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há um gap pra fechar...
há um gap pra fechar...
155$ seria um bom preço de entrada...
155$ seria um bom preço de entrada...
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GreenOctober
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Visitante
11/23/04
Goldman Sachs initiates Google stock with $215 target (GOOG)
By August Cole
SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) -- Goldman Sachs late Tuesday said it has initiated coverage of Google Inc. (GOOG) stock with a $215 price target. Analyst Anthony Noto wrote that he expects Google to generate $7 billion in sales in 2009 and grow annual profits by 25 percent over the next three years. Google stock was last up 4.7 percent to $175.45 in after-hours trading.
11/23/04
Google initiated at 'buy' with $195 price target (GOOG)
By Tomi Kilgore
NEW YORK (CBS.MW) -- First Albany initiated research coverage of Google Inc. (GOOG) with a "buy" rating and $195 stock price target. "We believe Google is well positioned to benefit from the secular growth of Internet advertising, particularly from search advertising, which we expect to grow at a 25 percent compounded annual growth rate through 2008," Analyst Jason Avillo said in a note to clients. The stock was trading up $1.90, or 1.2 percent, at $167 in Instinet pre-open trading.
Anonymous Escreveu:Estou short desde os 174Euros. Para mim vai fechar o GAP. Não se esqueçam de que quando as acções dos empregados estirem disponiveis para venda, vai ser o sell off. São muitas acções mesmo.
Fundadores do Google vão vender 16,6 milhões de acções da empresa
Fundadores do Google vão vender 16,6 milhões de acções da empresa
Os fundadores do Google, Larry Page e Sergey Brin, vão vender cerca de 20% das acções que possuem no motor de busca mais usado do mundo, de acordo com um plano entregue aos reguladores na última sexta-feira. O presidente executivo, Eric Schmidt, deve vender cerca de 15% do que detém.
O plano de venda de acções foi adoptado a 15 de Setembro e tornado público na sexta-feira. Os investidores têm questionado que quantidade de acções é que os accionistas maioritários vão vender, isto devido a grandes vendas poderem fazer depreciar as acções.
Os três accionistas detêm 90,5 milhões de acções, o que representa cerca de um terço do capital e 45,7% dos direitos de voto.
Page e Brin tencionam vender 7,2 milhões de acções cada um, num plano que decorrerá nos próximos 18 meses. Se este plano de venda for completado, os dois accionistas vão manter cerca de 81,1% das acções que têm actualmente.
Schmidt tenciona vender 2,2 milhões de acções, também sob um plano a 18 meses, mantendo cerca de 84,6% do que detém nesta data. No total vão ser vendidos 16,6 milhões de acções.
Depois de completado o processo de venda, os três accionistas vão ficar com 73,9 milhões de acções, o que representa 27% do capital disperso em bolsa, o que lhes dá 40,4% dos direitos de voto, isto se não houver mais venda de activos.
As acções do Google perdiam 3,93% para 162,75 dólares (124,82 euros), depois de terem recuado um máximo 4,78%.
Isto agora é sempre a descer, até ...
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Visitante
Google Co-Founders to Sell Company Shares
11/19/2004 7:41:00 PM
Mountain View-based Google disclosed the intentions of Page and Brin, both 31, late Friday in documents filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. In the same filing, Google also revealed that its chief executive, Eric Schmidt, plans to sell 2.2 million shares of his holdings to cash in on the company's stock price, which has nearly doubled since an August initial public offering.
Google's shares gained $1.86, or 1.1 percent, to close at $169.40 Friday on the Nasdaq Stock Market. Based on that price, Page and Brin would each pocket $1.2 billion from their planned stock sales while Schmidt, 49, would collect $373 million. The stock's trading price has ranged from $95.96 to $201.60 per share since the IPO was completed Aug. 19 at $85 per share.
Page, Brin and Schmidt, who say they run Google collectively, will retain most of their company stock. If the planned sales are completed, Page and Brin will still own about 31 million shares apiece - stakes worth more than $5 billion as of Friday. Schmidt would still own 12.2 million shares - currently worth more than $2 billion.
Page, Brin and Schmidt plan to dispose of their stock through automated trading programs - a common tactic that corporate executives use so investors don't question the timing of their divestitures. The trio adopted the plans in mid-September, but Google didn't reveal the details until Friday.
Google disclosed the planned stock sales amid rising investor anxiety about possible sharp decline in the share price if hundreds of insiders began to cash out the holdings that they have accumulated since the popular search engine's Internet debut in 1998.
The selling restrictions on 39.1 million shares held by Google insiders were lifted Tuesday, contributing to a one-day decline of nearly 7 percent in the company's stock. Another 227 million shares will become eligible for trading between from Dec. 16 through Feb. 14.
The insider selling has already begun. In a separate SEC filing Friday, venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers disclosed it sold 5.78 million shares Wednesday for $997 million, or $172.45 per share. Menlo Park-based Kleiner Perkins had invested $12.5 million in Google in June 1999.
Google also raised investor worries earlier this week by warning that its recent rapid rate of revenue growth might not continue during the current quarter.
Copyright 2004 Associated Press, All rights reserved
Google insiders selling shares
Founders Page, Brin to sell 7.2 million shares each
By Bambi Francisco, CBS.MarketWatch.com
Last Update: 7:51 PM ET Nov. 19, 2004
SAN FRANCISCO (CBS.MW) -- Google insiders are taking some money off the table.
In an SEC filing, Google said its founders, Larry Page and Sergey Brin, as well as its CEO Eric Schmidt adopted a stock-trading plan in accordance with Rule 10b5-1 of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
As part of that plan, the executives will have "pre-arranged" stock-trading plans. Currently, the three executives own 90.5 million shares of Google class B common stock, which represents 33 percent of the company. These shares represent 45.7 percent of the voting power.
Under the Rule 10b5-1 trading plan, and as part of an 18-month diversification plan, Page and Brin intend to sell about 7.2 million shares each.
If completed, they still will have 81.1 percent of their current Google holdings. Schmidt plans to sell 2.2 million shares as part of an 18-month diversification plan. If the sales are completed as planned, the three executives will continue to collectively own 73.9 million shares and about 40.4 percent of the voting power.
Google said that other executive officers have also entered into Rule 10b5-1 trading plans.
In a separate filing, John Doerr, a board member of Google (GOOG: news, chart, profile) and a partner at venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission Friday, to report the sale of 5.78 million class A common shares at $172.54. Doerr filed on behalf of Kleiner Perkins. The shares are worth $997 million.
Earlier this week, Google unlocked 39 million shares held by insiders. Those shares became available to trade on Nov. 17.
The recent sale is a significant payday for Kleiner, which purchased Google shares at 49 cents a piece in Google's early days. It's also a better deal than what Kleiner could have gotten if it sold at Google's IPO.
Kleiner dropped its plans to sell 2 million shares at Google's IPO in mid-August, after Google's offering range was slashed to between $85 and $95 from $108 and $135.
Google shares traded up nearly a percent to $168 in after-hours action Friday.
Olá,
A Google quebrou aquela LT ascendente a tracejado, embora de forma pouco convincente, com uma quase doji. Sobretudo num dia de fortes quedas do nasdaq, não mostrou grande vontade de cair.
Vamos ver como se comporta nos próximos dias, se aguenta os 164/165 ou se vem fechar o gap nos 150.
Eu tinha apontado a saída para os 165 mas vou esperar para ver se vem aos 150, com atenção para fechar caso reaja nos 164.
Um abraço,
red
A Google quebrou aquela LT ascendente a tracejado, embora de forma pouco convincente, com uma quase doji. Sobretudo num dia de fortes quedas do nasdaq, não mostrou grande vontade de cair.
Vamos ver como se comporta nos próximos dias, se aguenta os 164/165 ou se vem fechar o gap nos 150.
Eu tinha apontado a saída para os 165 mas vou esperar para ver se vem aos 150, com atenção para fechar caso reaja nos 164.
Um abraço,
red
- Anexos
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- goog.png (10.97 KiB) Visualizado 1120 vezes
Stock Split Might Not Be in Google's Cards
GOOG
169.35 -15.35 -8.31% Vol:19,852,000 12:00am 11/05/04
After Hours
168.30 -1.05 -0.62% Vol:146,720 Last:6:29pm 11/05/04
Stock Split Might Not Be in Google's Cards
11/5/2004 9:28:00 PM
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 05, 2004 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Google Inc., a company built on complex algorithms that power its online search engine, doesn't appear to be in any rush to tackle one of Wall Street's most basic equations - the stock split.
This widely used market maneuver is designed to make a stock more affordable to the masses, something that would seemingly appeal to an egalitarian-minded company like Google, whose shares crossed the $200 threshold for the first time earlier this week.
Yet all signs so far point to Google adopting an anti-split stance.
"This is a management that sees no upside to a stock split," said Barry Randall, portfolio manager for U.S. Bancorp's First American Technology Fund, which owns 4,682 Google shares. "I just don't think it's very high on the company's list of priorities."
Mark Pincus, an early investor in Google, agrees. "If I had to wager, I would bet they won't ever split it," said Pincus, who runs a privately held Internet company, Tribe Networks.
Mountain View-based Google hasn't publicly addressed the stock-split issue since its initial public offering in August. Company spokesman Steve Langdon declined comment earlier this week.
Stock splits have become so commonplace in corporate America that investors almost reflexively expect them whenever a company's share price approaches $100. Stock splits have been completed or announced by 2,682 companies so far this year, according to Thomson First Call.
But Google co-founders and controlling shareholders Larry Page and Sergey Brin already have made it clear that they intend to defy stock market conventions - an objective that would be furthered by eschewing stock splits.
Page and Brin outlined their unorthodox philosophy in a pre-IPO manifesto that they called an "owner's manual" for shareholders. The letter underscored the co-founders' deep admiration of fellow billionaire, Warren Buffett.
The Buffett-run Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has never split its stock, an anomaly that contributed to the company's eye-popping share price of $83,390 through Friday.
Buffett frowns on stock splits because he believes it paves the way for more short-term speculators to buy and sell shares - a phenomenon that Google also wants to discourage.
"We would request our shareholders take the long-term view," Page and Brin wrote in their IPO letter. "... A management team distracted by a series of short-term targets is as pointless as a dieter stepping on a scale every half hour."
Most corporate boards have embraced splits because they generally provide at least a temporary boost in the stock by creating the perception of a cheaper price.
A stock split wouldn't affect Google's current market value of about $47 billion, but it would cut the stock's share price - an outcome that theoretically opens the investment door to more Main Street investors with limited budgets.
A stock split lowers the nominal share price by increasing the number of shares outstanding, usually in multiples ranging from two to four times.
For instance, Google currently had roughly 275 million shares outstanding priced at $169.35 at Friday's close. If Google executed a 4-for-1 stock, the company would have 1.1 billion shares outstanding priced at $42.34.
Some analysts think Google's stock is bound to drop without a split, partially because nearly 267 million shares owed by company insiders will become eligible to be traded for the first time between mid-November and mid-February.
The looming expirations of these so-called "lock-up" periods is one of the reasons UBS analyst Benjamin Schachter set a $160 price target for Google's shares in a report issued Thursday. Schachter's bearish outlook caused Google's shares to plunge $15.35, or 8.3 percent, Friday.
Because stock splits don't change a company's market value or profit prospects, many analysts and investors belittle the exercise as little more than a promotional gimmick. "I think it would be very cool if Google didn't do it because stock splits are sort of an irrational thing to do," Pincus said.
Splits nevertheless are a staple, particularly in the high-tech industry, where per-share prices frequently soar.
Software giant Microsoft Corp. has split its stock nine times since its 1986 IPO. If not for those splits, Microsoft's shares would be valued at about $8,441 per share instead of Friday's closing price of $29.31
Yahoo Inc., perhaps Google's biggest rival, has split its stock four times, including three times within its first four years of going public. If not for the splits, Yahoo's shares would be valued at $872.40 instead of their Friday closing price of $36.35.
Google's resistance to stock splits became evident during its IPO. The company sought as much as $135 per share before settling for $85 after many investors expressed reluctance to pay a price in the triple digits. Some analysts thought Google could have softened the backlash by splitting its stock before the IPO.
Matthew Crowder, who owns 80 Google shares that he bought in the company's IPO, says he won't mind if the company doesn't split the stock. "It's kind of like 'six of one, and half a dozen of another,"' said Crowder, an Albuquerque resident.
Crowder also runs an online discussion forum devoted to Google's stock and he believes many investors are in for a disappointment, based on the remarks that have been posted in recent weeks. "I think a lot of people are hoping for a psychological boost from a split."
That's precisely the kind of thinking Google wants to discourage, said investment portfolio manager Randall, who attended a pre-IPO presentation that provided insights into the philosophy of Brin and Page.
"These guys are really committed to the idea of buying and holding a stock," Randall said. "The last thing they want to do is make their stock even more volatile than it already is."
Copyright 2004 Associated Press, All rights reserved
169.35 -15.35 -8.31% Vol:19,852,000 12:00am 11/05/04
After Hours
168.30 -1.05 -0.62% Vol:146,720 Last:6:29pm 11/05/04
Stock Split Might Not Be in Google's Cards
11/5/2004 9:28:00 PM
SAN FRANCISCO, Nov 05, 2004 (AP Online via COMTEX) -- Google Inc., a company built on complex algorithms that power its online search engine, doesn't appear to be in any rush to tackle one of Wall Street's most basic equations - the stock split.
This widely used market maneuver is designed to make a stock more affordable to the masses, something that would seemingly appeal to an egalitarian-minded company like Google, whose shares crossed the $200 threshold for the first time earlier this week.
Yet all signs so far point to Google adopting an anti-split stance.
"This is a management that sees no upside to a stock split," said Barry Randall, portfolio manager for U.S. Bancorp's First American Technology Fund, which owns 4,682 Google shares. "I just don't think it's very high on the company's list of priorities."
Mark Pincus, an early investor in Google, agrees. "If I had to wager, I would bet they won't ever split it," said Pincus, who runs a privately held Internet company, Tribe Networks.
Mountain View-based Google hasn't publicly addressed the stock-split issue since its initial public offering in August. Company spokesman Steve Langdon declined comment earlier this week.
Stock splits have become so commonplace in corporate America that investors almost reflexively expect them whenever a company's share price approaches $100. Stock splits have been completed or announced by 2,682 companies so far this year, according to Thomson First Call.
But Google co-founders and controlling shareholders Larry Page and Sergey Brin already have made it clear that they intend to defy stock market conventions - an objective that would be furthered by eschewing stock splits.
Page and Brin outlined their unorthodox philosophy in a pre-IPO manifesto that they called an "owner's manual" for shareholders. The letter underscored the co-founders' deep admiration of fellow billionaire, Warren Buffett.
The Buffett-run Berkshire Hathaway Inc. has never split its stock, an anomaly that contributed to the company's eye-popping share price of $83,390 through Friday.
Buffett frowns on stock splits because he believes it paves the way for more short-term speculators to buy and sell shares - a phenomenon that Google also wants to discourage.
"We would request our shareholders take the long-term view," Page and Brin wrote in their IPO letter. "... A management team distracted by a series of short-term targets is as pointless as a dieter stepping on a scale every half hour."
Most corporate boards have embraced splits because they generally provide at least a temporary boost in the stock by creating the perception of a cheaper price.
A stock split wouldn't affect Google's current market value of about $47 billion, but it would cut the stock's share price - an outcome that theoretically opens the investment door to more Main Street investors with limited budgets.
A stock split lowers the nominal share price by increasing the number of shares outstanding, usually in multiples ranging from two to four times.
For instance, Google currently had roughly 275 million shares outstanding priced at $169.35 at Friday's close. If Google executed a 4-for-1 stock, the company would have 1.1 billion shares outstanding priced at $42.34.
Some analysts think Google's stock is bound to drop without a split, partially because nearly 267 million shares owed by company insiders will become eligible to be traded for the first time between mid-November and mid-February.
The looming expirations of these so-called "lock-up" periods is one of the reasons UBS analyst Benjamin Schachter set a $160 price target for Google's shares in a report issued Thursday. Schachter's bearish outlook caused Google's shares to plunge $15.35, or 8.3 percent, Friday.
Because stock splits don't change a company's market value or profit prospects, many analysts and investors belittle the exercise as little more than a promotional gimmick. "I think it would be very cool if Google didn't do it because stock splits are sort of an irrational thing to do," Pincus said.
Splits nevertheless are a staple, particularly in the high-tech industry, where per-share prices frequently soar.
Software giant Microsoft Corp. has split its stock nine times since its 1986 IPO. If not for those splits, Microsoft's shares would be valued at about $8,441 per share instead of Friday's closing price of $29.31
Yahoo Inc., perhaps Google's biggest rival, has split its stock four times, including three times within its first four years of going public. If not for the splits, Yahoo's shares would be valued at $872.40 instead of their Friday closing price of $36.35.
Google's resistance to stock splits became evident during its IPO. The company sought as much as $135 per share before settling for $85 after many investors expressed reluctance to pay a price in the triple digits. Some analysts thought Google could have softened the backlash by splitting its stock before the IPO.
Matthew Crowder, who owns 80 Google shares that he bought in the company's IPO, says he won't mind if the company doesn't split the stock. "It's kind of like 'six of one, and half a dozen of another,"' said Crowder, an Albuquerque resident.
Crowder also runs an online discussion forum devoted to Google's stock and he believes many investors are in for a disappointment, based on the remarks that have been posted in recent weeks. "I think a lot of people are hoping for a psychological boost from a split."
That's precisely the kind of thinking Google wants to discourage, said investment portfolio manager Randall, who attended a pre-IPO presentation that provided insights into the philosophy of Brin and Page.
"These guys are really committed to the idea of buying and holding a stock," Randall said. "The last thing they want to do is make their stock even more volatile than it already is."
Copyright 2004 Associated Press, All rights reserved
Realmente será importante verificar quando os "donos" da empresa poderão começar a vender... penso que são uns 6 meses depois da cotação ter começado a negociar?
No pior dos cenários temos a cotação a fechar o Gap e visitar os 150 Dólares.
A correcção mais imediata será ele ir visitar o preço de 160/165 Dólares..
Se os mercados em geral começarem a corrigir já 2ªfeira, a Google provavelmente vai bater bem rápido nos suportes e estaria pronta para recomeçar a subida lá para o final da próxima semana.
Será uma hipótese a ter em conta, Abraço
No pior dos cenários temos a cotação a fechar o Gap e visitar os 150 Dólares.
A correcção mais imediata será ele ir visitar o preço de 160/165 Dólares..
Se os mercados em geral começarem a corrigir já 2ªfeira, a Google provavelmente vai bater bem rápido nos suportes e estaria pronta para recomeçar a subida lá para o final da próxima semana.
Será uma hipótese a ter em conta, Abraço
Ertai,
Seu Bull compulsivo eheh
Ulisses,
De facto está a correr muito bem, vamos lá ver até onde vai a correcção, mas o facto de estar a corrigir em contraciclo, depois de mostrar tanta força, é encorajador.
Iniciado,
Negoceio a Google via CFDs (Contracts For Difference) que na prática são semelhantes aos futuros: http://www.Deal4Free.com
Um abraço,
red
Seu Bull compulsivo eheh
Ulisses,
De facto está a correr muito bem, vamos lá ver até onde vai a correcção, mas o facto de estar a corrigir em contraciclo, depois de mostrar tanta força, é encorajador.
Iniciado,
Negoceio a Google via CFDs (Contracts For Difference) que na prática são semelhantes aos futuros: http://www.Deal4Free.com
Um abraço,
red
- Anexos
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- goog.png (10.52 KiB) Visualizado 1436 vezes
Re: Google
Red Escreveu:Olá,
Muito já se disse sobre a subida impressionante da google, e apesar de poder subir sempre mais, se calhar está na hora de uma correcção, parece ter formado um topo e uma correcção até pelo menos os 165 parece bem provável.
Eu entrei short hoje nos 188.91 e espero sair nos 165.
Um abraço,
red
Quando diz que entrou em short está a falar certamente de futuros (associados a este título) e não a uma venda curta no papel, certo?
Cumps
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Iniciado
Olá,
Muito já se disse sobre a subida impressionante da google, e apesar de poder subir sempre mais, se calhar está na hora de uma correcção, parece ter formado um topo e uma correcção até pelo menos os 165 parece bem provável.
Eu entrei short hoje nos 188.91 e espero sair nos 165.
Um abraço,
red
Muito já se disse sobre a subida impressionante da google, e apesar de poder subir sempre mais, se calhar está na hora de uma correcção, parece ter formado um topo e uma correcção até pelo menos os 165 parece bem provável.
Eu entrei short hoje nos 188.91 e espero sair nos 165.
Um abraço,
red
- Anexos
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- goog.png (10.6 KiB) Visualizado 1673 vezes
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