire" method of buying stocks. No one! Not even Warren Buffet, who just bought 2% of ALDCY (own Dunkin Donuts, etc.), but, his "gut" tells him that he'll make money on ALDCY. I bought some about 6 months ago. Buy into TJOB if you believe you will make money. Buy into it if you believe they will make money. Buy in if you believe they will be a candidate for a takeover by larger fish who want more hits - and what better way to get hits than to offer employment world-wide. Don't buy if you think it's a loser. Badmouth if you're planning to short the stock. We all have our greed motives.
Have a nice day!:) <<
I'm not aiming any of my RB chat toward you - I'm just generalizing, and stating that it ALWAYS boils down to "gut" or "instinct". I've followed charts, wore walnut shells around my neck with spiders in it to ward off evil stock spirits, but it always comes down to "instinct". You buy that way, and I buy that way. I'm fine with TJOB.
Best regards,
re:MAX |