Suena más a italiano la verdad…
Ey! Yo ya fui al psicólogo
No todo está perdido
Ya mismo tenemos de vuelta a Captur y sus chascarrillos.
suponiendo que no las haya ido vendiendo
[edit] si no recuerdo mal estaba vendiendo calls, así que supongo que habrá vendido unas cuantas ya
Una curiosa historia sobre la IPO de Figma.
On Thursday, July 31, design-tech company Figma Inc. launched its initial public offering (IPO).
This isn’t just any tech company. It’s the collaborative platform used by thousands of companies, from startups to heavy hitters like Google and Airbnb, to design everything from websites to cloud-based apps.
That, on top of Adobe’s $20 billion buyout attempt back in 2022, made it one of the most anticipated IPOs in years. Everyone from Wall Street to Silicon Valley had 7/31 circled in their calendars.
And Figma absolutely exploded out of the gate, tripling on day one and racking up over $55 billion in value.
I tried to grab 1,000 shares before the open. What happened next still has me shaking my head
As a retail trader, getting in on IPOs used to be almost impossible. Wall Street’s big banks had it locked down, scooping up shares before most of us could blink. But in 2021, Robinhood launched its IPO Access program, which changed everything.
It gave everyday investors a shot at buying IPO shares before they began trading publicly.
So, when Figma popped up in Robinhood’s IPO Access tab, I jumped in. I read the prospectus, punched in a request for 1,000 shares at the maximum price of $33, then waited for the big day.
I got the confirmation email as well, showing $33,000 committed – but I’d only be charged if I got an allocation.
Then came IPO day.
FIG opened at $85 and ripped even higher. With shares tripling, I was already doing the math in my head, thinking “If I got filled on all 1,000 shares, I’m up over $80,000!”
Except I hadn’t yet read the second email from Robinhood.
When I finally opened it, I saw this: “Your request to buy 1,000 shares of FIG was partially filled. You received 1 share at $33.”
One. Out of 1,000.
So, what happened? Robinhood uses a random allocation process – essentially a lottery. It doesn’t matter how many shares you request or how big your account is. It uses a fair system. But sometimes, fairness can sting.
Now, in all honesty, Figma’s IPO was wildly oversubscribed. Between the massive demand and limited retail allocation, most users received only a handful of shares, if they were lucky enough to get any at all. In fact, I saw a lot of noise on Reddit from angry investors who didn’t get any.
FIG isn’t a stock you can just flip, either. Robinhood’s policy says if you sell within 30 days, they’ll lock you out of future IPOs for 60 days. So, my one lonely share? I’m keeping it as a comedic reminder of what happened – and a good story to laugh about around the dinner table.
En 6 meses lleva un + 25,82 % ¿ Por qué será ?
En Yahoo pone lo siguiente
Gilead Sciences (GILD) publicó sus resultados del segundo trimestre, que superaron las estimaciones de Wall Street, tanto en ingresos como en ganancias. La compañía también elevó su pronóstico de ganancias para todo el año.
Salu2
Por fin una de este hilo que llevo en cartera , creo que la primera desde que se creó está sección.
¿alguien sabe si ha pasado algo con Israel, o con el mar rojo o los estibadores o huelgas…? vete a saber por qué, pero ZIM lleva casi +20% en premarket
UNH +11%
Por compra anunciarse que han comprado acciones Berkshire, Scion (Michael Burry) y Lone Pine.
Según la CQSS ya va un + 13,59 %
Salu2
Se ha roto hoy el zanahorio una pierna o que? Que pasa hoy con todo?
Ha salido Powell diciendo que es posible que en septiembre estén abiertos a bajar los tipos y claro … se han vuelto orgásmicos brokers de todas las casas de inversión y se han liado la manta a la cabeza.
A ver lo que les dura