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This page contains all of the posts and discussion on MemeStreams referencing the following web page: 10 FAS: 9 - Troy Wolverton, Neil Cavuto, and the Apple Stock Scandal. You can find discussions on MemeStreams as you surf the web, even if you aren't a MemeStreams member, using the Threads Bookmarklet.

10 FAS: 9 - Troy Wolverton, Neil Cavuto, and the Apple Stock Scandal
by Lost at 4:48 am EDT, Aug 4, 2007

What company is the most effective for stock manipulators to work over? The Street doesn't invent Microsoft products or set unrealistic expectations for Xbox uptake. The only reason for covering the Zune at all is to create fear, uncertainty, and doubt about Apple's iPod business. Nobody cares about Microsoft's stock price; the company can't even goose it itself. It's dead, and no amount of fake information will cause it to dance up and down in ways that short term speculators can exploit.

"Crazy" Jim Cramer's entire business is to create false information to invoke a calculated reaction, then profit from others' fear or credulity. It's not a closely held secret.

The floating news items picked up by rumor sites, reports based on scraps of papers found on trading floors, and all of those ghosts whispering news that pretends to be of great import for Apple's stock price are all lies generated by a few sources, intended to exploit the trust of investors and get them to sell off or buy up stock.

[More Absurd iPhone Myths: iSuppli, Subsidies, and Pricing]

Unprofitably Scandalous News.
This explains why nobody reports on Microsoft's six billion dollars of losses in consumer electronics, or its inability to expand into new markets. That information can't be used to manipulate stock prices and subsequently make a profit on it, because Microsoft's stock is stuck in a rut.

It explains why Microsoft's president of its Entertainment and Devices division, Robbie Bach, could dump $6.2 million of stock just before announcing another billion dollar loss related to Xbox failures, but not face any media coverage regarding his insider trading. The news was only a minor curiosity because Microsoft's stock is as flat as a frozen lake.


 
RE: 10 FAS: 9 - Troy Wolverton, Neil Cavuto, and the Apple Stock Scandal
by flynn23 at 2:19 pm EDT, Aug 4, 2007

Jello wrote:

What company is the most effective for stock manipulators to work over? The Street doesn't invent Microsoft products or set unrealistic expectations for Xbox uptake. The only reason for covering the Zune at all is to create fear, uncertainty, and doubt about Apple's iPod business. Nobody cares about Microsoft's stock price; the company can't even goose it itself. It's dead, and no amount of fake information will cause it to dance up and down in ways that short term speculators can exploit.

"Crazy" Jim Cramer's entire business is to create false information to invoke a calculated reaction, then profit from others' fear or credulity. It's not a closely held secret.

The floating news items picked up by rumor sites, reports based on scraps of papers found on trading floors, and all of those ghosts whispering news that pretends to be of great import for Apple's stock price are all lies generated by a few sources, intended to exploit the trust of investors and get them to sell off or buy up stock.

[More Absurd iPhone Myths: iSuppli, Subsidies, and Pricing]

Unprofitably Scandalous News.
This explains why nobody reports on Microsoft's six billion dollars of losses in consumer electronics, or its inability to expand into new markets. That information can't be used to manipulate stock prices and subsequently make a profit on it, because Microsoft's stock is stuck in a rut.

It explains why Microsoft's president of its Entertainment and Devices division, Robbie Bach, could dump $6.2 million of stock just before announcing another billion dollar loss related to Xbox failures, but not face any media coverage regarding his insider trading. The news was only a minor curiosity because Microsoft's stock is as flat as a frozen lake.

Oh please. Anyone who thinks that the market isn't manipulated all day every day is naive. You get to see these things first hand when you have to report to the SEC that you want to unload a large sum of shares as an officer of a publicly traded company. You usually employ an investment bank to liquidate the shares, and they definitely engage in 'pump n dump' and 'market mover' activity in order to get you the best price of the day. This is why the market bust of 2000 was so incredulous. Millions of individual shareholders lost wealth but the market makers made billions of dollars on their misery. A few of them got caught and had to pay some pretty stiff fees, but no one served jail time and the practice is still alive and well.


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