- Aug 10, 2001
- 10,420
- 2
- 0
That comes out to a P/E ratio of 109.17. WTF?!? 
http://money.cnn.com/quote/quote.html?shownav=true&symb=GOOG
http://money.cnn.com/quote/quote.html?shownav=true&symb=GOOG
Yes it's about 2.5 X the IPO price, and with an insane P/E ratio. You have to assume earnings will quadruple to justify the current price compared to the P/E of Microsoft.Originally posted by: Amol
holy crap, didn't it start at like $90???!!
can you explain that? Strike price?Originally posted by: sygyzy
Imagine you joined google today and got options granted with a strike price of $250. By the time it vests, the stock plummets to more "realistic" levels, say $50. Now your stocks are worth NEGATIVE money!
If a company gives you stock, you own it and can sell it at any time and pocket the money.Originally posted by: PoPPeR
can you explain that? Strike price?Originally posted by: sygyzy
Imagine you joined google today and got options granted with a strike price of $250. By the time it vests, the stock plummets to more "realistic" levels, say $50. Now your stocks are worth NEGATIVE money!
Originally posted by: Caveman
Can someone explain how to "short" a stock? I've never understood how this is done...
Originally posted by: Kipper
Originally posted by: Caveman
Can someone explain how to "short" a stock? I've never understood how this is done...
You essentially sell shares which do not belong to you and are loaned to you on margin, then hope the stock price DROPS.
So assume you short sell 40 shares of Google at $250 apiece = $10,000 proceeds are now available in cash.
When your margin is called or whenever you feel like "covering" your short, you must repurchase shares to return to the original owner...
If Google shares are now $200, then you pocket $50/share in profit because you only have spent $8000 of the original cash proceeds = $2,000 in profit.
However, if Google shares have RISEN, you lose money on your short because you need to pay more out-of-pocket to cover those shares you sold short.
So if Google goes to $300, you have gotten screwed $50/share (need to pay $12,000 to repurchase those 40 shares) and are now in the hole $2000.
Originally posted by: binister
Basically going long on a position has a finite amount of risk. That is, you buy a $10 stock, the most you can lose is $10.
Going short on a position has an unlimited amount of risk. That is, you short a $10 stock and get called when it is worth a googol you lose a googol - $10.
Going short can be risky. Just ask folks who tried to short TravelZoo.
Originally posted by: Kipper
Originally posted by: binister
Basically going long on a position has a finite amount of risk. That is, you buy a $10 stock, the most you can lose is $10.
Going short on a position has an unlimited amount of risk. That is, you short a $10 stock and get called when it is worth a googol you lose a googol - $10.
Going short can be risky. Just ask folks who tried to short TravelZoo.
That's what stop loss orders are for.
Originally posted by: binister
Originally posted by: Kipper
Originally posted by: Caveman
Can someone explain how to "short" a stock? I've never understood how this is done...
You essentially sell shares which do not belong to you and are loaned to you on margin, then hope the stock price DROPS.
So assume you short sell 40 shares of Google at $250 apiece = $10,000 proceeds are now available in cash.
When your margin is called or whenever you feel like "covering" your short, you must repurchase shares to return to the original owner...
If Google shares are now $200, then you pocket $50/share in profit because you only have spent $8000 of the original cash proceeds = $2,000 in profit.
However, if Google shares have RISEN, you lose money on your short because you need to pay more out-of-pocket to cover those shares you sold short.
So if Google goes to $300, you have gotten screwed $50/share (need to pay $12,000 to repurchase those 40 shares) and are now in the hole $2000.
Basically going long on a position has a finite amount of risk. That is, you buy a $10 stock, the most you can lose is $10.
Going short on a position has an unlimited amount of risk. That is, you short a $10 stock and get called when it is worth a googol you lose a googol - $10.
Going short can be risky. Just ask folks who tried to short TravelZoo.
Originally posted by: Mildlyamused
Originally posted by: binister
Originally posted by: Kipper
Originally posted by: Caveman
Can someone explain how to "short" a stock? I've never understood how this is done...
You essentially sell shares which do not belong to you and are loaned to you on margin, then hope the stock price DROPS.
So assume you short sell 40 shares of Google at $250 apiece = $10,000 proceeds are now available in cash.
When your margin is called or whenever you feel like "covering" your short, you must repurchase shares to return to the original owner...
If Google shares are now $200, then you pocket $50/share in profit because you only have spent $8000 of the original cash proceeds = $2,000 in profit.
However, if Google shares have RISEN, you lose money on your short because you need to pay more out-of-pocket to cover those shares you sold short.
So if Google goes to $300, you have gotten screwed $50/share (need to pay $12,000 to repurchase those 40 shares) and are now in the hole $2000.
Basically going long on a position has a finite amount of risk. That is, you buy a $10 stock, the most you can lose is $10.
Going short on a position has an unlimited amount of risk. That is, you short a $10 stock and get called when it is worth a googol you lose a googol - $10.
Going short can be risky. Just ask folks who tried to short TravelZoo.
Yea but what you guys are forgetting is the fact you don't have to sell...
Originally posted by: alkemyst
not many understanding this here.
dude is one of america's richest btw.
stock made many's lives.
all stocks on the 'average' are heading downhill a bit currently.
