Why Panic ?

penny stocks buyback 300x198 Penny Stocks and Low Volume MarketsEverywhere you go, whether it’s a Little League game or a cookout, people are whining and moaning about the market. It is especially true of the casual investor. Many of this group is also predicting some sort of crash or sharp fall in the market in the near term. My memory tells me that some of these same people were very upbeat during the monster tech rally of the late 1990′s. Others in this group also felt comfortable buying stocks and mutual funds when the market already rallied off of the bottom during our last big decline in 2009.

So what is this telling us ? It obviously shows that people are scared. It has become evident on the OTCBB, where with the exception of a few hot penny stocks, the volume has been weak at best. A stock like Distribution Management Services (DMGM.PK) may have risen more than 75% yesterday, but many other stocks recommended by some of the top penny stock newsletters traded relatively light volume. In other words you have had to be spot on to make money on the long side in this market.

On the large cap side there is a better rationale for the weak volume. Every year people are somehow baffled when the action is light in August. Did I miss something. Did PM’s and hedge fund traders all of a sudden stop vacationing in the late summer. Vacation isn’t the whole reason for the tepid trading, but it has certainly contributed to the absence of buyers.

On the other hand, major corporations are doing the exact opposite. Stock buybacks are happening on a frequent basis and M&A activity is already above the rate of the prior two years. Just keep in mind that if S&P 500 companies are willing to invest at these levels things probably are not as bad as they seem.


 

OTCQX Gets A Transparent Face Lift


I doubt the average person has any idea what the Pinks Sheets are, much less anything about its reputation. But the average investor probably has very few positive things to say about this over-the-counter stalwart.

It’s the “Wild West” of investing…

You can’t find anything on the Pinks that isn’t a sub-penny stock or shell company…

otcmarkets Pink Sheet StocksHowever, the Pink Sheets landscape is changing dramatically. And these changes could mean a more investor-friendly environment is finally making its way to the once-murky waters of bulletin boards. In fact, you might already be relying on the Pink Sheets for all of your over-the-counter trades — even if you’ve never put your money in a Pink Sheets stock before.

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Iit’s important to see how the Pink’s have evolved into a major player in the listing game.

The Pink Sheets put its plan into motion back in 2007 when it began to differentiate between transparent, reporting companies and the shell companies that make up the Pink’s notorious grey market. Most of these newly listed OTCQX stocks were larger, foreign firms looking for a foothold in the U.S. markets. Even multi-billion dollar firms such as Adidas and Wall Mart of Mexico count themselves as members of the OTCQX.

The Pink Sheets boasts that the OTCQX is the “premier tier of the U.S. over-the-counter market… Investor-focused companies use the quality controlled OTCQX listing platform to offer investors transparent trading, superior information and easy access through their regulated U.S. broker-dealers.”

And it’s not just foreign firms that are populating the Pink’s transparent listings. Since its 2007 inception, the program has expanded to include multiple market tiers designed to help traders and investors know exactly what they’re getting into when they throw their money at a Pink’s listing.

The OTCQB was the next step. This is the latest market tier for transparent, reporting, fully up-to-date listings. A public relations push has accompanied the OTCQB launch. The Pink’s domain has changed to “http://www.otcmarkets.com”. Front-and-center on the page is a link to the market tiers, along with clear designations and descriptions for even the speculative and grey market securities.

It would appear the PR blitz and OTCQB launch are part of the Pink’s plan for OTC listing dominance. That’s the important part: the Pink Sheets is not an exchange — it’s a listing service, competing with the OTCBB, which is run by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).

Despite its less-than-stellar reputation, the Pink’s are winning the technology race. Market makers have turned to the Pink’s quotation system in droves. In fact, more than 80% of all market maker quotes in OTC stocks are now published on the Pink’s platform, with just 20% on the OTCBB. So if you’re buying an OTC stock, chances are the Pink’s system is the one pulling the lever.

I can’t say how quickly the Pink Sheet’s reputation will change, if at all. But the listing service is positioning itself to turn the OTCBB into a thing of the past. That in itself is reason enough to pay close attention.

The whole game of investing in penny stocks could change forever.