That did not last long. After rallying from $5.00/share to over $9.00 earlier this month, trading manipulators took control of Himax Technologies (HIMX) stock again. The game plan is simple: expect VR and AR revenue growing later this year. In the meantime, accumulate the stock on the dips.Between 2014-2016, revenue fell from $840.5M to $802.9M. Himax kept costs from growing. It investment in a plant, new offices, and in components used in VR will keep earnings from moving up in the near-term. That uncertainty gives bears the ability to drive the share price lower. HIMX’s PR department did a good job in demonstrating its technology and explaining its strategy in the last three months to analysts. Hololens:Facebook’s (FB) F8 event concentrated on developments in AR. The better Oculus gets, the more HIMX benefits. Similarly, Microsoft’s (MSFT) Hololens development is beneficial for HIMX. But Hololens, for now, is an expensive device. When Microsoft releases the mass market version, Himax’s revenue in the AR/VR segment will go up. For now, Himax is counting on another sector for revenue growth: 8K TVs in Asia.HIMX has enough selling momentum to fall at $7.00 or lower. That may create yet another good entry point for investors who missed the nearly 100% return in just 45 days of trading. At a $7.49 closing price, the stock is valued at 15.80x earnings and a P/FCF of 16.6 times.