WeirdlyWired wrote:
So either the execs cashed in and banked their profits, or the street expectation was even larger contract for even more work. Or like some dot coms reality set in and the stock was way over-valued before the contract.
Nope and nope. Since that contract they´ve just kept doing great, company growing nicely, and the contract was unexpectedly good and big.
Yet after they got the contract, their stocks dropped to about 1% of their previous value over a few months, no visible reason, not just no GOOD reason, but no reason what so ever, and the stocks have only recovered a tiny bit of that loss even now, well over a decade later.
But the company is doing great, IIRC it´s over 10 times as big now, well settled into their market with a steady stream of contracts and constant profit ever since they got that first big deal.
Compared to similar companies, their stocks before the crash were at a fairly normal level, maybe a tiny bit overvalued, but definitely nothing like the 99% they dropped.
And it´s uncertain enough that calling them UNDERvalued at the time wouldn´t raise any eyebrows.
Trust me, after i saw that weirdness, i spent a lot of time trying to figure out the reason behind the extreme drop. Never found any.
Asked around a bit, noone had a good explanation either.
But like i said, that one was just by far the most extreme i´ve seen, weird stuff like that happens much too often.
And BTW, haven´t you ever considered why it´s a bigger deal to the price of a stock how much it lives up to expectations rather than how profitable the company is, or how well it´s going?
It´s always just so ridiculous seeing stocks fall sharply because some idiots had unrealistic expectations(or wishful thinking), when the true value of the stock is already accepted as likely being higher, simply because the company is doing so well...
Stockmarket has long since left any connections to reality far behind. It has little to nothing to do with investment any longer.