Don't Go Swimming With The Sharks: A Lesson From Irving Resources

 | Jul 27, 2017 03:22AM ET

Bob Moriarty, president of 321 Gold, warns investors to never put in market orders when buying or selling junior mining shares.

You should never, never ever, put in a market order when buying or selling junior mining shares. The liquidity is so low that it is the financial equivalent of putting a sign around your neck saying, "I'm stupid. Steal from me."

I wrote Nobody Knows Anything a year ago to try to educate investors on the basics of investing they need to know. Some of the most valuable advice is what not to do.

When I had someone design a cover for the book, the first cover I selected an investor standing in a boat trying to reel in dollars while the boat floats in a sea of sharks. It makes a great analogy. Everyone you deal with is trying to take your money. The biggest sharks of all are the brokers. They will steal from you in a moment if you allow it.

The same stock gave two different perfect examples of what can happen with market orders in just the last six weeks. The stock is Irving Resources Inc (SNX:IRV). The U.S. symbol is IRVRF and for American buyers not trading the Canadian symbol through Penntrade, everyone else is pretty much forced to buy in the U.S. using the U.S. symbol.

It vital that investors understand that on Canadian listed shares with companies domiciled in Canada; the Canadian symbol is the real stock. But when Americans cannot trade the Canadian symbol through their brokers, U.S. brokerage houses will have set up an OTCBB symbol. It is a derivative; it is not the real deal.

So when trading Canadian shares, every investor should track the stock on Stockhouse or Stockwatch in Canadian dollars. Those are the real prices. The U.S. symbol will more or less track the Canadian shares but with a currency conversion. But the U.S. symbol will always have less liquidity.

On June 13th I began to get a flurry of emails, all in a panic, wanting to know what happened to Irving. Had they gone belly up? I went to Stockwatch and looked at my screen. It showed the stock trading in a range of $0.64 to $0.66 with just over 22,000 shares traded. The stock closed up a cent on the day. Mentally I was scratching my head. Why were people contacting me in a panic? I asked one of the writers why he believed there was a problem. I didn't see any problem.

He wrote back that the shares had crashed to $0.09 a share. Naturally he was fearful. I scratched my head again before pulling up the U.S. symbol for Irving and the answer was as distinct as a pimple on the tip of your nose. The IRVRF symbol traded 10,109 shares on June 13th in four trades. Three trades were between $0.46 and $0.49, but the first trade of the day was at $0.09.

Someone put in an order to sell 5,000 shares at the market to insure he would get an execution. And he did. From a close of $0.48 the day before, the shares went to $0.09. I don't have any clue as to who the hopeless seller was but finding the culprit who stole $1,950 US from the investor was easy. All you had to do is go down to the slimiest gin joint around Wall Street and look for the broker with the giant grin buying free drinks for everyone.

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