ANATOMY OF A DISASTER (AKA- MY IPO FROM TODAY):
Today I did the MongoDB IPO and it was setting up to be an outstanding trade. It will probably be difficult to name everything that was going right for it, but I will at least capture most of it for you.
MongoDB (Ticker: MDB) is a company (HQ'ed in New York City) that has a No SQL (sequel, or structured query language) type database. Without all of the details- let me simplify. A normal type of database might list those who have purchased widgets from me. Joe Jones bought one on June 6, 2016 and paid $99.95 for it. Joe is from Anytown, USA and the widget was sold to him in a store near where he lives. Now, with No SQL (the more modern) type databases, I can also capture information such as Joe Jones posting a video of him with his widget on Instagram. That could actually be part of my database. That is just the beginning. Pretty cool technology. CNBC has had Mongo on their CNBC Disruptors list for four years now. Disruptors include companies like Uber, AirBNB and Pinterest. They are companies that are not yet publicly traded (unless they just began trading) that are changing the world and have yet to do IPO's.
I read reviews on MongoDB and they had lots of praise for the company. Also, being HQ'ed in New York meant they were right in the back yard of the financial capital of the world.
The stock had an initial offer range of $18-20. The range was then raised (fairly unusual) to $20-22. The final offer price was $24. All of this is very positive. The range being raised is excellent. The offer price being above the high end of the upwardly revised range is also very good. Then the stock opened this morning at $33.00. $24 being 26.3% above the $19 midpoint is very good. $33 being 73.7% above the midpoint is also very good.
I've noticed that the IPO's that open for trade in the third half hour of the day outperform those before and those after. Sure enough, this opened for trade at 10:50am EST. IPO's that open on a round number do significantly better than those that open on an odd number- this one opened at $33. Thursday IPO's are better than those from any other day of the week. What's more, October is the beginning of the best three month stretch of the year, by far.
The nearest comparison I have to this company was an IPO I traded on October 6, 2016 for Coupa Software (Ticker: COUP). For COUP I bet big and it paid off. Profit was $35,914.82 in 3 min., 25 seconds.
Needless to say, the planets were aligning nicely for this IPO and I was licking my chops. I decided to go in pretty aggressively and bought 10,528 shares at the opening price of $33.00. The offer price was $24, so my limit orders placed to buy the stock last night were at a limit of $52.56 or better. As soon as the stock opened at $33.00, I knew I owned it at that price.
Little did I know that the opening price of $33 would be the HIGHEST PRICE OF THE DAY. Originally it was posted that the high was $33.999, but that was revised to the $33 open. So the stock was down sharply right away. I held and sat and watched carefully for a bounce. The bounce never did materialize. The stock was down to $29.10 before rallying a bit. I held it till 1:03pm EST (2 hrs., 13 min.), which felt like a lifetime and sold at an average price of about $30.15. I would have stayed home longer to watch this trade as I was expecting a rally into the close of the day. However, at that point I had a commitment to teach some high school kids about, believe it or not, IPO's! The final damage on MDB was a whopping $30,874.87 loss. This was probably my 4th worst day in 20 years or so of trading.
By the way, I was right about the rally into the close. The stock closed the day at $32.07. If I got out at that price, my loss would have been about $9,800, a lot better than $30k+. Oh well, it wasn't meant to be.
Now how is this for weird. Last Thursday (October 12th) I traded the Cargurus (Ticker: CARG) IPO and made $12k in 12 minutes on the 12th day of the month.
Today was the 30th anniversary to the day of the big 1987 stock market crash. Wouldn't you know it, I lost $30k on the 30th anniversary. Numerologists would go crazy analyzing that.
Even with this huge loss and temporary setback, I have to look at the overall track record. 48 IPO's done in about 6 1/2 years and only three losses including today. That is an outstanding record, even though I don't feel so great right now. Also, I am playing with the house money at this point. But, of course, I don't want to be giving back house money!
Maybe I can set up a GoFundMe account to cover the loss!
Former stock broker w/ ~20 yrs. at one company. Spoke with 100k+ people and traded a lot (long, short, options, margin, extended hours, etc.).
NOTE: ANY stocks I discuss, no matter how compelling, carry risk- often
substantial. If not prepared to buy it multiple times in modest amounts without going overboard (assuming nothing really wrong with the company), you need to learn more about the market and managing risk. Also, please research covered calls (options) and selling short as well.