Basher
http://www.google.co.id/#hl=id&sclient=psy-ab&q=basher+stock&pbx=1&oq=basher+stock&aq=f&aqi=g-vL1&aql=&gs_sm=3&gs_upl=3800l4750l0l4910l6l6l0l0l0l0l200l680l0.4.1l5l0&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.,cf.osb&fp=ac598a967081d513&biw=1366&bih=587



Pump And Dump
http://www.google.co.id/#hl=id&sclient=psy-ab&q=pump+and+dump+stock&pbx=1&oq=pump+and+dump+stock&aq=f&aqi=g-L4&aql=&gs_sm=3&gs_upl=1800l10822l0l11062l19l13l0l3l3l0l1840l6620l0.1.5.4.0.1.8-2l16l0&bav=on.2,or.r_gc.r_pw.r_qf.,cf.osb&fp=ac598a967081d513&biw=1366&bih=587

This is the classic "pump-and-dump <http://www.sec.gov/answers/pumpdump.htm>"
stock fraud, where the fraudsters quietly load up on the stock in advance,
then promote the crap out of it, hoping to drive the price higher to make a
quick profit. The company itself may have nothing to do with the promoters,
but just happens to be a convenient target.
Investors are well-advised to ignore these stock touts. In many cases the
company itself is nearly worthless, and the price is likely to collapse as
soon as the hypesters have sold their stock and stop promoting it.

But the capitalist part of me keeps thinking....isn't there some way to
make money off these schemes?

*In theory, *a typical stock being pumped-and-dumped should follow a
specific and predictable pattern: first, it gradually goes up in price as
the perpetrators accumulate stock on the open market (this phase may be
skipped if the scam artists are insiders or have some other way of
acquiring the stock without buying it on the market). In this first phase,
there's no way for an outsider to know the stock will soon be hyped.

Next, the perpetrators begin promoting the stock through spam, chat rooms,
telemarketing, junk fax, etc. Since the stock has (presumably) been chosen
because it doesn't trade much and will move a lot when people start to buy
or sell it, this promotion should drive the stock price up. As the stock
goes up, other investors may take note and buy, driving the price up more.

The third phase is when the scam artists start selling their stock,
presumably after it has hit a price where they can make a profit on their
scheme. They keep promoting the stock, since it has to stay high long
enough to sell all or most of their shares.

Finally, once the fraudsters have cashed out, they stop promoting the
stock. Without the hype, there are few (if any) new buyers, and the people
who bought the stock find that they have nobody to sell to. The price
crashes.

*It is impossible** *to identify a pump-and-dump scheme in the first phase,
but once it starts getting promoted it may be hard to miss. In principle,
there are two ways to make money once the stock is being pumped. First by
buying before the peak and selling ahead of the promoters, and second by
selling the stock short at almost any time after it has appreciated. Both
approaches have potential, but also significant risks.

Buying the stock before the peak puts you in the position of trying to
figure out when the scammers will stop promoting the stock and let the
price crash. You are inherently at a disadvantage, since the scammers are
making the decision. If you make a wrong move, you could be out your entire
investment.

Shorting the stock is, in principle, simpler. If you short the stock, you
are betting that the price will fall, and you know that it has to fall when
the scammers stop promoting it. In practice, it isn't so simple. Many of
the stocks promoted in pump-and-dump schemes cannot be sold short because
they are too thinly traded. Even if the stock can be shorted, short sales
carry some unique risks: a short sale has (in theory) the potential for
unlimited loss; and there's the risk that your broker might force you to
buy back (cover) the stock before it falls.

*All these ideas* for profiting from pump-and-dump implicitly assume that
the market for the target stock is reasonably well functioning (unlike, for
example, this 
scheme<http://www.usatoday.com/money/general/2001-03-09-pump-and-dump.htm>where
the mob set up its own brokerage and threatened people with knives if
they tried to sell). Unfortunately, the scam artists intentionally choose
companies where the stock trades very infrequently--these are the stocks
which are easiest to manipulate. If short sales aren't possible (and they
probably won't be), then the only way to profit is by getting in and out
before the scammers. Sounds like a losing game to me.

So....on to my next great money-making idea....



On Wed, Feb 29, 2012 at 12:06 PM, kangduren <[email protected]> wrote:

> **
>
>
> hehehe........
> SP, TP, analisa, dan prediksi
> boleh2 aja koq biar milis rame, hanya harus disadari jangan sampai kalo
> kejadian betul somobongnya keluar, TAPI kalo SALAH diam pura2 KAGAK TAU.
> Bagi yg baca wajar2 aja kalo mau kontra, tapi hrs disadari momentumnya,
> kalo lg bullish boleh lah sedikit ngotot, bullish koq pilihan sahamnya
> mandeg dll., kalo lagi sideway/ downtrend maklum lah kondisi lagi susah.
> yg penting SP, TP, analisa, dan prediksi nya tidak menjerumusnkan spt :
> saham turun suruh dump, avoid, dan terbukti besok nya naik, itu jelas
> menjerumuskan. dll
> salam
> GBU
> happy chuan
>
> 
>

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