帮咪咪哥,老向开个帖

这bbry吧,千万不要追低short,一定要拉上来才short,切记。

咪咪哥,看到木有? 国内房地产税很戏剧:blowzy:,大概是卖家很稀售,最后是买家代付20%所得税。:) 加拿大要是有这么一天,估计老向就现在就退休了。
 
咪咪哥,看到木有? 国内房地产税很戏剧:blowzy:,大概是卖家很稀售,最后是买家代付20%所得税。:) 加拿大要是有这么一天,估计老向就现在就退休了。

我老友跟我说上海这税没收:D
他们笑不动了。
 
九哥,update一下上海最新地产行情,我妹妹政策出来后买的杨浦大桥5年新房,90平米不到,280万,不到1个月,还在涨:D
 
bbry看来要冲16了,q10在英国开卖。那天没short成幸运了。等16再空。

算你运气好,没short成。
16就空,太早了点吧?


BlackBerry Shorts Are On Borrowed Time

Expectations are very high concerning the launch of the new BlackBerry (BBRY) Q10, and rightfully so. All indications are that most people who want to buy a new BlackBerry phone are waiting for the BB10 qwerty version to roll out.

One thing about the Q10 is that it brings back memories of BlackBerry itself. Please note that BlackBerry is the definition of what a qwerty phone means. All those users that never really got comfortable with a flat screen smartphone device like Apple's (AAPL) iPhone or Google (GOOG) Android devices will now have a chance to get a premium smartphone with a physical keyboard.

Build it and they will come...

And that's exactly what has been happening, according to multiple reports from England. As fellow SA contributor Michael Collins said several days ago:

Upon arriving, there were lots of exporters buying 20+ units each. They had suitcases, and one used the suitcase to block people in the escalator so his pal could be first to the counter. Carphone Warehouse had broken customers out into two lines -- single unit buyers like me and "multi-unit" buyers.

BlackBerry says the Q10 will debut in the U.S. by the end of May, at $249 for a model with 16 gigabytes of storage on a two-year contract; Verizon (VZ) Wireless, AT&T (T), Sprint (S) and T-Mobile (DTE) will carry it.

Just to highlight the importance of the Q10, the availability of Skype for the Q10 (in beta) was announced several days ago. Skype is not yet available for the Z10, even though it has been out for awhile. It seems to me that BlackBerry didn't want to roll out the Q10 before Skype was available, in order not to scare many old-time BlackBerry users (mostly corporate, I imagine), who have been using Skype with their current BlackBerry devices.

Is there such a thing as pent-up demand for a smartphone? MarketWatch reported that RBC Capital thinks so, and raised its estimate for shipments of BB10 devices from 2 million to 2.75 million units for the quarter. That's a 30% upward revision, and if you ask me, that's a very big revision. "The Q10 is likely to appeal to the numerous existing enterprise and message-centric BlackBerry users. Many of these users have skipped over the Z10 to wait for the Q10," said RBC Capital.

Jefferies' Peter Misek also had something to say: "Our checks indicate Z10 sales in Canada, U.S., and UK remain steady with no excess inventory or return issues." So much for all those high return inventories that Barron's reported awhile ago.

Could the Q10 spark an enterprise upgrade cycle? Now, I don't know if BlackBerry is capable of something like that, however, there was a story over the weekend in which the international law firm of Clifford Chance has chosen to upgrade their entire firm with new BB10 devices.

London, UK and Waterloo, ON - International law firm Clifford Chance and BlackBerry® (NASDAQ: BBRY; TSX: BB) today announced that Clifford Chance will roll out 1,600 BlackBerry® 10 smartphones with BlackBerry's recently launched Enterprise Mobility Management solution, BlackBerry® Enterprise Service 10. Clifford Chance is a long-standing BlackBerry customer, with BlackBerry smartphones at the core of the law firm's enterprise mobility strategy for over 10 years. The firm's new investment in BlackBerry 10 will see 1,600 employees, initially in the UK, being issued with BlackBerry® Z10 (all touch) and BlackBerry® Q10 (touch with physical keyboard.) smartphones, beginning early this summer.

So in a sense it seems that there are many companies that were waiting to get their hands on the Q10 in order to officially announce their upgrade to the BB10 platform. I assume we will see a whole lot more of these announcements as time goes by.

What all these little bits of information mean is that the BB10 platform is doing just fine and will do a whole lot better, as the Q10 becomes available in multiple markets around the world. In other words, BlackBerry is gaining momentum.

And with about 1/3 of total BlackBerry shares sold short, it's only a matter of time before something has to give. And if you ask me, BlackBerry is a short seller's accident just waiting to happen, because when that something finally does give, the stock will move very fast in the blink of an eye.

And If my logic is correct and most of these shares sold short are losing money, the question is how long can they continue to lose money before they decide to cover or are forced to cover? Another question is, how high might the stock go in this case?

The answer is I don't know, but I have a wild imagination...

http://seekingalpha.com/article/138...orrowed-time?source=email_rt_article_readmore
 
算你运气好,没short成。
16就空,太早了点吧?

BlackBerry Shorts Are On Borrowed Time

Expectations are very high concerning the launch of the new BlackBerry (BBRY) Q10, and rightfully so. All indications are that most people who want to buy a new BlackBerry phone are waiting for the BB10 qwerty version to roll out.

One thing about the Q10 is that it brings back memories of BlackBerry itself. Please note that BlackBerry is the definition of what a qwerty phone means. All those users that never really got comfortable with a flat screen smartphone device like Apple's (AAPL) iPhone or Google (GOOG) Android devices will now have a chance to get a premium smartphone with a physical keyboard.

Build it and they will come...

And that's exactly what has been happening, according to multiple reports from England. As fellow SA contributor Michael Collins said several days ago:

Upon arriving, there were lots of exporters buying 20+ units each. They had suitcases, and one used the suitcase to block people in the escalator so his pal could be first to the counter. Carphone Warehouse had broken customers out into two lines -- single unit buyers like me and "multi-unit" buyers.

BlackBerry says the Q10 will debut in the U.S. by the end of May, at $249 for a model with 16 gigabytes of storage on a two-year contract; Verizon (VZ) Wireless, AT&T (T), Sprint (S) and T-Mobile (DTE) will carry it.

Just to highlight the importance of the Q10, the availability of Skype for the Q10 (in beta) was announced several days ago. Skype is not yet available for the Z10, even though it has been out for awhile. It seems to me that BlackBerry didn't want to roll out the Q10 before Skype was available, in order not to scare many old-time BlackBerry users (mostly corporate, I imagine), who have been using Skype with their current BlackBerry devices.

Is there such a thing as pent-up demand for a smartphone? MarketWatch reported that RBC Capital thinks so, and raised its estimate for shipments of BB10 devices from 2 million to 2.75 million units for the quarter. That's a 30% upward revision, and if you ask me, that's a very big revision. "The Q10 is likely to appeal to the numerous existing enterprise and message-centric BlackBerry users. Many of these users have skipped over the Z10 to wait for the Q10," said RBC Capital.

Jefferies' Peter Misek also had something to say: "Our checks indicate Z10 sales in Canada, U.S., and UK remain steady with no excess inventory or return issues." So much for all those high return inventories that Barron's reported awhile ago.

Could the Q10 spark an enterprise upgrade cycle? Now, I don't know if BlackBerry is capable of something like that, however, there was a story over the weekend in which the international law firm of Clifford Chance has chosen to upgrade their entire firm with new BB10 devices.

London, UK and Waterloo, ON - International law firm Clifford Chance and BlackBerry® (NASDAQ: BBRY; TSX: BB) today announced that Clifford Chance will roll out 1,600 BlackBerry® 10 smartphones with BlackBerry's recently launched Enterprise Mobility Management solution, BlackBerry® Enterprise Service 10. Clifford Chance is a long-standing BlackBerry customer, with BlackBerry smartphones at the core of the law firm's enterprise mobility strategy for over 10 years. The firm's new investment in BlackBerry 10 will see 1,600 employees, initially in the UK, being issued with BlackBerry® Z10 (all touch) and BlackBerry® Q10 (touch with physical keyboard.) smartphones, beginning early this summer.

So in a sense it seems that there are many companies that were waiting to get their hands on the Q10 in order to officially announce their upgrade to the BB10 platform. I assume we will see a whole lot more of these announcements as time goes by.

What all these little bits of information mean is that the BB10 platform is doing just fine and will do a whole lot better, as the Q10 becomes available in multiple markets around the world. In other words, BlackBerry is gaining momentum.

And with about 1/3 of total BlackBerry shares sold short, it's only a matter of time before something has to give. And if you ask me, BlackBerry is a short seller's accident just waiting to happen, because when that something finally does give, the stock will move very fast in the blink of an eye.

And If my logic is correct and most of these shares sold short are losing money, the question is how long can they continue to lose money before they decide to cover or are forced to cover? Another question is, how high might the stock go in this case?

The answer is I don't know, but I have a wild imagination...

http://seekingalpha.com/article/1382341-blackberry-shorts-are-on-borrowed-time?source=email_rt_article_readmore

Q10比Z10热销是正常的,黑莓死忠用户就是喜欢物理键盘。Z10就是跟风,难以拼过iPhone Andriod。
7000万用户黑莓能保持住也不错。
 
九哥,update一下上海最新地产行情,我妹妹政策出来后买的杨浦大桥5年新房,90平米不到,280万,不到1个月,还在涨:D


mimi-ge这几天想进点jcp, 多少价位比较好?谢谢
 
mimi-ge这几天想进点jcp, 多少价位比较好?谢谢

假如你做过分析,认为可以买,中线建仓的话,分几份进,投一份放在出利好后的第一个跳空16.3左右。
上周末我说过这融资是tm利空,这机构却当利好来做,切不消。
我大概会16元买我的第二份。
 
假如你做过分析,认为可以买,中线建仓的话,分几份进,投一份放在出利好后的第一个跳空16.3左右。
上周末我说过这融资是tm利空,这机构却当利好来做,切不消。
我大概会16元买我的第二份。



我又懒又笨,不分析都晕:D

跟定你就好了, 多谢。:cool:
 
Q10比Z10热销是正常的,黑莓死忠用户就是喜欢物理键盘。Z10就是跟风,难以拼过iPhone Andriod。
7000万用户黑莓能保持住也不错。

BlackBerry sees ‘absolutely phenomenal’ demand for Q10

BlackBerry is heralding initial market reaction to the Q10, its latest smartphone offering that combines a consumer friendly touchscreen with the traditional keyboard popular with government and business users.

“A lot of people are saying we have a real hit on our hands,” chief operating officer Kristian Tear said about the device that went on sale in the U.K. over the weekend and begins a general launch in Canada Wednesday.

Tear said the release at retailers and on several mobile network carriers will start in the GTA and expand across Canada later in the week.

He said the timing is to ensure supply amid “absolutely phenomenal” demand for the Q10 from users who prefer the ease of typing with a hard keyboard.

The device is priced at carriers including Rogers Wireless and Bell Mobility at $199.99 on a three-year contract and $700 outright, a premium over BlackBerry’s Z10 all-touch phone and the high end offerings of Apple and Samsung.

The company says it expects the device to launch in the U.S. by the end of the month as part of a staged global rollout.

After an exclusive launch British department store Selfridges called the BlackBerry Q10 its “fastest-ever selling consumer electronics product.” Chief executive Thorsten Heins at a conference in California Monday said “we have very, very good first signs already after the launch in the U.K. . . We expect several tens of million of units.”

That would dwarf sales of the all touchscreen BB Z10 that began a staged global launch at the end of January and would make the Q10 Waterloo-based BlackBerry’s best-selling device.

Tear said he sees pent-up demand among the company’s 76 million global customers, mostly QWERTY devotees, and expects a wave of consumer and enterprise upgrades. The Q10 is targeted in part at the professional market and U.S. carrier T-Mobile said Monday that businesses will be able to order the device a few weeks before non-business customers.

“There is no other product like it,” Tear said of the Q10, which combines a re-engineered version of the classic BlackBerry with a modern touchscreen device powered by the new BB10 operating system. He called the updated keyboard “second to none.”

In a note to investors the RBC’s Mark Sue raised his BlackBerry sales estimates to reflect Q10 demand, saying the device fills a niche among an older demographic while the Z10 aims to compete in a hyper crowded all-touchscreen segment dominated by Apple and Samsung

BlackBerry has said it will introduce more handsets in the next fiscal year to complement the Z10 and Q10, with a mid-priced touchscreen and QWERTY phone expected first and lower-tier models to debut late in 2013.

Heins at the Milken Institute conference in Los Angeles also raised questions about the company’s plans for its PlayBook tablet computer, a device that has failed to generate excitement after a flawed launch.

“In five years I don’t think there’ll be a reason to have a tablet anymore,” Heins told Bloomberg TV. “Maybe a big screen in your workspace, but not a tablet as such. Tablets themselves are not a good business model.”

Heins said he would provide an update on plans for the PlayBook at the company’s developer’s conference in Florida in mid May.

The remark drew some derision on Twitter, with several posts noting that Apple sold nearly 20 million iPad tablets in its most recent quarter.

In a statement, the company said the remarks are consistent with Hein’s previous comments about mobile computing, and while it continues to evaluate its tablet strategy, “we are not making any shifts in that strategy in the short term.”

Tear would not say whether the Waterloo-based company has dropped plans to upgrade the PlayBook, indicating only that BlackBerry is looking at “different, varying form factors.”

According to Jefferies analyst Peter Misek, the company is planning two or three more models this year, including a large-screened “phablet” combining functions of a smartphone and tablet.

BlackBerry shares closed up more than 4 per cent at $16.29 (U.S.) on the NASDAQ.

http://www.thestar.com/business/tec...0_off_to_absolutely_phenomenal_start_coo.html
 
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