sino grandness - undervalued stock

More
10 years 1 week ago #21086 by sykn
I first bought shares of SGFI nearly a year ago at around 70 cents. Of course, at that time, I didn't think (perhaps rather naively, since I only started doing this full time around that time) risks of fraud could be such a problem. But now after paying "school fees" for my mistakes, I have become a little wiser. So yes, if SGFI's clean as a whistle, 50 cents is definitely a steal. But that's a big "if". Hope I've answered your question.

Mel wrote: sykn, I can understand yr prudence. Would you buy back at a much lower level? Wht is it? In the event that Sino Grandness is clean as a whistle, the share price is really a bargain at about 3.5X.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
10 years 1 week ago #21090 by SWN
The CEO bought another 800,000 shares @ $0.505 on 23 Oct 2014!

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
10 years 1 week ago #21094 by heifien91
In my opinion, the CEO buying more shares does not give me much reassurance. His statement about how they have been audited and hence we should trust him is a potential red flag. Trust is earned and not asked for.

(not vested)

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
10 years 1 week ago - 10 years 4 days ago #21095 by ethan999
Last edit: 10 years 4 days ago by ethan999.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
10 years 1 week ago #21096 by SWN
Helifen91,

Over the last two days, 22nd and 23rd Oct, the CEO purchased a total of 1.4 million shares. If he is not confident of the company, you think he would throw good money after bad? Moreover I think his stake of 40.37% should make him the largest shareholder, so if anything go wrong with the company, he stand to loose the most!

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

More
10 years 1 week ago #21097 by heifien91
Dear SWN,

Of course SSH buying shares can indicate his faith in the company. However, it does not necessarily mean that as well. We still have to assess the situation and the company. I have past experience with Quindell, a company that was said to be a fraud by a blogger. Stock price dropped 50%, backed by large reputable funds like Fidelity and CEO constantly buying back shares during that period the price still continued dropping. Essentially, my point is don't base your judgement solely on CEO buying back shares as he may have other intentions.

Please Log in or Create an account to join the conversation.

Time to create page: 0.226 seconds
Powered by Kunena Forum
 

We have 1361 guests and one member online

rss_2 NextInsight - Latest News