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 What Are The Best Ways Of Making Money???
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 Advice on penny stocks?
Anyone have any advice on them, like if there is generally a huge risk involved, etc? ...


 Regarding mutual funds, which is the better option, to invest in growth fund or dividend re-invest fund ?
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 Just opened an online account w/TD Ameritrade. Decent way to save?
My thinking is really of this account being a form of savings while having the money trying to make a decent/good profit as well. In just a few days I've made back the money it cost's just ...


 Any experienced stock traders here?
I'm 24 and a beginner invester and I'm still trying to develop my own investing strategy. From analyzing stock charts I have noticed that whenever the slow stochastics of a stock bottoms ...


 Can someone suggest a book that will teach me what company I should buy stock from?
I'm looking for a book (not Stock Investing for Dummies, because I already have it), that will teach me how and why I should buy stock. When to invest and so on. I basically am looking to ...


 What is todays gold rate?
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 Any ideas on how to invest 20000 dollars with no risk please?

Additional Details
of course i am in the us, this is yahoo answers us. if i live in malysia i would have posted in the yahoo malysia....


 I am looking for a stock on the rise and be relible that has a low cost per share?
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 I am a teen and i want to learn how to invest and how to become financially smart?
i want to know what are bonds, cds and other ...


 Why buy gold if you have a hard time selling it?
When you buy expensive golden jewelry, like a ring
(for instance I had this ring made of complete real 24K 999 pure gold, wich was very soft and bendable)
When you try to sell it again to ...


 GM Stock ? please help?
Realisticly in the nexk 10-20 years how much can GM's stock be worth considering the economy gets ...


 How does one get into day trading with really no bankroll?
i have always followed stocks since a young teenager as a hobby; never really got into trading. but now as a young adult, there are just times when i know a stock is going to move (i.e. official ...


 I have $10,000 dollars to invest what would be a good stock or stock's to invest in?
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 Stock Trading Help?
Hi,
I am 16 years old and have a huge interest in the stock market. I wanted to get involved within it and make some succesful trades. How would I go about it?
Thanks,...


 $7K to invest. What would a good long term dividend yielding portfolio look like?
I plan on holding it forever with dividend reinvestment (whenver possible) until such time as I can retire (in about 25 years).

Any suggestions?

As an aside, how much diversity ...


 How often wal-mart check stock or inventory? If big stuffs were missing ...they will know who took them??
How many big items they usually carry in store?...


 What should I do with my 401K when I leave my employer?
I am 40 years old and leaving my current employer. I do not have a 401K where I am going. What should I do with the money? Its around 10K....


 What Should I Do With My Money For 2009?
I'm 19 years old, I have at 6,000 saved in a money market.
Should I buy stocks? (I have Ideas)
I have an opportunity to buy a house. Should I buy property?
Any suggestions to ...


 Which is the best bank to invest money into on a savings account?

Additional Details
In England....



Ivar
How will the falling value of the dollar affect you?
With the US government debt and liabilities out of control, is it conceivable that the dollar could collapse.
                     
 




4XTrader
Rating
Obviously the majority of posters have no clue what they're talking about. Yes, the dollar has been lower than it currently is, but when has the U.S. been so in debt before? And when they say $9 trillion in debt, that only current federal debt. Including longer term debt and unfunded liabilities, total government debt (federal, state, local, etc.), corporate and private, is around $44 trillion.

And where is the poster that said the domestic economy is strong getting his data from? The housing market is falling apart, GDP is contracting, ISM manufacturing data is contracting, the dollar is in free fall (the GBP is almost at 2:1 against the USD). The economy is beginning to come apart. If you take into consideration that 70% of GDP is consumer spending and with the housing market coming apart (Americans have been using their home equity as ATM's to the tune of some $3 trillion in equity withdrawals over the past few years) if their source of funds to buy things is drying up, where is the money going to come from to fund their spending - which is 70% of GDP. Americans import the majority of products they consume. So, a weaker dollar means higher import prices. China has $1 trillion in forex reserves of which $700 billion is USD and China is looking to diversify out of dollars. As a matter of fact many of the Asian countries are looking to diversify out of dollars. The US Dollar Index is at 82.42. The last time it was below 83 was 15 years ago. The 80 level is the demarcation line between an "orderly withdrawal out of dollars" and "a mad panicked rush to the exits to get out before its too late". Currency analysts are seeing continued weakness in the dollar. The lowest the dollar has ever been is 78.33, anything below that and we're in uncharted territory. When (not if) the dollar collapses and all those countries holding dollars start wholesale dumping them, all those dollars are going to flood back onto U.S. shores and that my friend is inflationary. If Bernanke is the hawk he claims, he'll have to raise rates which will put additional pressure on the housing market. And just and FYI, the real estate market is was accounted for 40% of the jobs created in the last 5 years.

Anyone that says a dollar collapse isn't important is clueless. The last time the world's reserve currency changed, there was a depression and a major war. Do you think for 1 second that a dollar collapse is going to go by without any problems?

What the other posters have failed to realize is this; the U.S. needs to borrow $2.4 billions PER DAY in order to function. With foreign companies importing so much to the U.S., all those dollars they get, they purchase U.S. treasuries. A collapse in the dollar would cause all dollar denominated assets to follow suit. Which means, U.S. treasuries would be sold off, that in turn would 1) drive interest rates through the roof (interest rates move inversely to bond prices) and 2) with no one buying U.S. treasuries any more, the government would lack the funds to operates. And just an FYI, Japan holds approx. $750 billion in U.S. treasuries and $650 billion in Dollar reserves. China has $700 billion in dollar reserves and about $300 billion in U.S. treasures. If the dollar collapses, can you imagine the financial tidal wave if China and Japan sold in excess of $2 trillion in dollars and treasuries to cut their losses? That would collapse the U.S. economy.

No, it is not conceivable that the dollar will collapse - it is inevitable. I'm a U.S. citizen and I love my country, but I am also a realist and no person, company or country can keep borrowing and borrowing and borrowing without ultimately having to face a day of financial reckoning. What happen if you made $100k a year and each year, your debt level grew every year? There would come a time when your debt service payments would exceed your income - that's called bankruptcy. The U.S. has passed the point of no return. An economic collapse that's going to make the Great depression seem mild in comparison is coming upon us. If we had reacted back then, we could have possibly averted it, but our leaders did not. Now, we will have to reap the consequences of what we have sown and it's going to be very ugly and painful.


Tony B
Rating
from England - I will look to source more goods and services from the US


s2scrm
Rating
Me personally? We live paycheck to paycheck. We have no debt and no investments, so we'll simply change over to whatever currency replaces the dollar and things won't change substantially for us.

Those with abstract investments such as bonds and other portfolio paper not secured by things of intrinsic value may find themselves "holding" the proverbial "bag".

Those with mucho debt will find themselves paying with whatever currency replaces the greenback. Whatever replaces the greenback, the PTBs will find some way to work it to their advantage so these are the net losers in the scenario.

Those with investments of intrinsic value such as silver, gold, real estate, etc. will lose nothing. NOTE: If you invest in precious metals, you'd better be holding a warehouse reciept, or it ain't gonna be worth squat in an economic collapse.

Landlords and backers of mortgage debt may have a difficult time squeezing "blood out of a turnip" as numerous former "government employees" are forced to earn their living in a competitive capitalist economy where everybody already in the market has an edge, having a longstanding presence and the experience that goes along with it.

Everyone still reading this probably understands that it isn't a question of IF it happens, but WHEN.
.


gregory_dittman
Rating
It makes my foreign ETFs go up up and away.


hgary06
dollar collapse??!! it just means U.S. stuff is cheaper than foreign stuff.


fergy_1967
Rating
From Canada: It will be cheaper to import goods from the US. The falling US $ will be a good thing for all concerned. Will it collapse? I doubt it. The US $ has been worth much less that it is now. The US market is a strong one. Once George W. decides to end the war in Iraq, the US debt will stop spiralling out-of control.


lax4life0022
Rating
when i go to germany this summer on an exchange, everything will twice as expersive which means i will have to save ALOT of money for the trip


Sanmigsean
Rating
Yes it's conceivable that it will collapse. It shouldn't effect Americans living in the US too much because the domestic market is so strong. It would only effect people travelling abroad and companies engaging in International business.

For me personally it would be great because my salary is based in Euros!


Kitty
Not affecting me.... I have plenty to fall back on and I am a low maintenance kind a gal. I will make it through anything!


Frank Castle
Rating
No.

The United States of America could sell Alaska back to Russia and Arizona back to Mexico.


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