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Another 52 week high for AMR stock

MiAAmi

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Stock up again today

AMR $ 24.59 up $1.27 or 5.45%

Date should read Feb 09 2006 ...Sorry
 
Dumped 298 options at the close yesterday
for a grand total of
3870.48
A bit shy of upper mgmt rewards but it will cover 2 mortgage payments :lol:
 
Dumped 298 options at the close yesterday
for a grand total of
3870.48
A bit shy of upper mgmt rewards but it will cover 2 mortgage payments :lol:

You've dumped more options than some management employees have. You should lose the doom and gloom routine for a week or two, maybe take the family out to dinner, relax a little.
 
You're impatience cost you about $100 nased on today's close. I'm holding out for $30 at a minimum.

You've dumped more options than some management employees have.

Actually, I think all management employees got 270 shares, regardless of their level or paycut...
 
You've dumped more options than some management employees have. You should lose the doom and gloom routine for a week or two, maybe take the family out to dinner, relax a little.

I think not 😛

RAMPANT INSIDER SELLING AT AMR

Four top AMR executives each sold tens of thousands of their AMR stock options in a short eleven day span in January. The AMR insiders involved were vice-president Dan Garton, CFO James Beer, general counsel Gary Kennedy and corporate secretary Charles Marlett.

The selling took place from January 19 to January 30 of this year. Many of the options had just recently become exercisable.

Insider selling among several executives in such a short time span is usually not considered a bullish sign for a company by investors who monitor insider activity.

Number of shares exercised and sold, dates and estimated pre-tax profits for each executive:

Dan Garton: 69,930 shares, January 19-20 Pre-tax profit: $550,158

Gary Kennedy: 47,466 shares, January 19 and 30 Pre-tax profit: $493,364

Charles Marlett: 26,576 shares, January 27 Pre-tax profit: $197,291

James Beer: 18,192 shares, January 19 Pre-tax Profit: $117,601



Sources: AMR SEC Form 4 Filings

Steven Baumert, Baumert Capital Advisors

The writer is the principal of Baumert Capital Advisors, an Allen, Texas-based investment consulting firm and a Registerd Investment Adviser. The preceding should not be construed as investment advice to buy or sell any security and is intended for informational purposes only
 
A wee bit shy of the $15,000.00 plus per year you gave up!
It only has to go up to $300/share to make up for the concessions.

Since 2003 it has gone up an average of $7.50 a year. So if you can hold on to the stock for just another 40 years you may actually see it hit $300/share.

However with the executives cashing out it must mean that they feel that the prospect of continued growth is slim.
 
Steven Baumert, Baumert Capital Advisors

The writer is the principal of Baumert Capital Advisors, an Allen, Texas-based investment consulting firm and a Registerd Investment Adviser. The preceding should not be construed as investment advice to buy or sell any security and is intended for informational purposes only

Steven Baumert is (or was) an AA flight attendant married to another AA flight attendant. His opinions are not exactly the most unbiased, nor are they even remotely objective in nature. Unlike other airline employees who also do financial advising as a side profession, he never seems to disclose that connection when giving "advice" regarding AMR.
 
And the likes of corporate bootlicker anaylst Ray Neidel(sp) or the corporate sposored ECLAT firm are????

As much as Ray is over-quoted (and they're not very useful quotes most of the time), I do have to say he's truly independent and doesn't do work for the airlines like Boyd and ECLAT do, and Caylon (his firm) doesn't appear to have any sort of relationships with the airlines he covers, unlike Lehman, JP Morgan or Merrill.
 
As much as Ray is over-quoted (and they're not very useful quotes most of the time), I do have to say he's truly independent and doesn't do work for the airlines like Boyd and ECLAT do, and Caylon (his firm) doesn't appear to have any sort of relationships with the airlines he covers, unlike Lehman, JP Morgan or Merrill.

I would say say Vaughn Cordle is most over-quoted; and he is not even a real airline analyst.
 
I would say say Vaughn Cordle is most over-quoted; and he is not even a real airline analyst.

Vaughn's problem is that he seeks out opportunities to be quoted, as opposed to being sought out...

That said, Cordle does have his CFA (chartered financial analyst) certificate, which on paper does make him more of a real analyst than some of the analysts employed by the investment banks or 99% of the people who write for The Street.Com or Motley Fool, and have far more influence over stock purchases.

The problem is that most airline employees can't look past the fact that he crossed the UAL picket line in 1985. I think that was a poor career decision on his part, but it doesn't change the fact that he went thru the certification process to receive his CFA, which is no small feat, and requires the ability to show more than a fair degree of impartiality in one's analytical abilities.

My only issue with Vaughn is that he doesn't bother to fully disclose his connection with UAL, which also is the same problem I have with Baumert and John McCorkle. If you're going to issue newsletters or regular research notes, you need to disclose any possible conflicts of interest or bias.
 
Insider selling among several executives in such a short time span is usually not considered a bullish sign for a company by investors who monitor insider activity.
These guys spend 95% of their year sitting on insider information that bars them from trading. The best times for them to cash out of options are immediately after quarterly conference calls. That's exactly what they did in this case.
 

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