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Re: Netflix Was Hammered *EDITED*

By: clo in ROUND | Recommend this post (0)
Tue, 20 Sep 11 10:10 PM | 40 view(s)
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Msg. 34984 of 45651
(This msg. is a reply to 34981 by Decomposed)

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Decomp,

Good for her, even better that she respects her limits.
Remember the stock split & the 120 turned into 240 shares.
240 x $300 the high would have been = $72,000, that ain't chopped chicken liver.

Your take is interesting.

Maybe that's why women tend to do better in the market, we would rather have a bird in the hand ;))
Most women are not big risk takers. clo

We men just make bad decisions. We can't help it. We’re men.

Women, on the other hand, do almost everything better. We’ve known this intuitively for a long time. If you didn’t, just ask your wife or your mother. But now there’s a raft of evidence that suggests women are better at everything -- including investing.

A new study by Barclays Capital and Ledbury Research found that women were more likely to make money in the market, mostly because they didn’t take as many risks. They bought and held. Women trade this way because they aren’t as confident -- or perhaps as overconfident -- as men, the study found.

"Women were more likely than men to have a greater desire for self-control,” the study concluded.

In other words, they trade less and earn more.

“Women tend to have lower composure and a greater desire for financial self-control, which is associated with a desire to use self-control strategies. Women are also more likely to believe that these strategies are effective.”

And you know what? They were.

The study supported previous findings that women tend to make more. A 2005 study by Merrill Lynch found that 35% of women held an investment too long, compared with 47% of men. Moreover, an academic study in 2009 found women made 1% more annually.

Chun Xia, a finance professor in Hong Kong and one of the researchers, wrote that women reported a greater desire for self-control in their approach to financial management. They are likely to get stressed out more easily and their awareness partially accounts for their greater desire for financial discipline.

However, the report said, it is men who actually have a greater need for discipline when it comes to investment management, as they tend to be overconfident in investing.

This probably doesn’t come as a shock to anyone. A new body of evidence is emerging that shows women are better at just about everything -- or, as Dan Abrams has titled his new book, “Man Down: Proof Beyond a Reasonable Doubt That Women Are Better Cops, Drivers, Gamblers, Spies, World Leaders, Beer Tasters, Hedge Fund Managers, and Just About Everything Else.”

As Abrams notes, women are better soldiers because they complain about pain less. They’re less likely to be hit by lightning because they’re not stupid enough to stand outside in a storm. They remember words and faces better. They’re better spies because they’re better at getting people to talk candidly.

Look at the evidence: Hillary Clinton has proved a more-than-capable secretary of state. Elizabeth Warren has been a leading champion against the banks. Sheila Bair, as chairman of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp., has played hardball with the boys’ club.

And what about Sarah Palin? There were 24,000 emails released this weekend and not one crotch shot.

This is deflating news for us men, but there is hope. We still lead the field in self-destructing because of pride, overconfidence, hubris and ego.

So, go ahead, ladies. Make the money. You’re better at it. We men will just make inappropriate comments, send you lewd photos and make asses of ourselves.

That’s why we created Facebook and Twitter.

It’s what we’re good at
http://money.msn.com/investment-advice/latest.aspx?post=5a3a76ca-746b-4b27-923c-c65c491e055b&ucsort=4




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The above is a reply to the following message:
Re: Netflix Was Hammered *EDITED*
By: Decomposed
in ROUND
Tue, 20 Sep 11 8:19 PM
Msg. 34981 of 45651

I spoke with the woman in my office who bought NFLX at the IPO. She exited her position, selling half at $220 (during the stock's ascent), and half at $165 (during the stock's collapse.)

Smart woman.

I toyed with her a little, trying to see if she had a point in mind where she'd buy back in. She thinks it could bottom at $80, but says there's no way she'll buy it again. She said that holding it was stressing her out big-time (she actually used the term "suicidal," but I'm sure she was kidding.) She not only exited NFLX, she closed her Scottrade account too - saying she'd had trouble sleeping and concluded that playing the stock market is not for her.

Funny, but I've had stocks take larger hits on a number of occasions and never got stressed to that degree. She had 120 shares, acquired at $9/share. Yes, NFLX was hammered, but this isn't that much money for her - an extremely well paid professional.

But I can understand the stress. NFLX peaked at $300, just two months ago. Seeing it fall this fast is difficult.

It is now $130.


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