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Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares...)
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quote:Originally posted by a4realguy: It's all hype, speculation and conjecture...
a4 Or . . . maybe it's opinion, hopes and dreams.
We already know "whining" doesn't help the PPS, so why not a little "reverse whining"? Since we have no control of the PPS, or of Frank, all we can do is wait. Some people prefer to be negative while they wait. Others prefer to be positive. And neither is correct because everyone handles stress in their own way.
I'm not criticizing . . . everyone has to react in a way that makes them feel better. I prefer to smile . . . and it drives people crazy because they think I know something and won't tell them.
-------------------- Everything I say is only my opinion ... right or wrong.
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-----Original Message----- From: "Equity Relations, Inc." <staff*equityrelations.com> Date: Fri, 4 Nov 2005 12:31:39 To:<rodney*xxxxxxxx.com> Subject: RE: MESSAGE VIA QTV WEBSITE: your company is being slandered
Thank you
Richard Brown Equity Relations, Inc. Creating Synergy Between Company and Investor Office: 617-314-7379 Email: Staff*equityrelations.com Web: www.equityrelations.com Please visit our website for company information and disclaimers
-----Original Message----- From: rodney*xxxxxxxx.com [mailto:rodney*xxxxxxxx.com] Sent: Friday, November 04, 2005 10:21 AM To: staff*equityrelations.com Subject: MESSAGE VIA QTV WEBSITE: your company is being slandered
The following is a comment provided by the form on the website. Your email address was not shared to the public. NOTE: Email addresses provided to us may not be valid, respond only if the email address looks valid. If you do respond, your email address will be revealed to the sender of this message. --------------------------------------------------------------
Name Provided: Rodney Xxxxxxxx
Subject: your company is being slandered
Email: rodney*xxxxxxxx.com
Comments: read the last paragraph of this article.
several of us at allstocks have sent the author e-mails asking him to retract this statement.
he has changed the wording, from the leader in Gay Pornographic movies to what is says now.
you may want to send him a message and ask for the info to be correctly stated.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares...)
TWO DOLLARS! Sh!t! If this thing ever hits .002 again - I may think of selling. LOL!
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No one on this board is a real long term investor. We are all sitting around waiting for the next stock to hit a few 1000% days and make us some green.
Why else invest in a penny. 9 x out of 10 you would have had better luck burning your money and praying it comes back.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares)
pennies I cannot answer for others, but I would sell every share and take my TWO HUNDRED DOLLARS to Vegas. (I'm a very conservative investor.)
I'd be out at 50 cents! So it it jumped straight to $2 you bet I'd sell...and retire.
-------------------- The opinions expressed here by myself and others should be taken for what they are: opinions. Beware, many express opinion as fact. Do your own research from reputable sources and never invest more than you can afford to loose. ~,-,-< GatorMan
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Hmm. I have been in this since April 04. That's when I found it. I only found this board in early 05 and lurked before I joined. A long is a relative term if you base it on TIME. Its really about sentiment on the stock or investment.
We all have a price in mind when one buys a stock. I had $750 bucks in an E-Trade account (all I had to play with). I saw a stock and product I believed in so I invested. That was SIRI * .70. I still have it and I don't intend on getting rid of it but that doesn't mean I will NEVER get rid of it, but I'll always keep a little of it. I have not sold a share of QBID yet. This was a long shot investment because of the lack of financials. But oil wells are shots in the dark too, you don't see ExxonMobil or Chevron being chastised for that, do you?
And, I am NOT saying that TRADING IS BAD. I am not going to argue with you or G, this is my last post on the subject.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
-------------------- "True Wisdom Only Comes From Pain"
quote:Originally posted by Optimus Prime: Hmm. I have been in this since April 04. That's when I found it. I only found this board in early 05 and lurked before I joined. A long is a relative term if you base it on TIME. Its really about sentiment on the stock or investment.
We all have a price in mind when one buys a stock. I had $750 bucks in an E-Trade account (all I had to play with). I saw a stock and product I believed in so I invested. That was SIRI * .70. I still have it and I don't intend on getting rid of it but that doesn't mean I will NEVER get rid of it, but I'll always keep a little of it. I have not sold a share of QBID yet. This was a long shot investment because of the lack of financials. But oil wells are shots in the dark too, you don't see ExxonMobil or Chevron being chastised for that, do you?
And, I am NOT saying that TRADING IS BAD. I am not going to argue with you or G, this is my last post on the subject.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
I would love to see your account positions from etrade. If you don't mind showing them.
(Not typed out numbers the actual position page.)
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The question is not would you sell at $2 (everyone would, even me) but how much would you sell and how much would keep to sell at 4 or 6 or .50 or .0001.
Sorry, couldn't resist posting. Now I am really done.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Everyone would sell at $2. lol
No one on this board is a real long term investor. We are all sitting around waiting for the next stock to hit a few 1000% days and make us some green.
Why else invest in a penny. 9 x out of 10 you would have had better luck burning your money and praying it comes back.
-------------------- "True Wisdom Only Comes From Pain"
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares...)
Kind of a specious argument though. Show me ANY investor in ANY stock that wouldn't sell after a 4000% run up. I don't think they exist!
And I have had this one for going on 2 years now. My original exit point was going to be when they said they would break even in like 2008. I am not upset that they have moved that date forward though!
-------------------- I just want to make enough money to be eccentric.
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quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares...)
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
My time horizon when I bought in Feb 2004 was 5 years. It is now 3.5 years.
If this hit $2 tomorrow would you sell? (If you have shares...)
Kind of a specious argument though. Show me ANY investor in ANY stock that wouldn't sell after a 4000% run up. I don't think they exist!
And I have had this one for going on 2 years now. My original exit point was going to be when they said they would break even in like 2008. I am not upset that they have moved that date forward though!
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[/qb][/QUOTE][/qb][/QUOTE]A long term investor is someone that raley looks at the stock price. Doesn't post on boards. A long is in a stock for years not one or two. Everyone on this board has a price if we hit today they would sell. That is not a long term investor.
[/QB][/QUOTE]
pennies you definately have the right to say what you want, but i would completely disagree with you...i think you wanna only a. talk bad about q investors or b. getting a little to far fetched
an investor is somebody who invests in the company for the future expecting gains because of its business model. you could invest in a company for a 1 year period, or a 50 year period it doesnt matter...
a trader is somebody who sees short term voliatily and by using charts, news, etc are willing to hold for an hour, a day, a week, or maybe a couple of months...
Now obviously Q invetors are going to sell at $2, dont be ridiolous..
If thats the case pennies, than my parents who work for General motors and have been investing a percentage of their paychecks in the company for 20-30 years, were to sell if GM stock hit 300 dollars are not investors???
give me a break, your arguement is actually rude and condescending to the Q investors...
i personally got in as a trader because of the buyback news and expected big news and a short term spike...but i have slowly been turned into an investor of the company liking the business model and the future...
I think after thinking twice about what you are saying you will realize that you are incorrect.
-------------------- Buy the silence-Sell the noise SFTV.004-.0075 AVNT.0018-.0033 FPPL.0034-.03 WEGI. My new Call
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quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Everyone would sell at $2. lol
No one on this board is a real long term investor. We are all sitting around waiting for the next stock to hit a few 1000% days and make us some green.
Why else invest in a penny. 9 x out of 10 you would have had better luck burning your money and praying it comes back.
Even the Warren Buffit would sell if he had a stock gain of One million percent overnight & if he's not a long term investor no one is!!!!!
quote:Originally posted by Optimus Prime: Hmm. I have been in this since April 04. That's when I found it. I only found this board in early 05 and lurked before I joined. A long is a relative term if you base it on TIME. Its really about sentiment on the stock or investment.
We all have a price in mind when one buys a stock. I had $750 bucks in an E-Trade account (all I had to play with). I saw a stock and product I believed in so I invested. That was SIRI * .70. I still have it and I don't intend on getting rid of it but that doesn't mean I will NEVER get rid of it, but I'll always keep a little of it. I have not sold a share of QBID yet. This was a long shot investment because of the lack of financials. But oil wells are shots in the dark too, you don't see ExxonMobil or Chevron being chastised for that, do you?
And, I am NOT saying that TRADING IS BAD. I am not going to argue with you or G, this is my last post on the subject.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Definitions of LONG TERM INVESTOR on the Web:
Someone who invests in stocks, bonds, mutual funds or other investment vehicles for a long time. Typically at least 5 years, in order to fund long-term goals. A long-term investor looks for solid investments with a good long-term track record.
I would love to see your account positions from etrade. If you don't mind showing them.
(Not typed out numbers the actual position page.)
I am afraid I don't understand what that would prove. I don't have more stories like SIRI because I haven't found many other products that I think would qualify. Plus, I don't know how to do what you are asking without revealing my account information.
-------------------- "True Wisdom Only Comes From Pain"
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For all its worth, I just emailed Bill O'Reilly with the link to the article by Guy Adams. O'Reilly may be conservative, but he's not stupid. And if this person pi$$es him off, he could mention something on the air.
quote:Originally posted by pennnies: Everyone would sell at $2. lol
if you're still in this thing at $2, why wouldn't you hold for $5 or $6....
aaahahah this is the dumbest arguement on here ive ever seen i think, its great
ok so heres my .0005 cents worth:
if this went to 2 bucks tomorrow i would be long gone. i am investing because if this goes to .002 im not out, im buying more. that makes me long term. because i am adding to my position when necessary to build a future in a company i believe will make it. im not investing in immediate dollar signs
so, if this went to 2 bucks in 3-5 yrs, yes i may sell some along the way who knows, but i may also feel my investment is well kept and i would have continued to add to my position for the future when i would sell off someday... that is long term. selling at .001 is short term. hahaaaha wow
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I believe that my time horizon for holding this stock is longer than most people here. I continue to review the reasons I bought in & one very important fact continues to neutralize my concerns about OS,,, ........................................................................... The purchasing power of the U.S. gay and lesbian population will hit an estimated $610 billion in 2005, according to a 2004 study by Witeck-Combs Communications, a Washington, D.C.-based marketing firm specializing in the gay marketplace.
Michelle Scales, director of Wells Fargo's division of "diverse growth segments," ticked off a list of attributes that makes the gay and lesbian market a natural fit for the bank: the U.S. gay population is estimated to include 15 million people with a combined $610 billion in purchasing power. Gays and lesbians are twice as likely to own a small business as non-gays, and 75 percent have incomes above the national average. Seven of every 10 gay couples own a home. ............................................................................
I'm not suggesting that 15 million or by some counts as much as 25 million (all in the US alone) will subscribe to QTV. But over time a couple million will subscribe & 3 or 4 million is not out of the question.
The audit will put us in a whole different category. Reporting Company. That in its self will increase the VALUE of this company. I look forward to this being completed.
With that audit behind us along with the very possibility that Frank will report profits within the year, a serious buyback, the approaching Chicago games, more carriers, syndication of some of their shows & things we've not even considered yet we will see rewards from this that few imagined.
Remember this about an audit. You can't report profits with the conviction Wall Street expects if you're not filing with the SEC.
Yes! We can run without an audit. but my targets are considerably higher than pennies.
There is a reason MSFT with 11 billion shares outstanding trades for $26.60 a share. They make money & report a profit. No! I'm not saying we will ever trade for $20 a share. But I maintain that a dollar a share is realistic.
While you all are laughing just remember that Genuine Broadcasting International TV Networks do not trade for less than a dollar a share.
And remember this. The hardest thing this company had to do has been accomplished.
(4) Are there precedents, companies that provide the same kind of product or service?
(5) Do most if not all these companies trade for over a dollar a share?
(6) What differentiates my prospect from these other companies?
(7) Do they have a target demographic?
(8) Does that demographic have the means to support the product?
(9) Where does the commercial community stand, do Fortune 500 Companies want to reach the prospect's target demographic?
(10) Can the prospect deliver an effective avenue for the major corporations to reach this market?
(11) Do they have sponsors?
(12) What's the possible impact of their primary competition & will my prospect have the lead in the market?
(13) Does this prospect have management with a proven track record of not only running a company but actually bringing a company to market, making it successful & profiting from this endeavor.
And most importantly one personal question,,,
(14) Do I have the discipline, willingness & conviction to maintain a large core position.