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Tag: investor

  • Is April now the time to activate your sell-in-May-and-go-away stock-market strategy?

    Is April now the time to activate your sell-in-May-and-go-away stock-market strategy?

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    Followers of the “Sell In May and Go Away” market-timing strategy may want to consider selling stocks before the end of April.

    The “Sell in May and Go Away” strategy, which also goes by the “Halloween Indicator,” calls for being in the stock market for the six months between Oct. 31 and May 1, and out of the market the other half of the year. Investors who mechanically follow this seasonal strategy therefore wait until the close of the last trading day of April to sell and to the close of the last trading day of October to…

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  • Aerial Vantage to Participate in Newchip’s Online Demo Week

    Aerial Vantage to Participate in Newchip’s Online Demo Week

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    The aerial imagery analytics company will present to potential investors as one of the top applicants accepted into the Newchip Accelerator program.

    Aerial Vantage (aerialvantage.us) is pleased to announce participation in Newchip’s Online Demo Week, March 27-31. The aerial imagery, software, and analytics company will be among over 100 startups presenting to potential investors through the Newchip Accelerator program. Aerial Vantage is raising a Seed Round of funding to support expansion of its operations to Michigan this year.

    Newchip’s renowned global accelerator program is designed to provide all the skills and tools seed-stage founders need to rapidly fund, build and scale their companies. Aerial Vantage was recently accepted into this highly competitive program and will successfully graduate next month.

    Aerial Vantage will present on March 30 as part of the Data, Analytics, and Cybersecurity segment. Newchip’s Online Demo Week is a free, online, event that will be live-streamed to investors, entrepreneurs, industry thought leaders, students, academics, and community leaders worldwide.

    “We are very excited to participate in the Newchip Online Demo Week,” said Chris Brinton, Chair of the Board. “The Aerial Vantage team looks forward to sharing our vision of creating a more sustainable, efficient future for industries powered by cutting-edge AI technology and enabling customers to better utilize aerial data to meet their goals with thousands of investors worldwide. See you there!”

    ###

    About Aerial Vantage

    Aerial Vantage, an aerial imagery, software, and analytics company headquartered in Washington, D.C., has a multi-faceted vision to lead the industry toward safe, efficient, and economically viable VLOS and BVLOS operations. Business capabilities include Accelerate, a UAS operations, and data management SaaS platform, advanced data analytics, and drone operations as a service.

    About Newchip

    Newchip is an online, global startup accelerator led by a world-class team of entrepreneurs and investors. It was designed to provide founders with the tools needed to rapidly fund, build, and scale. Since its inception in 2019, the equity-free, remote accelerator has enabled over 2,500 startups from 50+ countries to raise over $2.2 billion in funding with an estimated $9B portfolio. It has three distinct six-month accelerator programs based on company stage: Pre-Seed, Seed, and Series A. Its vast network of global investors, strategic partners, and mentors guide companies from team building and prototype development to securing high-profile VC investment, corporate partnerships, and everything in-between. To learn more, visit https://launch.newchip.com/.

    Source: Aerial Vantage

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  • How And Why Real Estate Documents Grow

    How And Why Real Estate Documents Grow

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    The owner of a building in the New York suburbs (let’s call it the Julex Tower) opened negotiations with a possible buyer. As is customary, the owner and possible seller asked the possible buyer to sign a confidentiality agreement, agreeing not to share information about Julex Tower or the possible sale. Like most other confidentiality agreements, this one carved out an exception, allowing the buyer to share information with prospective investors.

    A couple of weeks into negotiations, the possible seller was shocked to get a phone call from one of his neighbors about Julex Tower. The neighbor had received something from someone else, who had received it from someone else: an offering memo for Julex Tower. It presented the opportunity to invest in the purchase of the tower. It disclosed all the detailed rent roll and other financial information—including rents, lease expirations and renewal option terms—that the seller had delivered to the possible buyer. The offering memo declared that the seller had chronically undermanaged Julex Tower. The buyer planned to do a better job managing the building. He would undertake a strategic capital improvement program, exploiting opportunities that the seller had missed or ignored. The buyer said all of this would double the building’s net operating income. Buyers often say all of these things to prospective investors.

    Did any of this violate the confidentiality agreement? Not really. The neighbor was, in fact, a prospective investor. He might have invested in a small percentage of the acquisition of Julex Tower. The same could be true of every doctor, dentist and lawyer (or anyone else with a significant bank account) in town or anywhere else in the United States or the world. The buyer remained in technical compliance with the confidentiality agreement, because the information on Julex Tower was shared only with prospective investors, though potentially thousands of them.

    The confidentiality agreement at issue was no different than hundreds of similar agreements in circulation today. They typically allow disclosure to “prospective investors,” without further restrictions.

    In response to the experience just described above, maybe tomorrow’s careful seller, or its counsel, should add some language to any standard confidentiality agreement. Maybe the confidentiality agreement should limit the number of prospective investors. Maybe each prospective investor must be someone who the buyer’s principal already knows from previous deals. Maybe the buyer should only give prospective investors “teasers” with limited information unless a particular prospect shows serious interest in the deal. Maybe each prospect should sign their own confidentiality agreement, and also agree not to share the confidential information any further. Maybe the buyer should keep a roster of prospective investors and share it with the seller to show that disclosures to prospective investors didn’t violate the confidentiality agreement.

    If the next careful seller added some or all of those concepts to their confidentiality agreement, it would grow by a couple hundred words. Prospective buyers and their counsel would probably object to these restrictions, or want to fine-tune and negotiate them. This would lead to multiple drafts, phone calls, discussions, and other back and forth, which would lead to more legal fees and delays in substantive negotiation of any possible transaction.

    For a recent transaction, our client asked us to take a look at their existing confidentiality agreement. Sure enough, it allowed disclosures to any and all potential investors, creating the exact same opening and potential risk that the seller of Julex Tower had faced. So did a whole pile of other (different) confidentiality agreements this client had used for other transactions.

    We told the client the story of the seller of Julex Tower whose neighbor found out all the seller’s secrets through the prospective buyer’s offering memo. We noted that we could adjust this client’s standard confidentiality agreement to try to reduce the risk along the lines suggested above. We also noted, though, that the story of Julex Tower had occurred only once. It was an outlier.

    Just because this problem had happened once, did today’s seller want to complicate their standard confidentiality agreement and related negotiations? This seller had never experienced a similar problem. Ultimately, the seller decided to leave their standard confidentiality agreement alone and live with the risk. It was a close call, though. Often these close calls turn out the other way. This is how real estate and other legal documents just grow and grow, and rarely shrink.

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    Joshua Stein, Contributor

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  • 6 cheap stocks that famed value-fund manager Bill Nygren says can help you beat the market

    6 cheap stocks that famed value-fund manager Bill Nygren says can help you beat the market

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    These are tricky times in the stock market, so it pays to look to the best stock-fund managers for guidance on how to behave now. Veteran value investor Bill Nygren belongs in this camp, because the Oakmark Fund OAKMX he co-manages consistently and substantially outperforms its peers. 

    That isn’t easy, considering how many fund managers fail to do so. Nygren’s fund beats its Morningstar large-cap value index and category by more than four percentage points annualized over the past three years. It also outperforms at five and…

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  • Stocks are rallying now, but the 9 painful stages of this bear market are not even halfway done

    Stocks are rallying now, but the 9 painful stages of this bear market are not even halfway done

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    The official definition of a bear market is a 20% or greater decline from an index’s previous high. Accordingly, the three major U.S. stock-market benchmarks — the Nasdaq
    COMP,
    +0.90%
    ,
    the S&P 500
    SPX,
    +1.14%

    and the Dow Jones Industrial Average
    DJIA,
    +1.12%

    — are currently all in a bear market.

    Based on my work with stock market strategist Mark D. Cook, a typical bear market goes through nine stages. Right now we are in Stage 4. Keep in mind that a bear market does not always follow these stages in the exact order. 

    1. Failed rallies: Failed rallies represent the first clue that a bear market is here. Failed rallies often appear before the market “officially” becomes a bear market. If the rally doesn’t have legs and cannot go higher for the next few days or weeks, it confirms that the bear’s claws have sunk in. Along the way, many failed rallies will fool bulls into thinking the worst is over. Watch the rallies for bear-market clues. The rally so far this week is an example. Now in its second day, a failure of this rally would confirm that stocks are not yet out of a bear market.

    2. Low-volume rallies: Another bear market clue is that stocks move higher on low volume. This is a clue the major financial institutions aren’t buying, although algos and hedge funds might be. It’s easy for the algos to push prices higher in a low-volume environment, one of the reasons for monster rallies that go nowhere the following day (i.e. a “one-day wonder”). 

    3. Terrible-looking charts: The easiest way to identify a bear market is by looking at a stock chart. It goes without saying that the charts look dreadful, both the daily and the weekly. While rallies help relieve some of the pressure, they typically don’t last long.

    4. Strong selloffs: It’s been a couple of years since markets have experienced extremely strong selloffs, but that record was broken the week of September 26 when the S&P 500 hit a new low for 2022. These strong selloffs are typical of a bear market, followed by rallies that don’t last (a roller-coaster that so far has played out during October).

    5. Mutual-fund redemptions: During this stage, after looking at their quarterly and monthly statements, horrified investors throw in the towel and sell their mutual funds (also, some investors refuse to look at those reports). As a result, mutual fund companies are forced to sell (which negatively affects the stock market). Typically, when the indexes fall more than 20%, mutual fund redemptions increase. 

    6. Complacency turns to panic: As more investor money leaves the market, many investors panic. The most bullish investors are holding on for dear life but are buying fewer stocks. The most nervous investors sell to avoid risking precious gains. 

    7. All news is bad news: As the bear market pushes stock prices lower, it seems as if most economic data and financial news is negative. Many people become skeptical of the bullish predictions from market professionals, who earlier had promised the market would keep going up. In the depths of the worst bear markets, some bullish professionals are jeered or ignored. Even die-hard bulls are increasingly nervous as the market heads lower and lower (with occasional rallies along the way). 

    8. Bulls throw in the towel: As trading volume increases on down days, and some investors experience 30% or higher losses, they give up hope and sell. The market turns into a free-for-all as even the Fed appears to have lost control. Many in the media admit that a bear market has arrived. 

    9. Capitulation: After weeks and months of selloffs (and occasional rallies), many investors are panicked. Investors realize that it may take years before their portfolios will return to breakeven, and some stocks never will. In the final stage of a bear market, trading volume is more than three times higher than normal. Even some of true believers liquidate positions, as many portfolios are down by 40% or 50% and more. Almost every financial asset has fallen, with the exception of fixed income such as CDs and T-bills. Traders or investors who trade on margin feel the most pain.

    Read: ‘Material risk’ looms over stocks as investors face bear market’s ‘second act,’ warns Morgan Stanley

    Take action

    This bear market is fairly young, but already there have been so many failed rallies that many investors are too afraid to buy. Some investors with cash are looking for bargains, but it takes nerves of steel to buy when everyone is selling.

    One of the keys to success in the market is to buy what people don’t want. Here are several ideas of what to do (and it is not too late to act): 

    1. During bear markets, a key to survival is diversification. If you are patient and are willing to hold positions for years, dollar-cost average into index funds on the way down. 

    2. In the early stages of a bear market, consider moving to the sidelines with CDs or Treasury bills. 

    3. Consider building a strong cash position, although inflation will cut into some of those gains. Nevertheless, losing to inflation is better than losing 30% in the stock market. The goal is not to lose money; in a bear market, cash is king. 

    The length and volatility of every bear market is different. No one can predict how this one will turn out, but based on previous bear markets, there’s still a long way to go before it’s over. 

    Michael Sincere (michaelsincere.com) is the author of “Understanding Options” and “Understanding Stocks.” His latest book, “How to Profit in the Stock Market” (McGraw Hill, 2022), explores bull -and bear market investing strategies. 

    More: Could there be a stock market rally? Probably. Would it be the end of the bear market? Probably not.

    Also read: Whatever you’re feeling now about stocks is normal bear-market grief — and the worst is yet to come

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