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 What is stock market?
...


 My wife and I make $160K per year. What is the best way invest, pay taxes, and or how do we ensure tax refund
My wife and I make $160K per year. We need find the best way to contribute the maximum amount to IRA's and still come out with a refund annual. We are looking for ideas and or formulas we can ...


 I want to multiply my money to double in a year. I can invest approx. Rs.1 lac. approx.USD2000. Ideas???
I want my money to grow fast and am running short of a magnificent idea to do that!!! I know an amount of Rs.1lac isn't much but that is what I can invest. I need it to grow at least to double ...


 Do you need to be licensed to give someone investment advice?
People can sell books about investing without being a licensed financial planner. but if i am simply offering advice on a web site and sharing my findings with the public, can i become liable even ...


 What is the best way to invest 30000 euros?
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 Will you believe me when I say there is no 'get-rich-quick' in investing?
Treat growing money like planting a tree, not like launching a rocket. Be careful in what you are told here. Thanks....


 How to invest for the future...?
Okay I'm a 21yr old mother of two and I'm in the army. i will be getting my enlistment bonus piece by piece over the next 5 years. $10,000 each year for 4yrs and $20,000 the 5th year. i don&...


 Buy Long Call and Long Put stock options for a living?
Can you buy and trade Long Call/ Long Put (or Short Call/ Short Put) stock options as a steady income? Without margin? No other strategies?...


 Dividend's?
are dividend's based on the gross dollar amount or the amount of shares? Could someone explain!...


 If you short sell and lose , how do you afford to buy stock back to return? Do you just use your own funds?
to buy the stock to return to the broker?
Additional Details
Assuming you have ...


 What are some good international mutual funds/stocks to get in on right now?
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 I need to open an offshore bank account fast. can anyone recommend me one with lowest opening fees available?
I am in need of opening an offshore account where I can transfer my funds there because I am getting ready to retire. I need to know which bank is best to open an account with offshore and if its ...


 What does a conservative investor look for?
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 Can someone explain to me exactly how stocks and shares work?
For example like what kind of businesses are best to go with? How long to stay with one? How much to put into on your first time etc. Many thanks....


 How much money did you spend today, and on what?
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 Which forex broker would you recommend?
a broker that has very fast transactions like the second you click is the second the transaction is made and one in which money transfer in quick and easy. with some brokers money can simply be ...


 I have purchased 1500 shares of RPL @ 90 few months back. So I want to know what should i do with the stock ?
Should I hold the stock for sometime or buy more inorder to average it....


 What's your favorite investment right now?
...


 How reliable and true are Forex Autorobot Systems? ?
Is there a body that could provide unbiased report on the efficacy of such systems?...


 Help!! I am 30 years old and am about 2 start contributing in my company's 401K but I am lost?
These are the contributions given 2 me what will be my best chooses and and what percentage should I select?

Stabe Asset Return Fund
Intermediate Bond Fund
Balanced Fund
L...



sss_1990
I need stock market advice. Help?
I am 17 years old, almost 18. I am interested in investing in the stock market. My grandpa has taught me a little bit about it. I need more advice...maybe from somebody who recently invested and succeeded or somebody who works in this field.

Things I don't understand:
-How much money I'd need to put in an investment(for example I don't know if I can just put $100 or if it has to be thousands, so please help with that)
-How to buy stock without a broker

I'd like to hear from anyone if they feel they can help me out.

Thanks,
Sam
Additional Details
I am 17 years old, almost 18. I am interested in investing in the stock market. My grandpa has taught me a little bit about it. I need more advice...maybe from somebody who recently invested and succeeded or somebody who works in this field.

Things I don't understand:
-How much money I'd need to put in an investment(for example I don't know if I can just put $100 or if it has to be thousands, so please help with that)
-How to buy stock

I'd like to hear from anyone if they feel they can help me out.

Thanks,
Sam
                     
 




Kiker
For starters, you will need to make purchases through a Brokerage. You can save money by doing it online, rather than in person or over the phone...which is pretty much what everyone does.
I would recommend looking at the various online Brokerages, and open an account with one of them. Don't focus so much on the price of the commission, as there may be strings attached to that rate...which means you need to read up on that.
Now $100 is not a lot, which means you will likely get a lot of people telling you to invest in penny stocks. Funny thing about penny stocks...they are worth pennies, or less in almost all cases, for a reason. I would focus on a brokerage with a Commission rate less than $10. This means if you have $100, you will only be able to buy $90 worth of stock. Then when you sell the stock, they will take out the commission again. So, yes you can invest with $100, but you won't get a lot...which means that you may find yourself focused in bad areas...don't be tempted to fdo that.
I would strongly encourage you to take life by the horns and become actively involved in learning this stuff. You will be amazed at how easy it really is and how quickly you will pick it up. What I did in the beginning was I started watching MadMoney on CNBC. Then I bought some of Cramer's books and learned the ropes. As time went buy I found myself watching CNBC every morning before class, and now before work. I also read other books on Fundamental Analysis and apply what I learned throughout this whole process from what I hear is occurring in real time from CNBC.
Stick with an area that you are already interested in. This was the learning process will be a whole lot smoother. If you like the sports, look into companies like UnderArmor or Nike.
Hope this helps.
Good Luck.


Common Sense
Read as much as you can. Start with;
Mastering the Trade by John Carter
The Disciplined Trader by Mark Douglas

These two books will give you a place to start.


water_skipper
To start out small, get a DRIP. That way you DON'T need a broker to buy some stock.


AK
Rating
If you don't have much money to invest, I would say buy DRIP instead. DRIP is a dividend reinvestment plan to buy stock without brokers. The advantage is that you can build a portfolio of stocks with low or no commission fees and you don't need a lot of money to start.

There are big companies like Coca-cola, Procter & Gamble which offer DRIP investing. You can simply sign up and just buy 1 share from these companies directly.

The below site offers more information on how DRIP works.
http://dripinvesting.org/


Andy
Rating
I suggest you continue saving money and in the meantime open a "practice" account at money.cnn.com. Then go to moneycentral.msn.com and select "top stocks." There's 144 (today) to choose from. Put a few in your practice account and see what happens. Read about them. Compare them to the index they are part of. Monitor their performance. After you've done this for six months or so, then consider opening an online discount brokerage account and trying it for real. But be careful and remember, it's not just the data, it's your emotions too. Guard against making emotional decisions (not easy, when your money is at stake). Good luck.


RWLake
First, you are very wise to start investing early in life, and also during a down turn in the economy. A key issue at your age is don't be to concerned about where the market is today, tomorrow, or for the next many years. The great thing you have is time. In regards to investing, for the average person I wouldn't recommend tying up your assets in single stocks. If they do well, that's great. But during down times all of your assets are headed in a nefgative direction. Look more to mutual funds that spread (Diverse) your dollars. Much safer route to take. I believe if you want to open an IRA you may need a minimum of $250. Not positive but easy info to receive. Also many investment firms (Fidelity, Vanguard, etc) have IRAs that target specific retirement dates. For instance, if a person plans to retire in 40 yrs, they have funds that invest more aggressively for that type of portfolio. It takes any guessing on your part out of the equation. Just look for Non-loaded funds (No up front fees). Good luck.


voluntarheel
You can't buy stocks without a broker. But you can use an online discount broker - that's what most regular people do. Schwab, TDAmeritrade, Scottrade, Zecco and many others are out there.

Look at their fees closely. For instance I use TDAmeritrade and they charge $10/trade. That's $10 to buy and $10 to sell. BUT , if you buy mutual funds or index funds its $50/trade - OUCH! So I buy index etfs and stocks from them only.

If you like funds, then I suggest index funds cause they have low expense ratios and beat mutual funds over time. You can buy them directly from the company that issues them - Vanguard and Fidelity are two good companies for this.

But it sounds like you still have a lot of learning to do. I recommend you continue to stay out of debt and save your money until you get better educated on the stock market. Try going to your library and checking out Personal Fiannce for Dummies, Investing for Dummies, and books by Suze Orman and Jane Bryant Quinn. You really need to know what you are getting into - all the risk and reward. You can get professional help, but they are going to charge you and frankly they can't tell you anything you can't learn from books anyway.


Rain L
Sam, you always would need a broker... The stock brokerage firm I would recommend that is cheap is Scot trade. Their pretty cheap per trade and they allow you to open an account with as lettle as 400 bucks I think...

http://scottrade.com/

Before, investing you should read books from peter lynch or Warren Buffet books. It would give you an idea which stock would be a good buy... When it comes to investing can't just get a person's view you have to do your own research... Well good luck and take your time learning about investing... Risky stuff so research first....


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