Wachovia CEO's Insider Buying Is Another Indication of a Bottom
When I look for signals of a bottom in any sector, first and foremost will be the technicals, followed by rallies on bad news. Long before companies get back on track financially, their stock charts will have already had a big run as most of the bad news was built in. As a distant secondary indicator, I like to keep tabs on the insider buying habits of key executives, particularly the CFO and CEO.
These insiders know their company better than anyone and if they're making a large bet, there is good reason to assume the prospects for the company in the future are bright. The financials have been beaten mercilessly here in 2008, with several big banks trading in single digits. Who would have thought that a Wachovia (WB) would be trading under 10 or that a Washington Mutual (WM) would hit nearly $3 bucks a share.
Time will tell if those moves down were warranted, but many of these banks were well overdue for massive snap back rallies, and rally they did. Many have doubled in just 5 to 6 trading days, including banking behemoth Wachovia (WB) which despite recording record losses, job cuts and a huge dividend cut, rallied again as traders bet on "the worst is over".
Also betting big on the company is new CEO Robert Steel, who took over just about a month ago to inherit a mess he must feel he can clean up. Just hours ago, he made 3 large purchases of Wachovia stock totaling more than $10 million. That's one heck of a gutsy move and it will probably pay off in a few years, but I always wonder what these guys are thinking when they're timing their trades. I realize they aren't technical analysts but with that kind of money on the line, maybe you should consult with one! Your stock has doubled in little over a week. Why not wait a few days for the short covering to diminish and the longs to lock in their profit and save yourself a few million?
At any rate, it's a good sign for Wachovia over the long haul and financials do appear to be bottoming out, but I'm waiting for at least a 50% retracement of this move in financials to do some shopping.
Disclaimer: No position in Wachovia, but may trade it at 10 or lower.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- Energy Independence: It's About Demand, Not Supply
- Housing Prices: Bottom or Temporary Bear Break?
- McCainomics: What Can He Do?
- ETF Insights: The New Hard Assets Producers ETF
- Why Airline Stocks Are So Often Bad Investments
- The Chinese Oil Problem
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- Three Reasons the Solar Sell-off May Be in the Early Innings »
- Five Reasons Steve Ballmer Thinks Apple's a Buy »
- Why Commodities May Be Nearing a Turning Point »
- What's in Store for the Fertilizer Industry? »
- Precious Metals Manipulation: Lawyers Prepare for Battle »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Apple to Reveal Mysterious Product Transition on September 9th »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Oil: The Inconvenient Truth »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Sarah Palin: Wall Street's Candidate »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- Red Hat / Qumranet Deal Adds Fuel to the Virtualization Fire
- ETF Pick of the Week: iShares MSCI Netherlands
- Altria's Last Legal Hurdle Should Be Settled This Fall
- How Wal-Mart Really Beats Expectations
- Corning: Looking Very Cheap
- Leucadia's Key to Success
- China Natural Gas: Growth Appears Certain
- Can TRW Automotive Escape the Michigan Mess?
- Things Aren't Good - Fast Money Recap (9/4/08)
- ETFs That Help You Sleep Better at Night
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Nuance Communications: An End to Acquisitive Growth
- Short Interest Rising in Tesoro; Shorts Covering Airline Positions
- Harbinger Capital: Cut Short
- Not Much Meat on Pilgrim's Pride's Bones
- Salesforce.com: Demystifying the Force
- Should We Listen to Boone Pickens on Oil?
- Energy Conversion Devices: Ridiculously High Valuation
- Three Reasons the Solar Sell-off May Be in the Early Innings
- Is the Market Rolling Over?
- Solar and Oil, Part Deux
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Cramer's Mad Money (9/5/08)
- Worst Downgrades - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/5/08)
- Pimco's Bill Gross: Jim Cramer Is 'Courageous' and 'Entertaining'
- Cramer Sees the Light - Cramer's Mad Money (9/4/08)
- Keep Buying Big Brown - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/4/08)
- Don't Buy These Bonds - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/4/08)
- Loss of Integrity - Cramer's Mad Money Recap (9/3/08)
- Not Off the RIMM - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/3/08)
- Unbelievable Moves - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/3/08)
- The Rally was the Real Deal - Cramer's Mad Money (9/2/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »




This article has 15 comments:
Tiedeman
in your article before you were saying this is not the bottom, but now you say it is. It is clear to me that the only reason you write is to manipulate prices. Buying Wachovia now is like buying Yahoo 10 years ago. The consumer crisis is only deepening and it will take 1-2 more years for all this to completely bottom.
As for buying and holding five years, why not deploy the $$$ elsewhere and buy it in 4.9 years?
Just asking.
insider buying at these banks means NOTHING
Visit The Jim Rogers Project at JimRogersProject.wordp...
It's amazing how an oversold bounce and subsequent short squeeze have changed sentiment. Suddenly everyone is finding all kinds of "signs of a bottom". Traders (myself included) have made some money in the last week, that's for sure. But while the market prices of these companies have risen dramatically, their values have not changed. Fundamentally, the outlook for banks is every bit as bleak today as it was last Tuesday morning when it looked like everyone was going to zero. There is no upside in any of the good names at current prices, and the losers (like WB) will soon be candidates for short bets again.
Shorts are not required to cover today or tomorrow or ever (subject to available margin)(the SEC regulation enforcement may inhibit new shorts, but for existing shorts I don't think there is any new urgency).
If the shorts are agreeing with this recommendation, the "later" buying opportunity does not occur.
As for the predictive value of insider buying, consider the "wisdom" of all the ex-CEOs on wall street. Did Jimmy Cayne have knowledge "better than anyone"? For real evidence, it might be interesting to see how many "insiders" were selling Bear stock the week before the demise, and how many were buyers on that Monday ($2 offer). My guess is that those that weren't locked out - and this article fails to acknowledge that any insider who actually does have "inside" knowledge is prohibited from buying shares in the company during the "hands off" period - were no better at predicting the future price of Bear than the average investor.
www.theinternationalfo...
ence
Dwinnell