Aixtron- und die Banken stufen fröhlich auf kaufen
Habe ansonsten heute den letzten Teil meiner gewünschten Position gekauft und fühle mich für die Jahre 2020-22 damit sehr gut aufgestellt. Von mir aus kann‘s jetzt losgehen :-)
hehe
Public/Investor Relation Manager???
Sack him..und wenn man in Deutschland ein Arbeitszeugnis bekommt mit er "bemühte sich"...ihr wisst schon,was das wert ist.
Es sieht ja wohl jeder, dass die IR nach fast einem Jahr Tiefschlaf wieder aktiver wird.
Secondly, my belief on what is going on is that the US and UK fund managers are selling Aixtron to take the tax loss in year end to offset their tax gains from their winners.
In US, the wash sale rules prohibit you taking the tax loss benefit if you buy back the same stock within 30 days. I believe similar rule exists in UK. In Germany, there is no such rule but correct me if I am wrong. In Germany you can sell Aixtron to take a loss and immediately buy them back and you can still deduct your tax loss.
If I were a US fund managers, of course I would offload my loser Aixtron in December and back them back in January. That is a ~20% gain in taxes.
From Aixtron's 2018 annual report:
As of December 31, 2018, approximately 26% of AIXTRON shares were held by private individuals,
most of whom are domiciled in Germany. Approximately 73% of AIXTRON‘s outstanding shares
were held by institutional investors. The majority of institutional investors (approximately 37%)
was located in the United Kingdom, followed by Germany (23%) and the United States (21%).
The remaining investors came from other parts of Europe and the world. At the end of 2018, the
largest shareholders according to the most recent notifications were T. Rowe Price Group, the
Oppenheimer Global Opportunities Fund and Deutsche Asset Management, each holding more
than 5% of AIXTRON shares. 99% of the shares were in free float as defined by Deutsche Börse
and approximately 1% of AIXTRON‘s shares were held by the Company.
According to the voting rights notifications and public disclosures pursuant to Section 26 para. 1
WpHG, the following institutional investors held shares of more than 3% in AIXTRON SE at the
end of 2018:
• T. Rowe Price International Funds, Inc., Baltimore, Maryland, USA, 5.2%.
• OppenheimerFunds, Inc., Denver, Colorado, USA, 5.2%.
• Deutsche Asset Management Investment GmbH, Frankfurt, Germany, 5.1%.
• Argonaut Capital Partners LLP, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 4.9%.
• Ministry of Finance on behalf of the State of Norway, Oslo, Norway, 4.9%.
• Baillie Gifford & Co, Edinburgh, United Kingdom, 4.9%.
• Citigroup, Inc., Wilmington, Delaware, USA, 4.6%.
• BlackRock, Inc. in Wilmington, Delaware, USA, 4.3%.
• Oppenheimer International Small-Mid Company Fund, Wilmington, Delaware, USA, 3.1%.
• Varma Mutual Pension Insurance Company, Helsinki, Finland, 3.1%.
------------------------------------------------
You could see that 22.4% of Aixtron shares are held by the US institution investors. Another 10% by the UK. That is about 30m shares and most of them likely to have tax loss. If I were their money managers, I sell Aixtron and buy back in after 30 days. This is my theory, but I have no proof. If I were right, expect a January rally.
https://www.investopedia.com/terms/j/...20they%20are%20less%20liquid.
Lets see what happens in January (add to that CES in Las Vegas) and what happens around Aixtrons Q4 results and 2020 guidance on 27.02.
Müsste dann doch alle oder viele Aktien mir dem D/US/UK Investoren Gemisch treffen.
die märkte laufen direkt in den SIC trend. fehlt nur noch was nettes von samsung.
und dann das selbige von Samsung direkt.
@BigGeld : Börsenwert 1 Milliarde ist AIX m.M.n momentan definitiv nicht wert!
Re/ your Tax comments: I have no clue on the Tax situation for investment funds domiciled in Germany, but from a private investor perspective I can confirm that it could make sense to do such a tax-driven sale. Assuming you have realized 10k profits with other stocks throughout the year (on which you paid taxes already) and sit on 10k losses with your Aixtron investment - which you intend to hold for several years anyway - you might be inclined to sell Aixtron right now, get the taxes back for the time being and buy the shares again (however, some limitations: https://www.bauer-treuhand.de/Services/Aktuelles/...ten-Aktien.html). Obviously just a liquidity/timing effect, but nevertheless worth to consider.
On top of the Tax considerations, one could also mention the usual „window dressing“ phenomenon towards year-end, i.e. in your year-end portfolio you rather want to show a star performer like e.g. Apple instead of the laggard/underperformer Aixtron. So that might play a role currently as well.
dann handelst du eben mit aktien unter einer millarde oder nimmst us, japan oder china aktien.
ich denke in dem format bekommt scholz das nie durch.