Posts Tagged ‘Barclays’
Hi all,
To be honest I thought that Wall st will react better to the new president. I thought that Mr Obama will come with a great speech that will carry Wall st with great optimism all the way up. I was wrong.
When Barak Obama made his speech, the Dow was around 8150 soon after it went down to 8100 and then all the way down to 7950. Great start. So if Obama didn’t understand the task in front of him now he does.
But with banking sector near collapse some analysts talk about the Dow around 6000 and the FTSE has 2 at the beginning. My advice is calculate your risk. If you still want to go long on the market buy put option. Just in case. But put options are expensive these days because no one can see good news in the near feature.
I know that I am willing to take a risk and going to buy Barclays if they touches 65p. At the moment it is 72.95 so I am not far. But this is for long term investment. I think they are one of the few that have a chance to get it through, and if they do, the sky is the limit for this share.
Hi all,
Back in my of a fight back to London I read an article in one of the financial magazine that recommended to buying Barclays the price of the share back then was 338p. Today? 98p after black Friday for the famous British bank. In the last hour of trading the share lost 25%. Barclays is trading on 1993 level. And RBS? even worse 34.7p the bank that on 23/02/2007 was 704p.
In other words banks are trading for pennies. Do they have a chance? One can say that if RBS is just 34.7 it has no where to go down. But in my view it is matter of weeks or even day before the government will take full control and share price will be worth nothing.
Take a look at Citi. Not long ago a friend of mine told me that if the share price is below $10 I should buy. And I did. I bought it when the share was $9.38. On the same day it jumped to $9.90 and I didn’t take profit. Stupid me. It was Friday and I should take 5% profit on one day.
The next Monday the share went down and hit my stop loss at $8.6 on the same week the share went all the way to $4 before the US government bailed them out. My friend that recommended me to buy did sell and found himself buying more when it was $6 and more when it was $5 and $4.
Yes the share did bounce back and he managed to make small profit but since then it seems that that the end is close for Citi. And Bank of America, and Lloyds TSB and even HSBC. No one safe. Going short is the obvious choice but apart of HSBC no much left to go down. So it is a huge risk.
I am staying put.
Have a nice weekend!
