Text to Search... About Author Email address... Submit Name Email Adress Message About Me page ##1## of ##2## Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec



404

Sorry, this page is not avalable
Home

Recent Articles

IBD on IPO

2
Today in Investor's Business Daily the Investor's Corner article is about IPO's and it has many good pointers about IPO's.

Summary of main points in that article.
  • IPO's tend to have shorter bases
  • In IPO's few shareholders need to be shaken off as most investors are brand new.
  • Avoid buying a IPO just after it goes public.
  • IPO's are more risky and volatile
  • Look for IPO's with outstanding earnings and sales
IBD has very good coverage on IPO's. In fact if you focus on IPO's which IBD highlights, you can make decent money . FCSX was one recent IPO which IBD was positive about from day one and look what has happened. Similarly in last month or so IBD highlighted EDN and SLT after their IPO, both are up more than 25% since IBD mention.

IBD on IPOs

A base pattern needs at least several weeks to develop, but new issues sometimes form short bases that lead to prodigious results.

Many stocks' successful initial bases have been as short as three or four weeks.

Under normal circumstances, you'd look for base patterns to build over seven weeks or longer. Flat bases can be as short as five weeks.

Shorter patterns are much more commonly associated with failed breakouts. So why the exception for IPOs?

Because when a company with heavy investor demand goes public, it can run up quickly. Its first correction may not take long.

Remember, a base serves to frustrate weak holders, leaving the stock in the hands of investors with firmer convictions about it.

In an IPO, few shareholders need to be shaken out since most investors are brand-new holders.

It's still best to avoid buying an IPO just after it goes public. Let the stock develop some degree of trading history and wait for it to form its first base. Just be aware that first base could be pretty short.

IPOs have some risks not shared by established stocks, though.

If the general market stumbles into a correction, it's often the new issues that pull back the hardest.

Also, IPOs tend to be more volatile — something that can bring a stock down as fast as it rallies.




Earlier Posts:

How to trade IPO's
Become a member Methods

2 comments:

bandy said...

One of the IBD points is to "Look for IPO's with outstanding earnings and sales." Since these are new issues, where can you get this data? A recent IPO that is getting good coverage is NZ. However, I can't find any sales or earnings data on the company.

Pradeep Bonde said...

IBD itself has such information. Plus for new IPO's prospectus has this info.
Also the good IPO's are covered by IBD in their IPO section. Also everyday "Stocks in the news" column will have the IPO's with good earnings rating highlighted, if they are buyable as per IBD method.