Posts Tagged ‘Stock Trading’
Trading’s Wild West cleans up its act — with caveats
Written by troy on Monday, November 16, 2009 | No Comments
Categories: Uncategorized Tags: Otc Market, otc markets, stock promotion, Stock Trading
Originally Printed in Financial Post
By: Janet Whitman
As U.S. lawmakers mull a crackdown on murky trading activities such as dark pools and high-frequency trading, another unregulated sector of the market known as the Wild West of stock trading is cleaning up its own act.
The Pink Sheets has long been the home for stocks too thinly traded, too tiny or too financially ailing to list on a senior stock exchange. But since it started introducing new transparency initiatives, including a trading risk-ranking system a couple of years ago, the over-the-counter venue has attracted a growing list of big names, from German sportswear maker Adidas AG to Swiss drug maker Roche Holding Ltd.
The new OTCQX trading platform for premium listings being offered by Pink OTC Markets Inc., as the company is formally known, is expected to double its listings of Canadian companies by the end of this year.
“We have taken great strides to make the OTC market more friendly to investors,” says Tim Ryan, managing director of sales and business development for New York City-based Pink OTC Markets. “Stocks that trade on the pink sheets are categorized by their amount of disclosure. For a company that doesn’t provide disclosure, we flag it with a stop sign [icon]. We don’t stop trading in it, but we say investors should look both ways.”
For even shadier listings, including possible “pump-and-dump” stock promotion scams among the 5,000 or so stocks it quotes, the Pink Sheets slaps them with a black skull-and-crossbones warning label.
At the opposite end of the spectrum is the OTCQX listing service, set up to highlight reputable companies.
The QX, which stands for quality and excellence, doesn’t require foreign companies to make filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission nor do they need comply with burdensome accounting regulations that are part of the Sarbanes Oxley Act, a huge cost savings.
Instead, Canadian companies can use the filings they make with the Toronto Stock Exchange.
“The OTCQX opens the door for these companies to the vast U.S. retail market,” says Mr. Ryan.
It can also help improve demand in the companies’ home market.
Beyond a 373% surge in trading in the United States within three months of joining the OTCQX, Canadian companies have seen their trading volumes jump 54% on the Toronto Stock Exchange, according to data from Pink OTC Markets.
Avalon Rare Metals Inc., Globex Mining Enterprises Inc., Azure Dynamics Corp., China Education Resources Inc. and Alter NRG Inc. are among the Canadian companies that make up about 10% of the OTCQX’s 74 listings.
Officials at Pink OTC Markets, which debuted in 2007, say they’re getting a flurry of applications from Canadian companies this year.
Even with the improved disclosure efforts, industry observers doubt the Pink Sheets will eradicate fully its Wild West mentality.
“The Pink Sheets still has a whole realm of penny stocks that has always given the SEC problems,” says James Angel, a professor at Georgetown University in Washington D.C. who specializes in the structure and regulation of financial markets around the world. “A lot of little companies there are scams waiting to happen, so the SEC has a real enforcement nightmare.”
Nevertheless, the agency isn’t likely to come down on the Pink Sheets. Regulators recognize that small companies need a place to raise capital without the burden of registering and filing financial reports with the SEC. Perhaps more significantly, the SEC and U.S. Congress are much more preoccupied with other concerns, such as tightening up regulations on high-frequency trading, dark pools of capital and short-selling.
“The pink sheets are a small niche representing a very tiny slice of overall U.S. equity market value and a very small slice of trade volume,” says Prof. Angel. “The complaints the SEC gets in that space are usually about an individual company that’s fraudulent. They’re not getting a huge number of complaints about trading practices.” For savvy traders, the
Pink Sheets can offer a good opportunity to clean up.
Anthony Marchese, general partner at Insiders Trend Fund, a New York hedge fund that has a portfolio built around insider-trading activity, says he often prefers to buy stocks on the Pink Sheets rather than on more reputable, regulated exchanges.
“A lot of people aren’t able to buy those stocks, so there’s less competition,” he says. “There is still a heavy bias in general against purchasing micro-cap stocks.”
Mr. Marchese adds that the skull-and-crossbones warnings sometimes offer good buying prospects, including his purchase earlier this year of shares in Colorado-based mining company Golden Minerals Co.
“They came out of bankruptcy back in March and insiders were buying the stock,” he says. “When we bought it, it was trading below cash. It’s a situation where the skull-and-crossbones [warning] let me buy it for much less than it was worth.”
Buying such stocks isn’t always easy for retail investors.
“My brother bought some of this and his online brokerage called him twice,” says Mr. Marchese. “Discount brokerage accounts either won’t let you buy some of these stocks or if you do they put the fear of god in you.”
Link to Original Article: http://www.financialpost.com/news-sectors/story.html?id=2204249
Who Knows Where to Find Penny Stocks?
Written by troy on Friday, June 05, 2009 | 1 Comment
Categories: Uncategorized Tags: Price To Earnings Ratio, Stock Trading
So what is the difference between low price stocks and high ones? There are many. The first is that stocks which trade for a penny or under are usually very small and speculative companies. Oftentimes with no revenue or profits, they are but a dream in someone’s head. However, some of the largest most well known companies today started as such.
Hence, the appeal. Which penny stock will be the next huge grand slam? Being able to buy multiple shares for a penny one could accumulate quite a position in a penny stock without having much resources. Should you have picked the right one, a fortune can be made. Do the math figuring how much $10,000 invested in a stock originally at one quarter of a penny becomes if that stock goes to fifty dollars.
However, as with all things, the greater the potential gain translates to the bigger the potential pain. Many companies with a penny stock fail leaving the shareholders with nothing. This is a tangible risk which much be included within your equation. If you are unable to handle this scenario you should think hard before buying a penny stock.
There are many places to research and things to look at when selecting a penny stock. As indicated, many do not possess revenue or profits thus eliminating the traditional metrics which are used for analysis. For example, it is impossible to determine a price to earnings ratio (PE) for a stock with no earnings. It is similarly difficult to project sales seeing there is no revenue.
However, there is often much literature and filings put out by the company. Read these closely. Research the industry as a whole. Search online for any commentary possible. Of course, one has to take things written online with a grain of salt, however any tidbit of gleaned information can be useful. Call the company. Many will talk with you and discuss their products or services.
Official filings with the SEC should all be read. As should all disclosed risk factors. Often reading this material can prove tedious. However, many times you will find something to rightly convince you not to buy that penny stock. Other times your conviction is only strengthened through continued due diligence.
Which type of trader are you? Are you a patient long term investor willing to hold a stock for 20 years if necessary? Or, are you looking for tremendous quick returns? If the latter you may want to research where to find penny stocks.
By: Adam Hefner
About the Author:
To find out much more on where to find penny stocks, visit http://www.StockMarket4Beginners.com where you’ll find this and much more, including more on stock market basics.

