Ndindi Nyoro responds

Nameless

Elder Lister
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Somebody telling you to invest in shares without showing you ratios regarding valuation, profitability, liquidity, solvency and efficiency is just asking you to join pata potea.
That’s why I ask questions , because that article did not convince me . Last I heard kplc made losses. So how would they pay dividends.
 
Expound you statement
Somebody telling you to invest in shares without showing you ratios regarding valuation, profitability, liquidity, solvency and efficiency is just asking you to join pata potea.
What Okiya is suggesting is fair if your are a timid long term investor.

Personally, I am a demand vs supply investor. 1.58ksh per share is a sweet spot, or a penny stock as described by Nyoro. The chances of downside are minimal with plenty of chance for upside.

With some 1M spare change, I can grab up around 650,000 shares. Assuming, the KK government turns around the company in the short term, you can guarantee it will attract interest and supply will shorten causing the price to tick up.

I would ideally sell at 3ksh and dump on traders joining late making an extra 800k Essentially, I am not trading fundamentals, I am trading sentiment.

I did the same with the NSE stock during their launch and made quite a handsome figure.
 
Somebody telling you to invest in shares without showing you ratios regarding valuation, profitability, liquidity, solvency and efficiency is just asking you to join pata potea.


He forgot to mention caps in buying in bulk. You can't wake up and buy 40% shareholding
 
What Okiya is suggesting is fair if your are a timid long term investor.

Personally, I am a demand vs supply investor. 1.58ksh per share is a sweet spot, or a penny stock as described by Nyoro. The chances of downside are minimal with plenty of chance for upside.

With some 1M spare change, I can grab up around 650,000 shares. Assuming, the KK government turns around the company in the short term, you can guarantee it will attract interest and supply will shorten causing the price to tick up.

I would ideally sell at 3ksh and dump on traders joining late making an extra 800k Essentially, I am not trading fundamentals, I am trading sentiment.

I did the same with the NSE stock during their launch and made quite a handsome figure.
Best post I have read today.
Nachangamkia hio Kenya power
 
What Okiya is suggesting is fair if your are a timid long term investor.

Personally, I am a demand vs supply investor. 1.58ksh per share is a sweet spot, or a penny stock as described by Nyoro. The chances of downside are minimal with plenty of chance for upside.

With some 1M spare change, I can grab up around 650,000 shares. Assuming, the KK government turns around the company in the short term, you can guarantee it will attract interest and supply will shorten causing the price to tick up.

I would ideally sell at 3ksh and dump on traders joining late making an extra 800k Essentially, I am not trading fundamentals, I am trading sentiment.

I did the same with the NSE stock during their launch and made quite a handsome figure.

How do you determine the value of a stock?
I like your choice of words when you say "assuming the KK turns around the company"
 
How do you determine the value of a stock?
I like your choice of words when you say "assuming the KK turns around the company"
I am not one to go through financial records trying to ascertain the true value of a stock because that is not how I trade.

The only thing I care about is the amount of shares floated by the company. After that establish demand and supply and price movement to identify resistance and support zones. So an overlap of technicals as well.

With that in mind you can objectively identify an area where people might consider buying zones. Sprinkle some positive sentiment and you can make some quick profit in the short term.
 
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