You've no doubt heard the Wall Street adage "buy the
rumor, sell the news." The idea is that, by trading on some
rumored positive news for a stock, you will take a position
ahead of the crowd, and then sell as other investors rush in
when the rumor is confirmed as a fact.
One big problem I have with this notion is that it seems
to ignore all the instances where rumors are -- gasp! -- not
true. How often is that the case? Almost all of the time.
Remember when
Vale (NYSE: VALE) was supposedly
preparing a $25 billion bidfor
Mosaic (NYSE: MOS) in July? Or how about this
month, when
Applied Materials (Nasdaq: AMAT) was said to
be
readying an offerfor
Energy Conversion Devices (Nasdaq: ENER) at
$18 a share, and
MEMC Electronic Materials (NYSE: WFR) was
rumored to be a buyout target once again?
Takeover rumors aren't the only ones that can lead to big
disappointment for those hoping to sell the news. Take the
case of
Delta Petroleum (Nasdaq: DPTR), where rumor
fed upon rumor, leading to a truly impressive speculative
run.
On Sept. 8, Delta shares ran up about 16% on strong
volumes. The following day, word began to get around that
Delta had landed approval to drill four high-impact
exploratory natural gas wells in Washington state. That
rumor, which turned out to be true, no doubt fueled
anticipation surrounding the Gray well, which Delta was in
the process of completing. The stock exploded 33% higher on a
staggering volume.
Waves of traders rushed in over the next seven trading
sessions, taking Delta's share price from under $2 at the
start of the month to over $4 a share by last Friday --
which, funnily enough, was options expiration day.
Anyone hoping to sell the news of a monster well was
sorely disappointed today, with the announcement by Delta
that Gray had not flowed commercial quantities of gas in any
of the zones tested. Not only that, but Delta was curtailing
additional drilling activity while it puzzled over these
piddling results. I've closed my underperform call over on
Motley Fool CAPSat a handsome paper profit.
There is arguably such a thing as intelligent speculation,
but "buy the rumor, sell the news" is not how it's done.
This article was originally published as
Buy the Rumor, Get the Blueson
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