By statistics, there are less than 10% recommended "sell" from analysts. When an analyst issues a "sell" recommendation, those holding that particular stock better pay attention.
NONE OF THE ANALYSTS ISSUE BUY RECOMMENDATION FOR KNM....BUT STOCK UP FROM 40C TO 61C....THEY WILL SAY BUY KNM AFTER LISTING OF BORSIG, BY THEN U BUY ABOVE 3 AND HOPING TO GO FOR 4
AND SOME MORE THEY ASK U TO BUY KNM EVEN THE STOCK OLEDI SURGE FROM 0.27 TO 6.75 FROM 2003-2007...AND NOW KNM DOWN 95%+ THEY STILL ASK U TO SELL...SO WONDERFUL OF THE ANALYSTS
KNM was pumped up to 61 sen by insiders recently, thanks to the overall bullish market just after GE. Those who bought KNM at 40+ sen when it is lowest and sell at 61 sen will make a bundle. Those who have bought it above 55.5 sen would be holding a hot potato, especially if the market corrects. Those who were gung ho and punt with margin may be in trouble now. This "cycle" goes on and off, especially for stocks whose company major shareholders are share price manipulator, rather than business orientated. So which side are you in, those who bought it low and sold it high, or those who bought it high and have to cut loss?
In punting in the share market, there are two groups of people; the insiders and the general public. Who is at the advantage of this game? What is the chance of gambling with the insiders?
Furthermore, those share recommended and making statements by the ppl directly or indirectly so look and sound very potential and prospective... So big is BIGGER than small
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This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....
kcchongnz
6,684 posts
Posted by kcchongnz > 2013-05-31 15:28 | Report Abuse
By statistics, there are less than 10% recommended "sell" from analysts. When an analyst issues a "sell" recommendation, those holding that particular stock better pay attention.