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I'm contemplating between FOE or PEIX, which would you suggest?
Why are you looking to buy them? What is your target? What is the downside risk?
I am not the most savvy investor but energy overall was down last year and i think it might have a good bounce this year- especially going into the summer. Although not energy I think FOE will go in the direction of energy.
Both are relatively cheap in the cost per share and I only plan to invest about $1K, so I'm not going to put it in Apple or Price line and get 2 shares. They are both price relatively well within their 52 week range. I'm looking for stock with the opportunity to increase in price as oppose to paying a dividend as i am invested in WWE to cover my dividend revenue.
My target is about 15% sometime in June. The downside is the relative price leads the stock to more volitility- a .25 or $1 drop is a huge %.
I am not the most savvy investor but energy overall was down last year and i think it might have a good bounce this year- especially going into the summer. Although not energy I think FOE will go in the direction of energy.
Both are relatively cheap in the cost per share and I only plan to invest about $1K, so I'm not going to put it in Apple or Price line and get 2 shares. They are both price relatively well within their 52 week range. I'm looking for stock with the opportunity to increase in price as oppose to paying a dividend as i am invested in WWE to cover my dividend revenue.
My target is about 15% sometime in June. The downside is the relative price leads the stock to more volitility- a .25 or $1 drop is a huge %.
I think this has been discussed before, so forgive me if I'm being repetetive. But what's the difference whether you get 2 $500 shares or 100 $10 shares? Both equal $1K, and they'll move in terms of %, not dollars and cents.
I think this has been discussed before, so forgive me if I'm being repetetive. But what's the difference whether you get 2 $500 shares or 100 $10 shares? Both equal $1K, and they'll move in terms of %, not dollars and cents.
You gotta take the fees into consideration. If you have to pay a fee to purchase PEIX, the cost basis will have you in the negative. $8 to purchase a $1 share doesn't make too much sense.
I'm still not getting it. $8 on a $1 share that moves to 1.08...still in the hole for me.$1000 invested
1000 shares of $1 stock, add 0.8 cents per share for fee means a move to $1.008 puts you even. 0.8% gain
10 shares of a $100 stock, add 80 cents per share for fee means a move to $100.80 puts you even. 0.8% gain
Share price doesn't matter...
I hope my math is right![]()
Yes, but if you only bought 1 share you would have made $3.11?The difference is in 1000 shares versus 10 shares. You make one point on 1000 shares and you have $1000 worth of gain - subtract $8 from that. I owned many shares of RT back in 2008 at $0.89 and it made a run to $12 off the March '09 lows. Now that was a nice gain and I still own even more RT stock.
Yes, but if you only bought 1 share you would have made $3.11?
That is exactly the point! You have to take the fees and the cost of the share to determine when considering the number of shares to purchase. The topic was PEIX, so the number of shares purchased is important when evaluating the fees vs share value.why would you only buy 1 share of a $1 stock... I am not understanding what you are getting at
I'm still not getting it. $8 on a $1 share that moves to 1.08...still in the hole for me.
You don't pay $8 for each share you buy, just for the trade itself. Nobody is buying 1 share worth $1 and nobody mentioned doing that.