Well, I have some Broderbund stock (BROD) and it is doing the same thing. Only Broderbund, unlike Borland, had decent earnings, exceeding the expectation, and with possibly the best-selling game of all time ("Riven", the sequel to "Myst") the better part of whose pre-Christmas sales were not even included in the last quarter, could be expected to post some decent profits this quarter as well. "Myst" has had legs for 3 years now, and is still selling well. They don't sell a lot of games in Korea, just the U.S. and Europe, so the Asian Flu shouldn't be affecting them. It seems that a great number of tech stocks are sliding, some with reason, some without, but all treated as if they had the Hong Kong chicken flu. I don't see why Borland should be an exception.
I'm a novice investor, so I probably don't know what I'm talking about, but I'll bring this up and see if somebody can explain it to me. (And yes, I have a long position in BORL). The whole reason for investing in stock is to get a better return on your money than the 4% interest at the local Savings and Loan, which after inflation and taxes is a money-losing joke. But assuming a hypothetical situation of little or no inflation, and only slow growth (hey, how about no air resistance either - just a little engineering humor) then one would have to compare the dividends paid by a company to the stock price and compare the ratio to the interest rate paid by the bank. At $10 per share, BORL needs to pay out 10 cents per share dividend per quarter to beat the lowly bank. They need to earn more than that in order to be able to keep a little profit for a rainy day or to grow the company. I realize that if they don't actually pay out the 10 cents, but keep a greater share and grow the company more, the assets of the company should increase, and the share price commensurately. But, as in the film "Jerry Maquire", I still have to say... "SHOW ME THE MONEY"
What I actually see in the market are stocks whose prices seem to be purely speculative, invariably jacked way up based on what people conjecture the company might earn NEXT year, that is, if everything goes right, with no relation to what the stock is actually earning for its owners NOW. In Europe (where I live and work, although I am a US citizen) the prevailing business philosophy until recently has been to maximize RETURNS for the stockholders, i.e. dividends. If the dividends are reinvested or not is irrelevant. The philosophy in the US of the business managers has been to maximize the STOCK PRICE by whatever means, even if little or no dividends are paid out, with the idea that this is a better form of return on the investment. Well, I don't see why it is any better. If you buy low, and sell high, you make money. If you just own the company, you don't get anything. If the price of the stock were concretely tied to net assets, this would still make sense. But when I look at the high P/E ratios, I don't see how on that basis most stocks offer any real value compared to putting the money in the bank. Same for the balance sheet regarding assets.
But when I look at the doubling of the indexes over the last three years, I see why people have poured money into the stock market, perceiving a 30% return per year. But isn't the money pouring in, chasing a limited number of stocks, what has driven the prices up - as in artificially? It's not like the GNP has doubled in three years. Isn't this kind of like the AMWAY quasi-pyramid marketing scheme (no offense to any AMWAY dealers out there...) meaning that the ones who get in first make a lot of money, and the ones who come last into a saturated market can't find any new recruits? This kind of growth I perceive to have been based more on self-feeding speculation than on fundamental economic growth, and when people have no more savings accounts to plunder to throw into the market, it has to slow down. When it does slow down, and one can no longer buy a stock with the expectation that the price will increase by 30% along with the market, then one has to look instead at what the company is paying out in dividends. And lo and behold, a lot (most?) aren't paying crap. So there is a run into bonds, and the prices start coming back down to get in line with the company earnings.
So, in other words, perhaps we've all been spoiled by prices which were way too high, and now they're returning to where they really should be, painful as that is?
Of course, if a professional investor has a plan to make money based on the actions of other investors, rather than on the fundamentals (and real values) of the companies being traded, I suppose this is as legitimate as any other strategy. So I'm not saying that a person should just sit on their money merely because stocks are generally overpriced.
I've seen a lot of wishful thinking on this and other threads (by those with long positions in that stock), optimistic comments about 'trains leaving the station, hold on', etc. Also complaints about suspected manipulations, or the illogic of the 'big boys' who are no longer doing the favor of driving up the price of the stock even further. But everybody wants THEIR investments to go up, don't they, so its kind of hard to see things neutrally.
Somebody tell me this. If nobody wants to buy a stock, but those holding it also don't want to sell it, is the price going to remain stable, or is it going to slowly drift down? Or, put another way, if the price is set by the market maker, in a time of very low volume, what strategy is the market maker going to use? |