by Recyclersteve » Fri Jun 04, 2021 5:34 pm
I want to add a few more thoughts on A-Mark for those who think it might have gotten a little boring...
The low price today was $49.85, which was exactly (to the penny) the same low price from May 19th when the stock was just beginning to move to new higher ground after the earnings announcement. That COULD MEAN there is a big buyer willing to support the stock at that level. There is no way to know for sure. Remember, this is, to put it crudely, a high stakes poker game. People play games all the time, as my many years in the biz taught me.
Example: If I really wanted to, I could place an order to buy 10,000 shares and then instantly change it to only 100 shares. Some casual observers might actually assume I just bought 9,900 of the 10,000 shares right away, which would be totally wrong.
Another example: Let’s say someone is looking at the stock and has the ability to see the “book” of buyers/sellers right now, assuming the market is open. They might see a buyer for 100 shares at $50 and a seller for 5,000 shares at $50.10. This would imply selling pressure, since there are 5,000 shares being offered at the lowest price available and only 100 being bought. That might look bad. In fact, there are those (including short sellers and hedge funds) who would WANT it to look bad. But, picture this. The brokerage firm presenting the order to sell 5,000 shares at $50.10 has another much better and larger client who wants to buy, say, 30,000 shares at any price from $49.99 to $50.25. Furthermore, that whale (very large client) might give a special handling department at the broker up to 60 days to work the order.
There are many types of hidden (non-displayable) types of orders including Immediate or Cancel, Fill or Kill, Discretion, etc. Even a basic market order isn’t displayed until AFTER the order is filled. Then you could see it in the time and sales.
My point is to avoid getting cocky about thinking you really understand how a stock trades. It isn’t nearly as easy as people think!
All that said, I have noticed something very positive about AMRK trading. The number of shares traded is SHARPLY HIGHER than it was before the earnings announcement. You can verify this yourself by going into Yahoo! Finance and clicking on Historical Data. Since the earnings announcement, the stock regularly trades over 100,000 shares a day. Up until just a few days prior to the announcement, it would mostly trade less than 50,000 shares a day and sometimes even less than 30,000.
Also this isn’t the type of stock that people would typically daytrade. Those stocks often trade 5-10 million shares a day or more- AMRK’s average volume is 151,000 shares a day per Yahoo!
So the good news is that this stock appears to be one that is being discovered. That part is GREAT in my opinion and could lead to the possibility that options (puts and calls) could become available on the stock on down the road.
Don’t forget this. With all I’ve said about AMRK (I know there has been a lot), perhaps the biggest thing is this- the PRICE/EARNINGS RATIO IS STILL ONLY 3. For a true value investor that is absolutely incredible. With even an average P/E of, say, 15-20, that implies that this could be a $250 stock- or even more!
I fully agree that watching the stock move back and forth between $49ish and $57ish is like watching paint dry. This isn’t a company that frequently releases news. Therefore, I wouldn’t expect the next substantial move up to be until mid-August, in the few days just before the next earnings announcement.
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.