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Strategies & Market Trends : APMP (formerly APM) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: dmccoach who wrote (8183)11/5/1997 10:04:00 PM
From: AlienTech  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 13456
 
Cashflow determines if people are buying shares or selling them. If most of the sales too place at the ask then people are buying and cas flow will be positive. But what if the bid keeps getting lower and the ask follow it lower but people still buy it at the lower price? Well thats why cash flow is not an indicator by itself. But I do remember when ASND was 50+ someone pointed out that the cash flow was getting seriously negative, ie they were selling it at the bid, but the price kept on climbing so it was hard to pin point it at the time. But we know that when shorting you cant sell it at the bid, but you can sell it at the bid+1/16, so the price was rising but over all cash flow was negative. Bloomberg has options to let you see which direction the cash is flowing..

Now to your questio of sales to cash flow.. hmm thats a good one.. But I have no idea :)



To: dmccoach who wrote (8183)11/6/1997 9:20:00 AM
From: Bushy  Respond to of 13456
 
dmccoach, Look thru wsrn. You can find annual cashflow and sales/per share and other pertinent charts.

wsrn.com



To: dmccoach who wrote (8183)11/6/1997 10:00:00 AM
From: appro  Respond to of 13456
 
"Price to Cash Flow Per Share Ratio (TTM)
This is the current Price divided by Cash Flow Per Share for the trailing twelve months. Cash Flow is defined as Income After Taxes minus Preferred Dividends and General Partner Distributions plus Depreciation, Depletion and Amortization. "


From Market Guide University Glossary at
marketguide.com

Hope this helps.