Msft

Discussion in 'Stocks' started by jonnysharp, Apr 28, 2006.

  1. oh my......the 23.50's put up no resistance at all.....i was sure there was going to be some support there but it broke that level in about 0.23 seconds........where oh where is this stock headed? could we be seeing the teens by mid summer? :)
     
    #21     May 3, 2006
  2. capmac

    capmac

    I don't think anyone really cares about where MSFT is headed anymore. Or for that fact, INTC, DELL, or even CSCO.

    These stocks will be dead money for many, many years. The stock market is tired, kept alive by traders scalping for pennies.

    It's no wonder real estate has been so hot lately...
     
    #22     May 3, 2006
  3. madmunny,
    I have some "good" news; in a few weeks from now there will be many more US-stocks which will go the same route as MSFT. Gold, silver, oil and the US$ tell but one story to anybody with a few ounces of brains: the stockmarket is rediculess overspeculated by the mob and when the decline in stocks starts in earnest -most likely this month- the bearmarket from 1929-1932 (84% decline) will be repeated at least.
     
    #23     May 3, 2006
  4. hopefully.....theres plenty of fear out there as evidenced on this thread.....more fear -> more $$$$.
     
    #24     May 4, 2006
  5. I'm sure he's well hedged.
     
    #25     May 4, 2006
  6. I'm liking MSFT right now.. picked up a few shares at $24.02 on Tuesday. Seems like they dipped a little again into the $23 territory. :D Thinking about getting a few more for the long haul.
     
    #26     May 4, 2006
  7. siki13

    siki13

    Any fool knows how to average down position ,add a big ego
    and you have recipe for disaster
     
    #27     May 4, 2006
  8. yes, im sure that allocating less than 5% of my investing a/c over time into a non-margined long term investment such as MSFT is a receipe for diaster.
     
    #28     May 4, 2006
  9. My analysis is that every tom, dick and harry have jumped on the CANSLIM train again with these high flying small caps, and the big caps have been left behind creating a divergence which WILL at some time converge; right now there is good value in big names such as C, WMT, MSFT, ORCL, CSCO to name a few.
     
    #29     May 4, 2006
  10. Silver lining in Microsoft's stock slide?

    By Reuters

    Story Thu May 04 09:44:04 PDT 2006


    Some investors are viewing Microsoft as a bargain after uncertainty about its investment strategy and development delays pushed the software giant's share price to three-year lows.
    Value investors see Microsoft's latest woes as a chance to buy a cash-rich technology company boasting two dominant software franchises--the Windows operating system and Office business software--on the cheap.

    "Microsoft is definitely cheap right now," said Morningstar equity analyst Toan Tran. "If you're a long-term, patient investor, you're buying one of the great businesses in the world at a very cheap price right now."

    Investors were concerned about the lack of details about the company's plans to better compete with online rivals Google and Yahoo and the potential for more delays to its Windows upgrade, Vista.

    In the four trading days after Microsoft announced a profit target that disappointed investors, its share price plunged 15 percent, shaving $42 billion off the company's market value.

    Based on Wednesday's closing share price of $23.17, Microsoft was trading at 16.5 times Wall Street's estimated earnings for its fiscal year starting July 1.

    On that basis, Microsoft is trading at a premium to other blue-chip stocks on the Dow Jones industrial average. But value investor Todd Lowenstein at HighMark Capital Management argues that when Microsoft's $35 billion cash reserve is factored into its share price--which would add more than $3 per share--any premium is erased.

    "The valuation is attractive, and much of the reason for the hype about this product cycle is still there. The product cycle is still coming, and it's not going away," said Mark Lebovitz, a portfolio manager for the Munder Internet Fund and Munder Technology Fund.

    "The biggest issue is where it's going to spend all this money," added Lebovitz, whose funds own more than 1 million Microsoft shares.

    Free shot at a windfall
    Lowenstein said the cash cushion means investors are only paying for earnings from the Windows and Office business, which account for most of Microsoft's profit, while getting a free shot to possibly benefit from a future windfall from its Xbox 360 game console or mobile phone software.

    "We as value investors like to get things for free, and we are getting all those other businesses for free," said Lowenstein, co-portfolio manager at HighMark's Value Momentum Fund.

    "We will be inclined to be adding. You have very little downside here and some significant upside," he added.

    In recent months, several Wall Street analysts and financial publications have predicted a rally for Microsoft shares due to optimism about Windows Vista and Office 2007--only to see the stock fizzle.

    Through Wednesday, the stock was down 11 percent in 2006, compared with gains on every major U.S. stock index. Microsoft shares are down 30 percent since the start of 2002, at the same time that the Nasdaq has risen 18 percent and the S&P 500 has gained 14 percent.

    However, Microsoft shares appear to be reaching a technical bottom that suggests they are due for a recovery, analysts said.

    Microsoft shares are also near levels where it has consistently found support over the last three-and-a-half years. Technical analysts see a support range for the stock between $22.50 and $23.30.

    "When you have such an extensive basing pattern, the markets are conditioned to buy when it gets down to the lower portion of the pattern," said Paul Cherney, an independent technical analyst.

    Microsoft shares were up 15 cents at $23.32 in morning trade on the Nasdaq on Thursday.

    Story Copyright © 2006 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
     
    #30     May 5, 2006