How much money can i make a month investing 20,000 inr in share market ? |
| how much money can i make a month investing 20,000 inr in share market ?and in which companies do i invest?... |
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Favorite online stock broker? |
| What is your favorite online stock brokerage? I know there are many, many choices; ETRADE, Charles Schwab, Scottrade, Gorilla Trade, etc. etc. Which, from your experience, do you like and why?... |
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Experienced People Only: Investing? |
| I am looking to purchase stocks soon. However, I know NOTHING whatsoever about the stock market and how it works. Before I read a few books, is there any core information one NEEDS to know?... |
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How does stock work, and where do i begin? |
| im very young, and still in high school. So im living off my parents, i work 2 jobs, i have money to play with. And im looking to kind of.. set up a good source of $$ for the next few years. What ... |
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Federal reserve? |
why does the federal reserve focus primarily on controlling commercial bank lending as opposed to other financial intermediaries lending? Additional Details yeah..i know it's tough..... |
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Are we officially in RECESSION now? |
| after today's disappointing job report?... |
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Is The U.S. Dollar loosing Value? |
| If so then should'nt all the rich people be concerned about this. since This President has been in office and this war and all. and The fare trade agreement that allowed all the jobs to go ... |
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Does anyone understand day trading? |
| If anybody has ever read any of my posts on real estate, I consider myself a fairly savvy real estate investor. However, I have heard about and want to learn about day trading in stocks. I have an ... |
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What does the stock market crash mean in laymonds terms? |
| what does the stock market crash mean in laymonds terms? hypothetically if the stock market in america went from where it is at now which is around 9000 points, and plunged to 6000 or even to zero, ... |
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Why is it bad when people sell their stocks? I don't quite understand the market dropping like it is.? |
| I guess my question is why are people freaking out about sub prime mortgages, and why would they sell shares because of it?... |
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Is the stock market going to bounce back any time soon? |
| Despite its inconsistencies it has been particularly low lately, any chance it will bounce back?... |
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Amazing investment opportunity? |
| I was approached by a man in a potato sack the other day who explained to me that in the coming months the hottest investment opportunities will be in tarps, canvas, and camping grounds. He said ... |
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I have 7,000 to invest..Any suggestions on what to do with it so I can get fast returns? |
| and for all you ignorant a**es..No I don't sell drugs..I have a good job and I was able to save it..It took ma almost a ... |
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flossy | Can anybody explain what caused the stock market crash - in plain english please.? |
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Watakushi
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betmoney is correct. The federal government used many tools to promote home ownership for people who otherwise would not be able to buy a house. Chiefly among those methods was creating Fannie May and Freddie Mac whose sole purpose was to borrow money in the bond market to purchase mortgages from banks. Their bonds were implicitly guaranteed by the federal government making them nearly risk-free investments, and allowing them to pay below market rates. Because nobody could compete with the interest rates that they paid for their money, they ended up owning half of the mortgages in the US (most of the riskiest ones). They bought the mortgages to encourage banks to lend money that they otherwise wouldn't have because they knew they weren't risking their own money. The system had to collapse at some point; all it took was a hickup. Ironically, the politicians are now blambing the banks for doing exactly what the government wanted them to do in the first place, lend more than people can afford. The problem is our socialistic government trying to controll an economy, which they know nothing about, that otherwise would be perfectly fine. Banks know who to lend money to and how much to lend. Now, with the collaps of Fannie and Freddie, trillions of $s have evaporated out of our economy, and the greatest source of financing for mortgages has disappeared. Because they were a government-sponsored oligopoly, there are too few private competitors in the second-hand mortgage market to take their place. Banks now don't have the money to lend, without an adequate second-hand market. |
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betmoneyonit2
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In plain English. Democrats turned two government sposored corporations into a money laundering operation to fund their speical interests. They passed a law that encouraged and mandated that lenders give mortgages to people who could not afford them. Then they blocked all legislation to reform them until after it was too late and the credit crisis was unavoidable. Then they blamed everyone but themselves for causing the problem, even though the very people are on video, caught in the act. |
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James R
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Actually is all comes down to greed in my view. People say "supply and demand" dictates prices. I say if we run out of something then people need to learn to use less rather than businesses raising the price just because they feel too many people are wanting their product or service.
We came into this world without anything and we will leave this world in the same manner, without anything. |
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LN
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banks were lending money to too many people, people who could not afford to pay the banks back. When the banks went to get their money back (by selling the houses of those who borrowed) the banks did not make profits from these lendings because house value has gone down. The banks lost more money then earned, going into dept....these were major banks that screwed up everyone else. |
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Albundy
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Plain greed and lack of control from elected government officials.
They allow speculators and corporations to run our economy, and buy our officials, go to this site to get the full picture http://www.larouchepub.com/ |
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Jive Turkey
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People paid more than they could afford, for houses. |
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Josh
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The banks and mortgage companies started giving low-interest rates to people who couldn't afford it and then slapped on a big fee at the end, causing the people to default on their loans and the banks would lose that money. Eventually a lot of banks' money reserves to run out and the banks would fail. So many banks and mortgage companies started failing, forcing the government to bail them out. That caused a chain of events that spread panic among stock holders and everyone started selling. The market dropped so much that few people dared to buy stock, causing it to drop even further. |
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