RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:I like the warrants here.The warrants are trending down because they doubled from .065 when they first started trading last week, to over .18 when the stock ran from under $1 to 1.29. Now that the stock price is basically stagnant, the premium on the warrants is decreasing. Remember that these warrants are intrinsically worthless with a stock price under 1.75. So if the stock doesn't start running hard, the warrants will slowly trend down. Eventually they will bottom and stop declining.
I went through the same thing with the CBW warrants recently, when the acceleration clause was triggered and the stock dropped to the excercise price, and briefly below. Even with the stock below the excercise price, there was still a premium on the warrants.
For the warrants to start increasing substantially, the stock will have to do the same thing. At these levels, a couple cents gain on the stock isn't going to move the warrants much, if any. Right now the warrants are almost a slight leading indication of what the stock price will do.
MiltonHigh wrote: Hi, a warrant simply gives you the right to buy the share at a given price, in our case 1.75.
So let say the current stock price is 3.00, you will be able to buy the share at 1.75, making a 1.25$ per share right away.
The nice thing about the warrant is the leverage effect ( In a regular scenario, you would have 3 warrants for the price of 1 share )
So, let say the current stock price was 3$, the warrants issued at the original price would be 1$ each.
Now, if the stock the day after gains 1$, the stock would make a 33% gain. The warrat would vary in the same way, meaning it woulg gain 1$ too, so making a 100% gain.
Now, with HIP it does not work this way. And it does not make any sense to me. Looks very risky. The price of the share goes up today, but the warrant is sinking.