Home › Forums › Financial Markets/Economics › Qualcomm Has Really P.O.’d Wall Street Analysts…
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HLS.
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AuthorPosts
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February 24, 2010 at 8:10 AM #17102February 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM #517319
jameswenn
ParticipantI thought the company was doing well. Seem like every other smartphone coming out has a Qualcomm processor.
Qualcomm can’t help that speculators were bidding up it’s stock.
February 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM #517460jameswenn
ParticipantI thought the company was doing well. Seem like every other smartphone coming out has a Qualcomm processor.
Qualcomm can’t help that speculators were bidding up it’s stock.
February 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM #517895jameswenn
ParticipantI thought the company was doing well. Seem like every other smartphone coming out has a Qualcomm processor.
Qualcomm can’t help that speculators were bidding up it’s stock.
February 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM #517986jameswenn
ParticipantI thought the company was doing well. Seem like every other smartphone coming out has a Qualcomm processor.
Qualcomm can’t help that speculators were bidding up it’s stock.
February 24, 2010 at 9:25 AM #518242jameswenn
ParticipantI thought the company was doing well. Seem like every other smartphone coming out has a Qualcomm processor.
Qualcomm can’t help that speculators were bidding up it’s stock.
February 24, 2010 at 10:33 AM #517344werewolf34
ParticipantQCOM was the #1 position for hedge funds and short-term pro money during the bubble run-up
Maybe it doesn’t look so shiny anymore
February 24, 2010 at 10:33 AM #517486werewolf34
ParticipantQCOM was the #1 position for hedge funds and short-term pro money during the bubble run-up
Maybe it doesn’t look so shiny anymore
February 24, 2010 at 10:33 AM #517920werewolf34
ParticipantQCOM was the #1 position for hedge funds and short-term pro money during the bubble run-up
Maybe it doesn’t look so shiny anymore
February 24, 2010 at 10:33 AM #518011werewolf34
ParticipantQCOM was the #1 position for hedge funds and short-term pro money during the bubble run-up
Maybe it doesn’t look so shiny anymore
February 24, 2010 at 10:33 AM #518267werewolf34
ParticipantQCOM was the #1 position for hedge funds and short-term pro money during the bubble run-up
Maybe it doesn’t look so shiny anymore
February 24, 2010 at 12:33 PM #517359ucodegen
ParticipantThere is a new-old game in the stock market. The whole point is to get the stock moving up and down, with people jumping in and out of the stock. This way, the brokers and market makers make money. Bash a stock bad to the press or create ‘leaks’ of information, let the stock take a large hit and then buy in after 30 or more days of it being low. Too many people don’t do their DD and just jump when some news pundit opens their mouth.
Remember that Jim Cramer stated that there was no real problem in the housing market before it really tanked. It was only after the banks started having real problems that he said anything. Also remember that Jim Cramer admitted to using the above mentioned method when he was in his hedge-fund days.
Cramer also said in 2/19/2010 that QCOM might be forming a technical bottom (2nd page):
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10685068/2/jim-cramers-portfolios-of-the-week.htmlFebruary 24, 2010 at 12:33 PM #517500ucodegen
ParticipantThere is a new-old game in the stock market. The whole point is to get the stock moving up and down, with people jumping in and out of the stock. This way, the brokers and market makers make money. Bash a stock bad to the press or create ‘leaks’ of information, let the stock take a large hit and then buy in after 30 or more days of it being low. Too many people don’t do their DD and just jump when some news pundit opens their mouth.
Remember that Jim Cramer stated that there was no real problem in the housing market before it really tanked. It was only after the banks started having real problems that he said anything. Also remember that Jim Cramer admitted to using the above mentioned method when he was in his hedge-fund days.
Cramer also said in 2/19/2010 that QCOM might be forming a technical bottom (2nd page):
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10685068/2/jim-cramers-portfolios-of-the-week.htmlFebruary 24, 2010 at 12:33 PM #517935ucodegen
ParticipantThere is a new-old game in the stock market. The whole point is to get the stock moving up and down, with people jumping in and out of the stock. This way, the brokers and market makers make money. Bash a stock bad to the press or create ‘leaks’ of information, let the stock take a large hit and then buy in after 30 or more days of it being low. Too many people don’t do their DD and just jump when some news pundit opens their mouth.
Remember that Jim Cramer stated that there was no real problem in the housing market before it really tanked. It was only after the banks started having real problems that he said anything. Also remember that Jim Cramer admitted to using the above mentioned method when he was in his hedge-fund days.
Cramer also said in 2/19/2010 that QCOM might be forming a technical bottom (2nd page):
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10685068/2/jim-cramers-portfolios-of-the-week.htmlFebruary 24, 2010 at 12:33 PM #518026ucodegen
ParticipantThere is a new-old game in the stock market. The whole point is to get the stock moving up and down, with people jumping in and out of the stock. This way, the brokers and market makers make money. Bash a stock bad to the press or create ‘leaks’ of information, let the stock take a large hit and then buy in after 30 or more days of it being low. Too many people don’t do their DD and just jump when some news pundit opens their mouth.
Remember that Jim Cramer stated that there was no real problem in the housing market before it really tanked. It was only after the banks started having real problems that he said anything. Also remember that Jim Cramer admitted to using the above mentioned method when he was in his hedge-fund days.
Cramer also said in 2/19/2010 that QCOM might be forming a technical bottom (2nd page):
http://www.thestreet.com/story/10685068/2/jim-cramers-portfolios-of-the-week.html -
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