Can i trade secretly...? |
| i don't mean anything illegal. you see i just turned 18 and i want to trade with the money i saved by jobs i did in the past year. i've studying stocks for more than a year now. but i ... |
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If you are under the age of 30, don't you deserve a second option on how to invest your social security money? |
| Today if you are under the age of 30 you may never see social security and yet you will pay 7-8% of all your earnings into this federal payroll TAX. Don't we have a right to invest this money ... |
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How do you benefit from buying shares? |
Could someone explain the point of it?
Thank you.... |
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How do you think I should invest? |
| Ive been saving money for a couple years (Im 19) and right now have a few thousand in CD's at an interest rate of 5.25%. I want to expand the areas Im investing in to include things like mutual ... |
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I have 10 thousand to invest and am not looking to get rich quick, or take a huge risk. Any suggestions? |
| I have virtually no bills, a house already paid off, no student loans, and am getting ready to head to Iraq or another tour. I wants to invest for a 12 month period and get a decent return.... |
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I just inherited $100,000, taxes paid, which is the best way to invest it? |
Additional Details I'm 29, own a house, self-employed, have some money invested for retirement.
Willing to invest for a long time no matter how high the risk.... |
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Is there a site that i can invest fake money that way i can learn and take chances without using real money? |
| Kinda of like playing partypoker but using the fake money pot..Where is there an investment site like this. That way i can get good practice??... |
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Can I trust fool.com? |
| The site says that it gives good advice on investments. I just want to know if that is real, I'm getting a little bit cautious after encountering freelotto.com. Thanks!... |
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What is a mutual fund? |
and how does it differ from stocks? Additional Details i have abt 15000 to ... |
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Am i too greedy or what??? |
| I recently bought into a company with $1000 and made about 42% on my investment in a matter of 2 months. Problem is i put a stop order in this morning and it went through and then shot up again. I ... |
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Im 13 years old my dad loaned me 100,000 dollars and said do what i will and i bought some stocks? |
| Do you think i bought some good stocks i bought one hundred of each did i go over the limit and did i buy good stocks the transacations havent gone through yet because the stock market is closed what ... |
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mashi | How can i start investing in share market...i have no clue pls help? |
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Young and Famous
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Try Sharebuilder.com, they are the easiest online stock broker. You'll learn how to trade stocks easily with them!
It's also very cheap to invest with them. Just $4 to buy stocks!
Just go to http://www.sharebuilder.com/ and check out the Investor Starter Kit at the Retail Store. |
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udayashanker k
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IF U ARE INDIAN THEN OPEN 3 IN ACCOUNT WITH:
ICICIBANK OR HDFCBANK.
IT IS VERY EASY TO OPERATE TRADING IN SHARES |
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chuck m
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I have been told that www.oneshare.com offers deals from time to time and have good customer service. I must say I have not used them but a young couple at work swears by them. |
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dinu_pawar
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invest time first
study ebooks PPT on 4shared.com
aptistock freeware 4 tech analysis
with buy sell signal
do mock trading & then
START
details visit my ans & blog or mail |
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oakhill
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Start an account in a company that allows small investments. Sharebuilder.com allows a very minumum opening amount and only charges $4 per trade. There are other companies that have similar terms. Another is buyandhold.com. If you have a larger amount, $2000, it may be worth opening an account with a broker such as TD Ameritrade. They charge $9.99 per trade and currently have incentives for new accounts. Then, you can use the research tools of the company with your account to find stocks that would be good investments. |
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josekjose
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You start investing into the share market once you have an excess of income over your expenditure -i.e. you have an investible surplus. Once you have an investible surplus then there are essential investments that should be made like life insurance,medical insurance and there may be others depending on your priorities and your age before you allocate money for investing into the share market. Shares are among the riskier forms of investment and so you invest the moneys of which even if you lose a substantial portion you are not affected. The proportion of money of your investible surplus that you can allocate to 'share investment' depends on your risk taking capacity. If you are younger you have more capacity to take risk so you can invest more into equity shares. It is also a function of your endowment - the richer you are the more risk that you can take. These are the basic premises on which you should proceed before you take the dive into the hurly-burly world of the share markets.
You should study read up on the equity markets before you make investments. You can invest directly by buying through a stock broker or invest indirectly through mutual funds or if you have substantial funds then there are fund managers who will manage your funds for you for a fee by investing appropriately. If you want to experience the risk (and maybe the rewards) and the excitement of trading the markets then you can become a day-trader which is not different from gambling. Between these two extremes of having your funds managed by either mutual funds or fund managers and the extremely risky day-trading you have other options. But this means that you should have studied the various styles of investing.
Traditionally there are four styles of investing a)Value Investing -which looks at identifying undervalued companies b)Momentum Investing -which looks at price trends c)Contra Investing - which tries to find opportunities in neglected area d) Growth Investing -which sees opportunities in companies or sectors which are in a secular growth phase.
A simple approach to the above is to study the two broad areas of investment analysis which are denoted as Fundamental Analysis and Technical Analysis. There are good books and online resources on both of these. Go to the wikpedia site and search on those two phrases and you can get many links to those areas. The essential point is that if you want to approach the share market in a 'professional' and systematic manner then it is not simple. However there are many people who do it in a much more simple manner and I will outline some steps for that based on what I have written above:
a) Identify your investible surplus
b) Recognise your risk taking capacity and the amount of money that you would like to invest.
c) Read up/discuss and identify an investment strategy
d) Test it out (there are are online sites that allow this)
e) Or identify an advisor who will help you -it can be a stock broker.
Last advice: Be very careful when investing in the stockmarkets as you can lose all the money that you have invested -and sometimes many times more. |
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bozotexino
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buy the book" investing for dummies" |
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albisorii
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ETrade is another option or even easyer,talk to your bank,they'll give you advice. |
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BlueNile
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Mutual fund is the good start. ETF also is another good start with. Both invest in bunch of stocks at once. Diversification is the point here. If the market has correction, mutual fund/ETF follow the correction as well, but it won't as steep as individual stock becasue of diversify. |
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Sang Suci
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Discover your style. Are you a speculator (making money from price fluctuation) or an investor (making money from owning businesses)? After that, find some good books about your investment style. If you're a speculator, you would find books on candlestick chart and technical analysis useful. If you're an investor, you might want to learn to read financial report. In any case, finding the broker should be your last step. And when you go out to find one, look for the one with lowest fee. |
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