*Tema mítico* : WALLSTREETBETS TO DA MOON! Hold Paco, Hold.

y como pretenden dar un dividendo anual, aunque sea a través de acciones en vez de en cash, si tiene un huevo de pérdidas ?

mas raro que un perro verde
 
y como pretenden dar un dividendo anual, aunque sea a través de acciones en vez de en cash, si tiene un huevo de pérdidas ?

mas raro que un perro verde

Por lo pronto para dar un diviendo en acciones, hay 2 posibilidades:

-O la empresa compra en mercado abierto las acciones y luego las distribuye entre sus accionistas.

-O la empresa crea nuevas acciones que se suman a las antiguas, aumentando el número de acciones totales.


Si es la opción 2, es una nueva tomadura de pelo para el MOASS, creando más acciones aún de las existentes, tanto hold hold personajes para que por tercera vez "presuntamente", aumenten el numero de acciones.



y a la vez el supuesto split de acciones, que realmente es lo mismo por lo que da igual.
 
y como pretenden dar un dividendo anual, aunque sea a través de acciones en vez de en cash, si tiene un huevo de pérdidas ?

mas raro que un perro verde


Seguramente los de GameStop no tengan ni idea y no sepan lo que es mejor para la empresa y sus accionistas, yo de ti me ponía corto.


HOLD


y si puede DRS
 
Buenas tardes

Otro días más en la oficina.

(En estos momentos -6% aprox $160)
Tweet de RC, "ya sabes lo que me pasa cuando como demasiada fruta"

Y esto comentando lo del split:


Se me quedó este mensaje escrito sin enviar...
Cierre en -10%
 
el dogma que se ha formado en torno a las meme stocks no lo entiendo, como tampoco entiendo muchas de las habladurías de los grupos de telegram. ¿Me puede alguien explicar....

a- Por qué dicen que cuando haya una crisis del copón las meme stocks van a subir como un cohete porque los margin calls, beta negativa, etc etc... PERO SIN EMBARGO cuando el mercado está bajista GME y AMC no solo no suben sino que son las primeras en caer una brutalidad?

b- Por qué la inmensísima mayoría de inversorcillos odian las opciones (sí, incluso las call) y consideran que es FUD terrible tradearlas PERO SIN EMBARGO se hacen caricias cada viernes a ver cuántas calls entran en el dinero para hipotéticamente subir el precio la semana entrante?
 
el dogma que se ha formado en torno a las meme stocks no lo entiendo, como tampoco entiendo muchas de las habladurías de los grupos de telegram. ¿Me puede alguien explicar....

a- Por qué dicen que cuando haya una crisis del copón las meme stocks van a subir como un cohete porque los margin calls, beta negativa, etc etc... PERO SIN EMBARGO cuando el mercado está bajista GME y AMC no solo no suben sino que son las primeras en caer una brutalidad?

b- Por qué la inmensísima mayoría de inversorcillos odian las opciones (sí, incluso las call) y consideran que es FUD terrible tradearlas PERO SIN EMBARGO se hacen caricias cada viernes a ver cuántas calls entran en el dinero para hipotéticamente subir el precio la semana entrante?

Te contesto sobre lo segundo.

Porque para un particular sin información privilegiada las Calls son la manera de perder más fácil tu dinero y más a estos niveles de precios.

Te pajeas pensando en que la gente que maneja millones y miles de millones, con información o bajo su riesgo, van a querer que se ejecuten.
 


Pulte Group, es la tercera empresa de construcción de viviendas más grande de los Estados Unidos según la cantidad de viviendas cerradas
 
Última edición:
Buenos días !

Carta de Furlong


Para votar en la junta del Split Dividend:
Only stockholders of record as of the close of business on April 8, 2022 are entitled to vote at the annual meeting and any postponement or adjournment thereof.

También dicen otras cosas interesantes como que están "obsesivamente centrados en el largo plazo" y que están haciendo y seguirán haciendo inversiones, contrataciones y mejoras para mejorar la satisfacción del cliente y ampliar los horizontes de la empresa en el comercio electrónico, gamers blockchain, Metaverso y Cryptos, y que el objetivo del Split es poner un precio más bajo para que los inversores que lo deseen puedan hacerlo de manera más cómoda.

Grandes, Team !
 
Última edición:

Just how different is it from a cash dividend?

GameStop ( GME 3.26% ) wants to split its stock for the first time in 15 years. While many were caught off guard by the video game retailer's announcement, some investors were also confused because it wants the split to be "in the form of a stock dividend."
Everyone is familiar with cash dividends -- a company pays you money every month, quarter, or at some other frequency to own the stock -- but not so much a stock dividend, even though most companies describe their splits as a dividend.

Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA), for example, also recently announced that it wants to split its stock in the form of a stock dividend. But many internet stock traders seem to think that because GameStop has a high percentage of shares sold short, the language has special significance.
So does it matter that the video game retailer will split its stock as a dividend, or is this really just boilerplate and much ado about nothing?

Person paying out $100 bills.


Buying into the meme stock frenzy

Because GameStop was one of the first meme stocks and continues as one today, its stock rarely trades on its fundamentals. One of the hallmarks of meme stocks is their share price tends to move more in relation to chatter on internet stock boards and social media than on what its business looks like.

GameStop became a meme stock poster child a year ago because chat room discussions rallied individual retail investors behind its vastly shorted stock. Believing they could initiate a short squeeze by buying the stock and causing its price to rise, hedge funds and other short-sellers would be forced to cover their positions. And they were right.

Shares of GameStop soared as high as $483 a share last January but had fallen back to around $80 a share last month before a new rally caused them to double in value, at which time the retailer announced plans to split the stock.

GameStop's stock remains heavily shorted, with more than 26% of its float sold short. But that's far below the level it stood at a year ago, when the short sellers overplayed their hand and sold more shares short than were in circulation. According to financial analytics firm S3, short interest in GameStop reached as much as 141.8% of its float at its peak on Jan. 4.

As GameStop bulls piled into the stock, buying up its shares or stock options, which caused market makers to buy the underlying stock, few if any shares were left available for shorts to cover their position, and the stock rocketed higher.

Man holding head in front of a laptop.


Playing the short game

But GameStop's stock split isn't likely to affect short sellers. While shorts would be required to pay a cash dividend if GameStop issued one, a stock dividend works pretty much the same for all investors regardless of whether you're short or long. The effect is to increase the share count and lower the share price using the split ratio.

For example, an investor with 10 shares of stock trading for $100 that splits 2-for-1 will now own 20 shares, but they will be worth $50 each. A short-seller who shorted 10 shares will have to buy back 20 shares after the split, but also at $50 apiece. There are no extra shares to pay back because it's a "dividend."

In fact, the dividend aspect of the split only affects the company's accounting -- basically how much it keeps in its retained earnings account -- and not much else. By declaring it a stock dividend, GameStop's cash balances won't be affected by it as they would be with a cash dividend, and the stock split won't trigger a new "gamma squeeze" on its shares.

Ready to roar?

Stock splits are seen as bullish signs from a company, and studies show stock prices tend to rise after the announcement as well as after the split happens, even though nothing about the company changes.

It may or may not be notable that GameStop's stock is down by more than 12% since the announcement, but investors should still consider the fundamentals of the company before investing, because it can't trade on hype forever.

I still wouldn't short GameStop's stock, because, as economist John Maynard Keynes is reported to have remarked, "The market can remain irrational longer than you can remain solvent." But that doesn't means the stock is a buy, either. And certainly not because GameStop is splitting its stock.
 
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