50-1000 usd
eurobolt 1 or 2? Monte Carlo or hog back stock?
1000.00 dollars
Depending on the extent of damage to the stock, it will probably INCREASE the value. Save the old stock with the gun in case some collector wants to put it back on.
One way to predict and profit from a stock's decline in value is by short selling. This involves borrowing shares of a stock from a broker and selling them at the current price. If the stock's value decreases as you predicted, you can buy back the shares at a lower price and return them to the broker, pocketing the difference as profit. However, short selling carries risks and may result in losses if the stock's value increases instead.
Buy a Browning A5 dissassembly guide. You can find them for sale on the internet such as ebay. If you try to remove all the screws, and just pull it off, you will have a problem getting it back on. Be carefull and get the guide. It will walk you through it. auto5man
I assume that you are asking about a Browning auto-5 semi auto shotgun.The value cannot be determined without a much more detailed description of your shotguns overall condition,to include the amount of original finish remaining,the bore condition etc.
That would depend on how much stock they own, the price of the stock, how much they paid for it, and how much the value of the stock rose or fell during the year. So there's really no way to give a difinitive answer.
When a company buys back stock, it purchases its own shares from the open market, reducing the number of shares outstanding. This can increase the value of the remaining shares and improve earnings per share for existing shareholders.
The stock market is considered to be out of the Bear phase when there is consistent increase in the index value and the investor confidence in the markets is back and we have more buyers than sellers...
The value of a portfolio may decrease when the stocks are increasing in price if the portfolio owner is making bets that the stocks will decrease in price. One way to do this is by short selling ('shorting') a stock. This essentially means you borrow the stock and then immediately sell it, in the hope that the stock will decrease in value so you can buy it back at the lower price (the opposite of buying a stock and hoping for an increase in value).
The best place to receive that answer would be from your stock broker. However if you are doing this on your own you could automatically set back 20% of the stock's value to cover the AMT that would be due on your stock once you exercise them.
You can buy back a stock after selling it at any time, as long as the stock is available for purchase on the market.