Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Beginner Stock Market Investing-How To Make A Fortune With Your Investments

By: Josh Neumann

So what is the best beginner stock market investing strategy for investing your money? In order to really make money from the market, you need to do several things. First of all, you need to decide which investing strategy you want to adhere to.

There are basically two schools of thought in stock market investing today. The first is technical analysis; the second is value investing. Technical analysis involves studying the stock charts of a company, identifying patterns, and making investment decisions accordingly.

For instance, you might look at a company and see that it's stock price been going up for the last two weeks. Instead of looking at how profitable the company really is, and whether or not there is any substance behind the rising stock prices, you simply buy because you want to ride it out until it peaks.

The hard part is to determine when a stock price has peaked out, and the best time to sell. Many investors do make some good money with this method. However, the potential gains are slim compared to the risk of losing.

It is very difficult to determine when a stock will go up or down, especially short term. Also, if you do manage to swing a profit, the money you spend from all the transactions very often can eat the entire profit you've made.

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Tuesday, July 24, 2007

What Is A Good Stock Investor Newsletter

By: Mark Crisp

Things to look for and Things to stay away from:

Newsletter always go forth with the same concept in mind, giving people the information that they need to make advised opinions with the knowledge they are given. News articles need to reach audiences of all ages while keeping with the topic.

In a recent study where people were surveyed about what makes a newsletter good, the majority said that it is the quality of information in the newsletter. It is imperative that the content be fresh and it is vital to keep the information in sync with the main concept of the newsletter.

What makes a stock investors newsletter good?

For starts you would want to make sure that the content is right for all levels of investors. For new investors you would want to have articles geared towards how and where you should invest as well as tips on finding the best stocks and strategies for investing.

To cover intermediate investors you will want to have detailed information on market projections and the activity of the stocks.

The experienced or advanced investors would like to see such things as a RSS feed or even a ticker that updated hourly. You could also make available articles that cover things like market temperament and trading strategies.

With all of the above combined, you should keep the goal the same which would be driving visual and element elegance. You need to make the news letter appealing both visually and intellectually to investors. With all of the above things accomplished you can be sure that the subscribers that you have, will keep coming back for more. That is the best way to make your newsletter the best it can be.

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Thursday, July 19, 2007

Stock Market Advice From Chicken Little

By: Gary Wollin

One day, while Chicken Little was walking in the woods, an acorn fell and hit him on his head.

"Goodness gracious me!" said Chicken Little, "The sky is falling, the sky is falling. I must go warn everyone."

We see this all the time. The stock market goes straight up for eight or nine months, and if there are 2 or 3 down days in a row, there is hand-wringing and the moaning all over the place.

Who are these people that panic at the first sign of a downturn or with the slightest bit of profit taking?

The first group are people who get in the near the top and are now worried that their small losses will turn into big losses. Also, people who haven't invested in the stock market are in this same box. For many, many years they were wrong to not have invested, but now that the market has declined very slightly for a few days they would like the point out how smart they are and how dumb everyone else is.

Short sellers are the next group. Short selling is selling a security that the seller does not own but is committed to repurchasing eventually. It is used to take advantage of an expected decline in the security's price.

The press comes next. You have heard this before: "bad news sells newspapers."

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Wednesday, July 11, 2007

The Master Trader

By: Reynaldo Soriano Jr.

I have always compared trading to martial arts because they are psychologically the same. Like martial arts, there are different levels of trading.

At the entry level, a trader is similar to a martial arts white belt, and has just started searching for the right trading system. The belief of beginners is that after they go to a seminar or read a trading book for the first time, they will soon make lots of money. They are convinced that trading will make them millionaires in a short period of time. Most of them would also like to leave their jobs as soon as possible.

The second level of traders is the blue belt level. This type of trader is learning that trading can be easy or tough. When challenged, they will either persist and keep going to more seminars, looking for the "holy grail," or they will give up and play the victim, saying that trading is "risky." I call this the break-out stage. They either remain or leave.

The third level of traders is the black belt level. These traders start to realize that psychology plays a big role in trading. They also start to learn more about themselves. They begin to perfect their trading skills systematically and psychologically.

The fourth level of traders is the master level--the highest level of trading. When they trade, they are at one with the market physically, psychologically, and spiritually. They feel the market and they have no fear. They control their emotions when challenged and they take full responsibility of their own actions. In ancient Japanese, this is called Mushin.

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Tuesday, July 3, 2007

How You Can Make Ten Times Your Salary- With Day Trading

By: Joseph Plazo

Day trading - no, it's not something that Bill Murray wished he had in Groundhog Day. It's a style of trading on the foreign currency exchange market in which a trader completes all his trades within a single day. In other words, he may make a few dozen - or more - trades in a day with the objective of buying and selling quickly and making a profit from the fluctuations in a currency exchange rate over the course of the day.

Sound complicated? Depending on the method or system that you use to pick your trades it can be. The idea behind day trading is that currency exchange rates are subject to fluctuations over the course of the day - they go up and down depending on who's buying, who's selling and what rumors are floating around. In fact, day trading in the foreign currency market is probably the single segment of any type of stocks, currency or futures trading market most affected by rumors and real-time, real-world happenings. A savvy trader who is quick on his feet can roll up the profits by paying attention to what the current news is doing to the currency exchange rates.

The currency market, commonly referred to as the forex (short for Foreign Exchange), is the most liquid market in the world. The latest statistics say that daily trading on forex is in excess of $1.3 trillion U.S. dollars. That makes forex the world's largest, most efficient market. A major part of the reason for the liquidity and volume of trade is the practice of day trading. The difference between day trading and other types of trading is in how long you hold your stocks (or in this case, your currency). In day trading, you hold nothing beyond the close of the day's market. Think of it as a game in which the object is to keep trading cards back and forth, increasing the value of your cards - but have no cards in your hand at the end of the day.

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