Comment by
Majormac79 on Jun 13, 2012 8:52am
Rin is more like a small mutual fund. Why direct invest like that??
Comment by
whoisyourpapa on Jun 13, 2012 8:57am
Rin just announced a rollback of their shares. . . whois
Comment by
juncles on Jun 13, 2012 2:05pm
Not to mention that capital gains and income are taxed twice - once at the corporate level, Resinco, and again on shareholders. Also a reason RIN will always trade below NAV.
Comment by
whoisyourpapa on Jun 13, 2012 2:22pm
If memory serve RIN owns 26Mil shares of wof. If woulfe goes to $1.00 it would mean $26Mil for them, divided by their otstanding shares (aprox 123,000,000 undiluted?) it gives you around .20/share. So I doubt it would trade at .10 - .15. Correct me if I'm wrong. . . whois
Comment by
James54 on Jun 13, 2012 2:27pm
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Comment by
professorchaos on Jun 13, 2012 6:02pm
Unless you're buying a controlling share of RIN, you can't really think in terms of what you own indirectly. That's not to say it won't pay off for you, it's just a fundamentally different investment, with completely different risk profiles.