
muncie birder
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Check out your library and see if they subscribe to Value Line, Barrons, Forbes, Moringstar, and Wall Street Journal. Visit the internet site Fool.com. |
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esskay33
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For speculative investing that actually has some merit to it try Investors Business Daily (AKA IBD). I do not use this publication (it is too speculative for my taste), but have worked in the trading industry for a while and IBD is the best I have seen. Hope this helps! |
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slavaret2
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http://www.tradingzoom.com/ |
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trancevanbuuren
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LOL, your going to let someone else you havn't even met tell you where to invest? They don't know your risk tolerance, your purpose, or who you are. You're likely to get burned.
My advice, learn how to pick stocks by yourself, or just go with a mutual fund, index fund, or ETFs. With these, you don't have to worry about picking individual stocks. |
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JS
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My favourite one, and its free, is the daily reckoning. (I don't follow their advice enough). |
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pvs
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visit this site http://www.panguvarthagam.com/OPTREC2007.HTML or contact (india)09884693411 09841270458 (after 4.00 p.m) for investment purpose . we provide stock investment ideas based on fundamental and technical ideas |
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Former Banker
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It costs a little money, but try Barron's. It is a great source of information. |
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Valuefrog
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I've been investing for a long time, and on a daily basis I read these sites/magazines:
Businessweek
Forbes Magazine
Barrons.com. This magazine costs money and is issued on a weekly basis.
Moneycentral.msn.com (free)
Smartmoney
nytimes.com/business (free)
Of the sources I mentioned, Barrons is for the more advanced investor. I don't know what your background is, but I would recommend picking up Businessweek, scanning the New York Times business section, and visiting the Moneycentral site as a start. |
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