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Iron Sheik | If I am investing $800-$1000 per month in the stock market what should I be buying? |
I have been buying ETF's and a couple single stocks. |
|


Ron Berue
|
You should be buying those stocks which meet your trading rules for your trading style.
After doing your research and the stock passes your trading criteria for that strategy and trading style, you should buy those stocks.
The stocks I consider buying MUST trade - on a consistent bases - AT LEAST 500,000 shares and more per day.
Personally, I WON'T buy stocks which have a price less than $26.51 per share.
Personally, I WON'T buy any stocks which have a price between $45 to $56.51. Stocks in this range have a tendency to get stuck or be in the doldrums.
Personally, I WON'T buy storks which have a price between $73.51 to $76.51 per share.
I have other trading rules.
Thanks for asking your Q! I enjoyed answering it!
VTY,
Ron Berue
Yes, that is my real last name! |
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rmlowrie
|
At the present time, if it were my money, I wouldn't be buying anything until the Markets show significant upswing, meaning rallies from previous closes, of at least 1.5% or more on higher than normal volume. For the present, I would be mostly in cash, to minimize my downturn exposure. Knowing that 3 out of 4 stocks will follow their market's index(es), I want to wait until I know that a rally is fully on. This may not be your favorite answer, but following the information will allow you to survive to trade another day. |
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Mary Ann V
 |
Your first option should be to fund fully a retirement account. This is always a good investment regardless of who you are.
If you have done this, or you wish to wait on the retirement fund, then one of the best things you can do is open a DRIP Plan.
They are seldom talked about because brokers make very little money when they suggest them. Yet, they have proven to be one of the best, if not the best, long-term strategy on Wall Street.
The best part is you get solid annual returns from well-known, safe Blue Chip companies like: McDonalds, General Electric, Pfizer, Walmart, US Bancorp.......etc........
They are inexpensive to start and maintain, and your dividends are reinvested for free.
They are perfect for small investors, as well as big investors. They are safe and allow you to not care about whether the market is going up or down.
It is good that you have been putting your money into ETF's instead of mutual funds. ETF's management fees are much less expensive on average than mutual funds, and they are basically the same thing. |
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Tony D
 |
If the money is for the longer-term,you should stick with what you're doing- ETFs,a few select stocks,and perhaps some mutual funds.The key thing is to diversify-spread out your money between various sectors-it's a sounder strategy. I've seen people with dozens of positions but they're all in the same sector-such as US techs-but no international stocks,no exposure to commodities,etc. Putting all your eggs in one basket is a sure to lose money.
www.investinganswers.citymaker.com |
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Knox
 |
Stay away from mutual funds. About 75% of them under perform the stock market. All of them have management fees, and some have sales loads.
You really need to know what you are doing if you are going to invest in mutual funds.
ETF's are the same thing with lower fees.
DRIP Plans are even lower than ETF's and you get to choose from the top International Corporations in the world.
Look at all suggestions closely and make an informed decision.
Best of Luck to you |
|

mike h
 |
BAC
or Bank, of America |
|

bgrace12
|
Hi,
Ask your question on other sites, as well. Specifically those designed for investment questions. Try www.moneyrec.com - free, post your assets, ask your questions and users and pros give advice.
Good Luck
Grace |
|

?
 |
You haven't provided enough information about your investment objectives.
Is the money you're investing for retirement, money for a house down payment, cash for the kids college fund?
What?
If you won't be needing your money for a while -- read that 10-20 years -- and you don't want to do a lot of work, put your money into broad market index funds.
Personally, ETFs are nonsensical. As John Bogle says, why on Earth would you want to trade index funds? That defeats the purpose of passive investing. |
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mrrosema
|
save up enough to buy B shares of Berkshire Hathaway |
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Ted
 |
Just buy the whole market. The ultimate EFT is SPY. |
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MR MONEY
|
Depends on your ability to accept risk.
I prefer using mutual funds in a diversified portfolio. You are creating a large number of transactions (every month). ETFs and stocks charge fees per trade. If you buy mutual funds, you will not pay a fee every time you put in new money.
The funds that I trust the most are American Funds, Franklin Templeton, Oppenheimer, or JP Morgan.
Good Luck! |
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