Brian

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In 1972 the company had warrants that sold for 27 cents when the stock traded at $8 a share. The warrants were so cheap because they were worthless unless the stock traded above $40 a share. Fat chance. Since our model said the warrants were worth $4 a share, we bought all we could at the unbelievable bargain price of 27 cents each, which turned out to be 10,800 warrants at a total cost, after commissions, of $3,200. We hedged our risk of loss by shorting eight hundred shares of the common stock at $8. When the stock later fell to $1.50 a share, we bought back our short stock for a profit of ...more
Brian
A smart hedge. And a win on volatility either way. This slump was profitable even before the not foreseeable subsequent Atlantic City development that made the warrants hugely valuable.
A Man for All Markets: From Las Vegas to Wall Street, How I Beat the Dealer and the Market
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