Great Profit Potential Comes With Greater Risk

IPO
Angelo asks:

Perhaps you have been trading stocks for a long time. You believe that you have mastered the art known as trading and want to go even further. You think you are ready to play with the big boys now.

All right then, step right up to the plate and get prepared for some advanced stock market trading.

For advanced traders, using margin, selling short, getting into IPOs, and other quite sophisticated trading techniques and strategies can open a whole new world of exciting trading experiences and potential profits.

Understanding IPOs

IPOs or initial public offerings are a highly visible sign of the transition of a company from a privately owned organization to a publicly held firm. Every incorporated business issues common stock, although initially this is usually to a few stockholders. In order for a company to raise necessary capital without incurring debt, one commonly used method is to sell stock to the public, thereby becoming a publicly traded company.

There are two ways to potentially make money from these IPOs.

First, the trader needs to get in early and buy stocks through the initial public offering, hope for a large quick increase in share price, and then sell shares for a quick profit.

The other way is to sit back, watching and waiting until after the IPO has begun. See if the new stock is fairly priced. If it’s reasonable, then one would purchase the stock.

Shorting Stocks

Selling short is an advanced technique that many traders do not take advantage of. Short sellers look for the best stock to sell. Short sellers sell stock they don’t actually own with a belief the value will come down by a significant amount in the near future. The shares are borrowed from a stockholder. The borrowing is done by each party’s brokers.

When the price tumbles, the short sellers can buy the stock at the lower price to cover their short positions, pocket the profit and return the shares to the owners.

Short selling is risky though. If the prices jump instead of drop, you will lose money. It is often difficult to easily speculate if a stock will fall. The historical tendency of the average stock is to increase in price over the long term. So the potential for loss is greater than the potential for profit, because the short seller is going against a historical norm.

Margin Trading

Margin accounts can permit the trader to borrow money to buy stock. Margin trading uses borrowed money to increase how much stock the trader can buy. This money can be loaned by a broker.

If you were to buy a stock worth $1,000 on a cash basis, without the use of margin trading, you would have to dish out the full $1,000 dollars, plus commissions. But if you margin trade, your broker can lend you up to half of the amount or $500 on many stocks, and you only need to shoulder the other $500 plus commissions and interest payments.

If the stock gets you $10 per stock, profit will be based on the number of shares of stock you bought with $1,000. Then you can pay the broker back. If you did not margin trade, your profit would only have been for the number of shares of stock you paid for using cash. On the other hand, were the stock price to go down, the loss incurred would be based on the entire $1,000, and you would still owe the margin loan amount to the broker.

Closing

As with everything in life, there is a flip side to every coin. In many cases, the greater the profit, the greater the risk. Advanced trading is not for the faint of heart, and you should only trade with risk capital, not with money that you can’t do without.



Online account with access to IPO?

IPO
Sade asks:

I currently have a zecco account and I don’t believe I can access IPO’s (the initial price), does anyone know of any online brokers that have access to ipos? I am interested particularly in the VISA IPO.

Middle East Economies Beating Credit Crunch

IPO
Catina asks:

US$ 4.72 billion in capital raised showing strong economic sentiment.

The Middle East markets raised US$ 4.72 billion from 13 IPOs in the second quarter of 2008 compared to US$ 3.9 billion in the same period in 2007.

The capital raised was 20% higher than amounts raised in the first quarter of 2008.

The figures were today announced by Ernst & Young today.

Saudi Arabia’s Al Inma Bank was the largest IPO in the Middle East in the second quarter of 2008 raising US$ 2.8 billion which amounted to 60% of the total funds raised.

Saudi Arabia’s Rabigh Refining and Petrochemical Company and Mobile Telecommunications Company Saudi Arabia combined accounted for 75% of the capital raised in the first quarter of 2008.

Other large IPOs in the region included Mohammad Al Mojil Group with US$559.94 million.

The UAE’s DEPA United Group raised US$432.3 million and was followed by two Egyptian companies - Palm Hills Developments with US$348.22 million and Maridive and Oil Services with US$272.93 million.

According to Azhar Zafar, Head of Mergers & Acquisitions, Ernst & Young Middle East, “There were 52 IPOs during 2007 and in the first half of 2008 there have been 26. The total capital raised in the first half of 2008 amounted to US$8.69 billion compared to US$4.83 billion from 33 IPOs during the same period last year.

The trend in the market is fewer but larger IPOs. IPOs continue to be oversubscribed in most instances, which reflects the continued appetite for IPOs in the market, for now.”

Phil Gandier, Head of Transaction Advisory Services for Ernst & Young Middle East, added, “although the drop in number and amount of capital raised in IPOs has been more severe in mature global markets, the region has shown some resilience as a result of liquidity created on the back of continuously increasing oil prices.

Less uncertainty in the East

Gandier said expectations for the rest of the year remain optimistic due to the large number of announced and to-be-announced IPOs. Companies that have either withdrawn or postponed their IPOs would revisit going public once they realize that market conditions in the Middle East region are less fraught with the uncertainty that is persisting in other regions.

Globally, the size of IPOs taken for two quarters on aggregate was roughly half as much as the 2007 while more IPOs have been postponed or withdrawn in the first six months of 2008 (177) than in all of 2007 (169).

In the second quarter of 2008, a total of 258 IPOs worldwide raised US$37.4 billion in capital. This compares with 247 IPOs worth US$41.2 billion in the previous quarter. However, compared with the same quarter in 2007, total capital raised fell by 59% (from US$90.4 billion to US$37.4 billion) and the number of deals more than halved (from 567 to 258). The BRIC states (Brazil, India, China and Russia) accounted for 76 deals worth $11.8 billion in the second quarter.

Emerging markets continued to drive activity in the second quarter with China leading the way in both value (US$6.2 billion) and volume (56 IPOs). Seven of the top 10 and 15 of the top 20 IPOs by capital raised were from emerging markets.

Four countries accounted for half of the capital raised globally: China (US$6.2 billion); Brazil (US$4.6 billion); United States (US$4.3 billion); and Saudi Arabia (US$3.4 billion). The most active countries in terms of number of deals were China (56); Poland (21); and Australia, South Korea and India (17).

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my question was how to start my own company and get it listed as ipo?

IPO
Sharmaine asks:

how do ipos work and what about shares how do i own 51% of the company and what if i dont want it on the market for trade just want investors to loan money with interest in return

is there any websites , where we can see all Indian Initial Public Offering Shares with initial bid price?

initial public offering
Dotty asks:

All IPOs for Last three years , which have come in indian share market

I am in college and new to investing. When it is reported that the individual investor can buy Fortress IPO.

IPO
Hollis asks:

..does that mean that I am able to. I don’t understand what they mean my individual investor, and can someone like me even purchase IPOs? I have only a few thousand dollars to work with.

Where can I find a list of upcoming IPO’s?

IPO
Sarina asks:

I can only find lists of previous IPOs.