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 What's a good investment with someone who has very small funds?
If someone were to have only about $1000-$5000 but was interested in investing it, what would you recommend?

Preferably something very safe, even if growth potential is low. Or, if ...


 Do you think the economy is as bad off as the stock market indicates?
We are seeing huge drops in the prices of stocks, perhaps at levels similar to the 1929 crash. Do you think the economy is that bad off?...


 Ideas for Investing i this economy?
My fiance is in the Marines. He is in Iraq right now. While he is over there he isnt spending any money at all and it is all just adding up in his bank account. I was wondering in the current ...


 I want to invest in some stocks but dont know where to start can anyone help??
i am 19 and i would like to start investesting in stocks but i dont know anything about stocks and dont have a clue where to start can anyone give me some good info? THANKS...


 Why do day traders suggest trade on Margin?
...


 Long term bullish or bearish?
I'm a technical guy, and this is what I see on the S&P:

Downtrend channel from October 2007 broke in April (intermediate move). Then, classic aggressive return move to the ...


 Can a boxer also become a hedge fund manager?
...


 In which website i can find the 52 weeks low/high shareprices daily?
...


 How is monthly interest computed?
I have a Online Savings account that I usually put money into on the last day of the month. The monthly interest rate in 4.65%. It really seems like I haven't gotten the interest I deserve.
...


 Why most of the stock brokers are men?
...


 What is hedgefund?
...


 What should I invest $6000 this Monday?....looking for a short term investment.?
is there any suggestions for an investment preferably with a 4-6 week turn around.., and what do you think the gain % would be?.....


 Should Jim Cramer be thrown in jail?
His picks stink....


 India looks like it is about to boom. Can i invest in India, and if yes then what should I invest in?
...


 I want to invest some money for my old age. what are the safest optiions?
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 Anybody here double his/her investment within a year?
In what kind of venues/commodities did you invest in?...


 What stock would anyone buy right NOW?
Or anything of that matter.......


 I Know Nothing about STOCKS!?
I want to invest a SMALL amount of money. (like $10 - $50) in a company, just for fun. How does this work?

How to buy?
How to track?
How to sell?

By the way, I am POOR,...


 How far does the stock market have to fall?
how far does the stock market have to fall before we go into depression. The dow has already fallen further then it did in 1929. so how far is far?...


 Do you think now is a good time to buy stock from GM or do you think they will go bankrupt?
...



trivmtran
Why are mergers and acquisition becoming so prevalent in today's market?

Additional Details
People seem to be responding with the answer that M&A are steady? This seems to be erroneous considering the shear amount that are occuring today and the fact that private equities seems to be buying out much larger companies. I understood it better when this ramp up was happening in 2000, but recently with news that the economy is slowing down, I don't quite understand the reason why. Shouldn't companies be a lot more cautious now? What's the motivating factor?
                     
 




Rabbit
Rating
My first response is that there have always been cycles of M&A activity. I remember some prominant 'raiders' like Pickens and Icahn used to scare companies silly. I worked at one, Phillips Petroleum, for a while. When Pickens was supposedly trying to do a leveraged buyout (borrowing money on the value of the stock he was buying in order to buy it), the company started looking for a 'white knight' someone they would rather sell to that would be more gentle with them (some marriages are built like that). Then they decided to buy back enough of the company's stock so that an outside couldn't get the controlling interest. That made the folks in Bartlesville, Oklahoma happy, because then there would always be a Phillips, presumeably always in that town (especially after they pulled all those strings to stop Cities Service, Citgo today, from building their big office of several decades ago in Bartlesville). Then Phillips merged with Conoco, a Dow (or was it DuPont, I forget) cast off (a previous merger to escape a raider). Then the center of power shifted out of Bartlesville and the locals realized how stupid they were to let the one company rule that roost.

Today, the big companies require an enormous amount of capital, so private corporations are funded for the purpose of taking under utilized and under managed companies out of the public scrutiny. They give the companies a break from stockholder pressures which are more concerned with dividends and stock price appreciation than how well the company does the business it is in business for doing. Without the public pressure-cooker, the private companies let their new acquisition grow for a time--then spin them off when they are then much more valuable.

The raiders would have sold off pieces, stripping the synergistic values when they perceived that the sum of the parts is more valuable than the whole. Today's private equities are more likely to turn an old draft horse, plodding along with a wagon, into a race horse. The transition is a lot of work, but the result is a lot more valuable and the value didn't have to come from killing the horse.


www.scapegoatz.com
because the companies have money. The economy has been very good for a few years. The companies have a ton of captal and are will to spend.


Edie
As so many have said before me, "becoming?". We have boards of directors who care nothing about the companies they oversee. They are out to raid the liquid assets of any company they can get their hands on. Anything with a pension fund or whatever that can be liquidated and turned into a golden parachute suits them. They could care less if the business fails after they raid the pantry.


B
Rating
When a business is "cash rich" they need to put their money into something that defers taxes and nets them additional profit.


Janet P
When weren't they? They are part of how our ecomony operates and have been going on longer then I can recall.


SMEAC
Because in stock investing , the road to success is paved with the bones of bodies of others, watch the movie "other peoples money" for stock investing info try the link http://stock-investing-info.com/


Aman J Singh
They have always been there but these days you know more because of the media and now we have more small scale industries trying to make it big and hence acquisitions occur.


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