Market Harmony wrote:Unfamiliar with this... is there an angle to play?
I would normally have said to sell short SHLD (or buy puts), but the fees to short and price of the puts makes it super difficult. You could literally bet on them going down, have them declare bankruptcy, and still lose money (as hard as that is to believe)!
Regarding stuff left by the curb, now that is a potential opportunity. Some people think "Oh no, that sofa is gonna have bedbugs." It very well might, so I don't pick up sofas.
But there are plenty of other things. Here is but a very very small percentage of the items I've gotten recently (many this summer), all for free:
Binoculars
Telescope
Wire shelving (the type used in custom closets)
8 lawn chairs (newer and stronger than the ones we had, so we rotate out our old stuff and upgrade for free)
Noise cancelling headphones (worth ~$200- virtually new and w/ original case) (only needed new battery)
A $10 bill in the pocket of a ladies bag that I found yesterday morning
Golf clubs (partial set) with Ping bag
Rakes, brooms and shovels
Seed spreader
Tools (including about 70 screwdrivers, wrenches, etc. all at one time)
Ice chests (like the Igloo type) (many of these out there)
Skis and poles
Humidor
Karaoke machine
Tower fans (lots of these out there)
Ceiling fans (lots of these too- one man got rid of 4 of them because he didn't like the color white, but they all worked)
Lots and lots of wire
Lots of electrical conduit
Furniture for my college age daughter (her roommates love it and have no idea where it came from)
Plenty of things that I've taken to Goodwill (office chairs, etc.)
Why would people get rid of perfectly good stuff? Plenty of reasons. Maybe someone died. Maybe the kids are gone and they are downsizing. Perhaps a divorce or bankruptcy.
What about this- a clean person has a relationship with a messy person and the messy person moves out, saying "I can't take it with me." The clean person FINALLY can have the house look the way they want it to look. Who knows...
The above stuff is but a very partial list of what I've found. And there have been plenty of things I've left behind as I don't have a truck and have limited space:
Bookcases (lots of them)
Appliances of all types (usually not working- so they need to be sold for scrap)
BBQ's (tons of them- pretty sure they weren't all broken)
Hot tubs
How about this? I saw a good looking 9-burner Grand Turbo brand BBQ sitting by the curb. Online I see that a 7-burner version from the same company costs $3,500. I imagine it might need 1-2 parts to get it working again. It made me sick to leave it behind, but there was nobody with a truck that I could call at 3am. Oh well...
A few points I need to make: If you are concerned that your spouse will get embarrassed if one of the neighbors sees you, then just go very late at night or to a different neighborhood.
Also, check the rules in your city to make sure that picking up this stuff is ok. In my area, I called someone at the city and he said flat out that they pay by the pound to drop this stuff off at the landfill, so the less they need to drop off the better. That is different from the recyclable trash cans, where the city GETS PAID for what is inside.
In areas where you have a long drive to a landfill, this may not be as worthwhile. Ditto for rural areas where people are more self-sufficient (for instance, there are probably lots of farmers who are also mechanics and can fix lots of things).
Also, before you go poking around, it is good to consider getting a tetanus shot.
I have to admit that scrapping can be a lot of fun (like going through coins for me). Sometimes I am tired, it is late or very hot outside or I just don't really feel like it. Then I think about the potential rewards and get up off my backside to get in the car.
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.