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centermedic

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I just loaded up. People love to trash on S, but there's no way it'll won't gain. Good buy, IMHO.

 

I own a lot of S now.

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I know this is a very novice question but should I buy S right now or wait. Looking for long term not a quick penny.

How long are you willing to wait?   :P

 

$3 range it is at right now seems like a good entry point.  You will be getting a cheaper price than Marcelo Claure paid and waaay cheaper than Masayoshi Son paid.   :D

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How long are you willing to wait? :P

 

$3 range it is at right now seems like a good entry point. You will be getting a cheaper price than Marcelo Claure paid and waaay cheaper than Masayoshi Son paid. :D

Speaking of which, I wonder if this 52-week low would trigger a larger investment from Son or Claure?

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The more low it goes, the more I'm tempted to buy.

 

 

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Go ahead. I shorted the stock. Ready to make another go of it! :D

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Go ahead. I shorted the stock. Ready to make another go of it! :D

Should I wait until $2?

 

That seems to be when the shorts will head for the hills... I think. [emoji45]

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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At some point, Sprint's spectrum alone will be worth more than its stock price fully capitalized.

 

Using Nexus 6 on Tapatalk

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Currently up  0.22 (5.93%). I've already made a tidy profit on the purchase of more shares t'other day.  :D

Now is the hard part of realizing those gains (sell) or riskily holding on for more.  :P

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Now is the hard part of realizing those gains (sell) or riskily holding on for more. :P

I'm going long on S. Worst case scenario, I can stop loss and come out even best case scenario, S goes on a tear in 9-12 months...

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Should I wait until $2?

 

That seems to be when the shorts will head for the hills... I think. [emoji45]

 

 

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I would use dollar cost averaging. That will ensure that you don't miss the bottom.

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Anybody here own nTelos (NTLS)?  I am interested in their focus on West Virginia and western Virginia, long-term wholesale agreement with Sprint, and possible buyout in the future.

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BTIG Research cut Sprint target price to $2.00 on July 17th.

 

http://www.btigresearch.com/2015/07/16/will-investors-embrace-sprints-new-network-plan-cutting-target-to-2-00-while-we-continue-to-wait/

 

If Sprint doesn't post strong consensus-beating numbers in their upcoming earnings report, we might see that $2.00 pretty soon.

Edited by luvixuha
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I have a bit of money I got from my father in back child support payments he owed for several years. I had to pressure my mother for a very long time to try collecting on it, which she finally did last year. I have enough of it to purchase 10,000 shares of Sprint stock at $2.00 each.

 

However, I know very little of the stock market and how things work, so please no one think this to be a dumb question for me to ask, as I'm just trying to learn some things about it, as I know I need to try to make money for myself any way I can without physical assertion, and I'm unable to get a job because of my extreme physical limitations.

 

So, the question is, say I purchase stock which devalues a week later. I know then that the stock I own is worth less at that point than at the time I purchased it. However, say that another week passes and the stock price rises above the price I purchased it at. In that case, does the stock I own goes up in value to the new higher stock price, or is the stock I own still stuck at the lower devalued rate?

 

I'm figuring that the value of the stock I'd have in the scenario would match the current stock price, though I wanted to ask anyways to make sure. If I'm correct about that, and I owned 10,000 shares at the original rate of $2.00 each, and say it eventually increased to around $40.00 per share, in average, how wealthy would that make me?

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