For a 60 year old, you are a novice at financial analysis. OK Your ignorance is overshadowed by your hubris; a lethal combination for an investor. But then again, you're not an investor; you're a gambler. Actually, I only have 10% of my investments in the stock market....so you're wrong on that hunch. Big difference. Rather than indepth analysis, you rely on hunches. As you age in the next 20 yrs, you will learn that reading a financial statement is no guaranty of success. There are too many variables in the world of investing to be that naive.
Guys like you make investing easy for me; PT Barnum was spot on. I make a lot of money off of uniformed 'investors.' You mean while I'm going long, you're going short? This type of investing needs to be stopped, and I've just written my Congressman.
Stick with the Jim Cramer school of investing; I prefer to take my lessons from Benjamin Graham and Jesse Livermore.
JBLU's a short to zero. Give it 12 months. Must be that death spiral deal, huh? I'll take that bet, and be back to discus it with you in 12. And for those wishing to short JBLU, it's a less than $5 stock. Many brokerages won't allow you to short them; interactivebrokers.com will allow you to short it. I'd wait to see how the stock does in the short term, should oil continue to fall (I would expect oil to drop closer to $100, as there's currently excess production of ~600K barrels per day worldwide).
A safer play would be to buy put options on the stock with decently long dated strikes. Buying in the money strikes cuts down on IV. The Jan 09 $5 strikes, VYOMA, look like a decent play here.
I'm not currently playing shorts on airlines, as I'm short financials; Don't have enough money? I'd lend you some, but my money's tied up in the restroom repair business. I want to see oil take a decent dip, likely resulting in a dead cat bounce on airlines before shorting the airlines. And there are better shorts than JBLU.