Archive for the ‘Trading’ Category

Investment Ideas for Small Investors

Wednesday, September 5th, 2007

You don’t have to be made of money to be an investor. There are many investments ideas for small investors that you probably aren’t aware of. And these investments can be a lot closer and simpler than you think.

One investment idea for small investors is stocks. Now this may come as a surprise since most people think you need to have scads of money to get involved with the stock market.

Many stocks, however, do not cost an arm and leg to buy. They can be quite affordable and you can start with a few shares and work up to larger investments.

Shares in start up companies in a hot industry are one example of a good investment idea for small investors. A few shares of a blue chip stock is another.

Just be sure to do some research first and be willing to hang on to your stock through ups and downs, as stocks tend to be more profitable in the long term and will definitely see some ups and downs.

Government bonds and securities are other investment options for small investors.

Many government bonds can be bought at a low to moderate price, and they will give an investor the advantage of interest payments.

These interest payments can be used for another investment idea. In fact, the interest payments on government bonds and shares can make it possible to diversify investments for small investors.

Investment ideas for small investors can be in more tangible types of items as well. Items such as coins, cars and collectibles are often a good place for small investors to begin.

These types of investments often make an investor feel more secure than when they’re dealing with what is often referred to as “paper “ money. They like being able to keep their investments close to them.

The advantage this can have is that if a coin or collectible has a sudden spike in value it can be easily gotten to and sold for a profit. And, after all, the best investment idea for small investors is the one they feel the most secure and comfortable making.

Read more free investment tips, tutorials & reviews at http://www.Global-Investment-Institute.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Mika_Hamilton
http://EzineArticles.com/?Investment-Ideas-for-Small-Investors&id=79725

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The subprime mortgage situation

Tuesday, August 28th, 2007

The subprime mortgage situation is hitting the credit market in the US and the house mortgage loans are once again in focus where the credit squeeze might go towards a credit crunch. If we going towards a credit crunch there will be signs that mortgages rated as Alt A loans is starting to get hit.

At this stage there are no signs that the credit squeeze is going towards a credit crunch and hit the private consumption and global growth. Interesting though is that problems in the subprime mortgage loan market in the US expect to be hitting the loaning market world wide and for now stockmarkets in “old Europe” is taking a hit and been coming off more than 10% in the last month though Asia, where the real growth is today not been taking much on the downside. Though the depending on the US market is declining the fear is spreading all over the world but the impact of US insecurity is day by day decreasing when country by country is less depending on the US consumers. Japan as an example have the last 5-6 years decreased there total depending on the US market by 25 %.


To understand the impact on what is going on at this stage there might be a good idea to try to find out the worse case scenario on the
US mortgage situation. When it comes to high risk loans in the US market there is four types of high risk loans, subprime, Alt – A, Jumbo IO and option ARM which together stands for around ¼ of the total house mortgage stock in the US. What shakes the market at this point is the insecurity how far this can go, what is going on now is revaluation of risk and this might in the end hit the spreads between company bonds and government bonds. At this stage the spreads in the private sector is getting wider and if that also hit company loans that will hit the cost for company investments world wide. Besides the fear of increasing spreads on loans the stockmarket speculating that the growth coming from US consumers will be taking a hit when the house mortgage sector having problems.

The FED is though very aware of the risks and will be watching very close what will occur regarding the mortgage situation. FED has to provide the market with liquidity and act powerful to avoid the US going into a recession. At this stage FED is waiting for the growth of employments to ease off to take the step to cut interests. This might though be a view that FED will change if the mortgage situation is getting really bad.

In the longer run the level of interest in a number of countries seems to peak on historically low levels will be something that might help the global growth in near future. The US and Great Britain is as an example where the probability of pushing the interest any further is out of the question regarding the risks of growth and inflation.

The impact on the overall expectations on low interest levels in the global economy might at this stage as well be underestimated by the market and help both easing off the mortgage problems we have at this stage and keep the growth on a descent level as it did in the mid ninety when the stockmarket holding up nicely though the interest was peaking.

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The Realities Of Market Timing

Thursday, August 9th, 2007

Market timing systems are based on patterns of activity in the past. Every system that you are likely to hear about works well when it is applied to historical data. If it didn’t work historically, you would never hear about it. But patterns change, and the future is always the great unknown.

A system developed for the market patterns of the 1970s, which included a major bear market that lasted two years, would have saved investors from a big decline. But that wasn’t what you needed in the 1980s, which were characterized by a long bull market. And a system developed to be ideal in the 1980s would not have done well if it was back-tested in the 1970s. So far in the 1990s, any defensive strategy at all has been more likely to hurt investors than help them.

If your emotional security depends on understanding what’s happening with your investments at any given time, market timing will be tough. The performance and direction of market timing will often defy your best efforts to understand them. And they’ll defy common sense. Without timing, the movements of the market may seem possible to understand. Every day, innumerable explanations of every blip are published and broadcast on television, radio, in magazines and newspapers and on the Internet. Economic and market trends often persist, and thus they seem at least slightly rational. But all that changes when you begin timing your investments.

Unless you developed your timing models yourself and you understand them intimately, or unless you are the one crunching the numbers every day, you won’t know how those systems actually work. You’ll be asking yourself to buy and sell on faith. And the cause of your short-term results may remain a mystery, because timing performance depends on how your models interact with the patterns of the market. Your results from year to year, quarter to quarter and month to month may seem random.

Most of us are in the habit of thinking that whatever has just happened will continue happening. But with market timing, that just isn’t so. Performance in the immediate future will not be influenced a bit by that of the immediate past. That means you will never know what to expect next. To put yourself through a *timing simulator* on this point, imagine you know all the monthly returns of a particular strategy over a 20-year period in which the strategy was successful.

Many of those monthly returns, of course, will be positive, and a significant number will represent losses. Now imagine that you write each return on a card, put all the cards in a hat and start drawing the cards at random. And imagine that you start with a pile of poker chips. Whenever you draw a positive return, you receive more chips. But when your return is negative, you have to give up some of your chips to *the bank* in this game. If the first half-dozen cards you draw are all positive, you’ll feel pretty confident. And you’ll expect the good times to continue. But if you suddenly draw a card representing a loss, your euphoria could vanish quickly.

And if the very first card you draw is a significant loss and you have to give up some of your chips, you’ll probably start wondering how much you really want to play this game. And even though your brain knows that the drawing is all random, if you draw two negative cards in a row and see your pile of chips disappearing, you may start to feel as if you’re on *a negative roll* and you may start to believe that the next quarter will be like the last one. Yet the next card you draw won’t be predictable at all. It’s easy to see all this when you’re just playing a game with poker chips. But it’s harder in real life.

For example, in the fourth quarter of 2002, our Nasdaq portfolio strategy, with an objective to outperform the Nasdaq 100 Index, produced a return of 5.9 percent, very satisfactory for a portfolio invested in technology funds only. But that was followed by a loss of 7.8 percent in the first quarter of 2003. Most investors in this strategy, at least those we know of, stuck with it. But they experienced significant anxiety at the loss and the shock of a sharp reversal in what they had thought was a positive trend. The same phenomenon happened, with more dramatic numbers, in our more aggressive strategies.

Some investors entered those portfolios in the winter of 2002, and then were shocked to experience big first-quarter losses so quickly after they had invested. Some, believing the losses were more likely to continue than to reverse, bailed out. Had they been willing to endure a little longer, they would have experienced double-digit gains during the remainder of 2003 that would have restored and exceeded all of their losses. But of course there was no way to know that in advance.

Most timers won’t tell you this, but all market timing systems are *optimized* to fit the past. That means they are based on data that is carefully selected to *work* at getting in and out of the market at the right times. Think of it through this analogy. Imagine we were trying to put together an enhanced version of the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, based on the past 30 years. Based on hindsight, we could probably significantly improve the performance of the index with only a few simple changes.

For instance, we could conveniently *remove* the worst-performing industry of stocks from the index along with any companies that went bankrupt in the past 30 years. That would remove a good chunk of the *garbage* that dragged down performance in the past. And to add a dose of positive return, we could triple the weightings in the new index of a few selected stocks; say Microsoft, Intel and Dell. We’d get a new *index* that in the past would have produced significantly better returns than the real S&P 500. We might believe we have discovered something valuable. But it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that this strategy has little chance of producing superior performance over the next 30 years.

This simple example makes it easy to see how you can tinker with past data to produce a *system* that looks good on paper. This practice, called *data-mining,* involves using the benefit of hindsight to study historical data and extract bits and pieces of information that conveniently fit into some philosophy or some notion of reality. Academic researchers would be quick to tell you that any conclusions you draw from data-mining are invalid and unreliable guides to the future. But every market timing system is based on some form of data-mining, or to use another term, some level of *optimization.* The only way you can devise a timing model is to figure out what would have worked in some past period, then apply your findings to other periods.

Necessarily, every market timing model is based on optimization. The problem is that some systems, like the enhanced S&P 500 example, are over-optimized to the point that they toss out the *garbage of the past* in a way that is unlikely to be reliable in the future. For instance, we recently looked at a system that had a few *rules* for when to issue a buy signal, and then added a filter saying such a buy could be issued only during four specific months each year. That system looks wonderful on paper because it throws out the unproductive buys in the past from the other eight calendar months. There’s no ironclad rule for determining which systems are robust, or appropriately optimized, and which are over-optimized. But in general terms, look for simpler systems instead of more complex ones.

A simpler system is less likely than a very complex one to produce extraordinary hypothetical returns. But the simpler system is more likely to behave as you would expect.

To be a successful investor, you need a long-term perspective and the ability to ignore short-term movements as essentially *noise.* This may be relatively easy for buy-and-hold investors. But market timing will draw you into the process and require you to focus on the short term. You’ll not only have to track short-term movements, you’ll have to act on them. And then you’ll have to immediately ignore them. Sometimes that’s not easy, believe me. In real life, smart people often take a final *gut check* of their feelings before they make any major move. But when you’re following a mechanical strategy, you have to eliminate this common-sense step and simply take action. This can be tough to do.

You will have long periods when you will underperform the market or outperform it. You’ll need to widen your concept of normal, expected activity to include being in the market when it’s going down and out of the market when it’s going up. Sometimes you’ll earn less than money-market-fund rates. And if you use timing to take short positions, sometimes you will lose money when other people are making it. Can you accept that as part of the normal course of events in your investing life? If not, don’t invest in such a strategy.

Even a great timing system may give you bad results. This should be obvious, but market timing adds a layer of complication to investing, another opportunity to be right or wrong. Your timing model may make all the proper calls about the market, but if you apply that timing to a fund that does something other than the market, your results will be better or worse than what you might expect. This is a reason to use funds that correlate well you’re your system.

The bottom line for me is that timing is very challenging. I believe that for most investors, the best route to success is to have somebody else make the actual timing moves for you. You can have it done by a professional. Or you can have a colleague, friend or family member actually make the trades for you. That way your emotions won’t stop you from following the discipline. You’ll be able to go on vacation knowing your system will be followed. Most important, you’ll be one step removed from the emotional hurdles of getting in and out of the market.

About The Author

Robert van Delden has been managing the FundSpectrum Group since 1998, whose objective it is to help individual investors to increase their investment returns using low risk Market Timing strategies.. More details can be found on our membership web site: http://www.fundspectrum.com

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The Role Of Brokers In Online Stock Trade

Sunday, July 29th, 2007

The online stock brokers play a significant role in online stock trade for those who want to invest but do not possess a good amount of amount to play. They are different from the traditional stock brokers in terms of investing and managing money.

Significant Role Of Online Stock Brokers

In the world of financial ups and downs, it has become a difficult task to know the best method of investing your money. Stock exchange has always acted as a platform between the stock traders and the companies in the form of buyers and sellers respectively. The invested money of the investors is always utilized by the company in further expansion of the business to increase profits.

In the traditional method of stock trade, the investors were assisted by the stock brokers in the process of buying and selling of stock and in building the financial portfolio of the investors. But since the discovery of internet, a new easy method of stock trade has come up which is known as online stock trade and it only requires the turning ON of your computer. The online stock brokers play a significant role in the market of finance by helping the online traders to hit their financial goals.

There are numerous online stock brokers in the stock market but the most commonly used ones are Ameritrade, ETrade Financial, Fidelity, and Schwab. These stock brokers work in a very systematic way as they estimate the financial condition of the investor, they execute the financial plan, and assist the investors in investing in the stocks.

Online brokers keep on updating the investors with the updated and latest news and information in terms of stock quotes, performances of each stock, and company’s financial status via online accounts created through online brokers. This information really helps the investors in investing and coming out with the profitable results.

How To Select Online Stock Brokers

The online stock trade has proved to be very much beneficial with the assistance of online stock brokers. But it is in your hands to choose the best stock broker in order to be on the bright side in the world of finances. Therefore, you should consider the following points while choosing your online stock broker.

1 - It is always recommended to begin with a full service broker for the beginners in order to become confident and knowledgeable in the market of finance therefore you should not consider “discount” as the standard requirement if you are a beginner.

2 - You should keep on checking the website performance especially during the peaks hours so that you should be very much familiar with the site in order to clear the confusions else it may lead to mistakes.

3 - You should always opt for the broker who can be accessed by some different modes other than internet. For e.g. via telephone, fax, etc.

4 - It is always suggested to have a proper survey of the finance market in order to get an apt stock broker.

5 - It is recommended to go for the brokerage firms that require a minimum deposit for opening an account. There are many firms that do not possess any minimum deposit at all therefore you can enjoy the liberty of depositing and withdrawing amount according to your wish but the account will remain open.

6 - You should prefer to open an account with the broker offering lowest commission cost.

7 - You can opt for the broker who not only deals in stock market rather offer other financial services like CDs, municipal bonds, mutual funds, gold or silver certificates, etc so that you can withdraw profits from these financial services also.

8 - You should confirm beforehand that the brokerage firm in with which you are going to deal with should possess 24 x 7 hours customer care service in order to assist you every time whenever required by you.

Therefore, anyone can enjoy the thrill of online stock trade but should always begin this business of finance with the assistance of a good brokerage firm in order to be on the profitable side of the stock market.

For more online stocks information please visit http://www.aboutonlinestocks.com - a popular online stocks website that provides tips and online stock resources. Don’t forget to check out our page on online stock brokers.

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High Volatility Investments

Wednesday, July 25th, 2007

Penny stocks and options are high volatility investments that attract both the trader and the long term investor because of the small amount of capital required to make substantial gains as compared with less volatile higher priced stocks. The long term investor buys a stock believing that a company’s value will increase over time and the stock price along with it. When he buys an option it is usually to reduce the risk in owning the underlying stock. The short term trader looks at things a little differently. Typically a trader looks for large percentage price movement over a short period of time. Large percentage, short term price movements can be found both in options and certain penny stocks.

Penny Stocks are often defined as stocks priced below $5. It is often implied, but not necessarily the case, that penny stocks are also micro caps with capitalizations of less than about $250 million. Penny stocks can be found across the full range of capitalizations from micro caps to large cap stocks. For example, Sun Microsystems (NASDAQ: SUNW) met the definition of a penny stock for much of 2004, trading between $4 and $5. In late 2004, trading between $5 and $6 per share, its capitalization was over $18 billion. The price of a large cap $18 billion stock would rarely be expected to move by a large amount over a short period of time. The largest percentage daily price gainers, of say 50% or more are typically stocks that started from $5 or less. But they are typically micro caps.

As a group, micro cap penny stocks are avoided by large funds because prices are too easily affected by sizeable buy and sell orders and capitalizations are too small to affect a large fund’s bottom line. Buying more than 10% of a publicly held company carries with it certain insider responsibilities. Large funds must wait until stock prices rise typically above about $20 before they can become seriously involved without moving the price and still have price movement impact their financial results. The small investor has a distinct advantage over large fund managers when he takes an early position in a good micro cap penny stock.

Short term options are best suited when the underlying stock has a higher price, say above $50. While it is more likely that a micro cap penny stock will gain 50% in a single day than it is for a higher priced stock, the typical 5 or 10 to one leverage that options provide makes it only necessary for a higher priced stock to move 5% to see a 50% gain in the corresponding option price. There are several additional considerations involved in choosing an option. Not the least of these is the market environment. When chosen properly, options for higher priced stocks provide the same large daily price movements of penny stocks. Lower priced stocks need to move by a larger percentage in order to see a similar percentage move in the corresponding option. They are only likely to do so if they are micro cap penny stocks.

James Andrews publishes the Wiser Trader Stocks and Options Newsletter. One can read about choosing penny stocks and options at http://www.wisertrader.com

© 2004 Permission is granted to reproduce this article, as long as, this paragraph is included intact.

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Is Online Trading For You?

Monday, July 23rd, 2007

Online stock trading opens the opportunities for stock market investing to anyone. No longer only limited to guys who hang around the brokerage house, online trading is available anytime, anywhere by computer. With so many brokerages offering online trading access, the costs of trading are within the means of any investor. Since online trading increased the competition among brokerages, the do-it-yourself trader benefits.

The novice trader needs to start by learning the basic terms of the stock market. A quick reference guide gives definitions. A beginner to online trading may be smart to pay slightly more in commissions to get assistance and support from a broker or subscribe to a trading information service. Saving commissions with the no-frills online trading firms is only a better deal after you understand more about trading. The low fee trading firms do not give any advice for buying or selling. Novice traders can lose more as a result of poor decisions than they might spend in commissions for support from a full-service brokerage.

The next step is determining a trading strategy for your online trading. A day trader commits hours daily in online trading. Do you have that much time to focus on trading? Or do you want the convenience of online trading but only plan to buy or sell occasionally? Then you have a long term trading strategy.

Online trading is particularly suitable for people who want instant access to the market and the ability to respond to price fluctuations. Whether day trading or longer term investor, online traders can maintain control over their investments whether in town or traveling. As a fail-safe provision against losing connection with a trading site, some online traders keep accounts with two or three online brokerages. Traders who travel frequently improve their connectivity by investing in broadband wireless access card to get instant internet to their laptop computers.

Online traders need to keep accurate records of online transactions since there is no stockbroker in the background keeping records for you. Those records will also be necessary at income tax time. Reviewing your trading records can also help spot mistakes to avoid or strategies to repeat.

With more experience in online trading, you can compare deals that reduce commissions. Some online trading companies offer a membership fee which entitles the trader to lower fees. Others reduce fees if the trader maintains a minimum deposit on account. Like frequent flyers on airlines, frequent traders are rewarded on some trading sites with free trading days based on trading volume. For the day trader this is worth checking out.

Online trading is convenient, inexpensive and easy to access. It’s a great way for novice investors to get their feet wet in stock trading from the comfort of home. Whether finance major, business owner, retiree or homemaker, online trading is for you!

Get your Momentum Stock Trading System and sign up for my free weekly online trading system newsletter here at: http://www.stressfreetrading.com

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Benefits Of Investing In The Stock Market

Saturday, July 21st, 2007

Investing has become increasingly important over the years, as the future of social security benefits and for other countries, their respective government programs which supports up and coming retiring people. Most, if not all of us, want to insure and take control of our future, and a lot of us know that because of the extra burdens being placed on government or even their retirement plan safety net might not be enough to support them through their non-working years.

Investing is the answer to the unknowns of your financial future.

You may have been saving money in a low interest savings account over the years. Now, you want to see that money grow at a faster pace. Perhaps you have inherited and you need a way to make that money grow or you might even have come across similar articles such as this one from CNN Top 25 Fastest Growing Techs wished that you also could invest in these companies. Not only do you want to own stocks but you want to provide that income to purchase a new home, provide for your children’s college education and other “material things” which we want in life.

If you want or need to make a lot of money fast, you would be more interested in higher risk investing, which will give you a larger return in a shorter amount of time. If you are saving for something in the far off future, such as retirement, you would want to make safer investments that grow over a longer period of time.

The overall purpose in investing is to create wealth and security, over a period of time so as to provide for yourself when you will not be or simply be unable to earn an income.

Favorite blog is http://www.netdollarz.net Containing many work at home,online income,paid survey articles along with off topic articles that interest the author of the blog.

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Trading Systems

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

A trading system consists of a set of rules for viewing markets and making trades. The advantages of trading systems can be hidden when they become associated with trading platforms involving trade order submission and processing. A clarification of their roles can help explain the benefits of using a trading system. This can be done without identifying a particular platform or system. Once the platform infrastructure is isolated, a brief look can be taken at why a trader can benefit from a trading system.

An online trading platform consists of the infrastructure for viewing market prices and making trades. While platforms make use of user provided hardware and the internet itself, platforms consist of software linked to a database while displaying price quotes, enabling order entry and routing orders to an exchange. A platform of software and order routing services is provided by many brokers. It often includes programmable charting software that allows a user to select from an array of formats for price, volume and technical indicators. Links to real time databases are used by day traders while free delayed quotes are quite adequate for position traders who analyze data after the markets close to minimize the emotional stress of changing prices. Platform software saves time and reduces errors by automating repetitive tasks.

Some platform tools have become quite sophisticated, allowing a user to add his personal rules for making trades. Rules tell the software which set of indicators and prices to monitor and the levels at which traded instruments are to be bought and sold. Automated systems trading software are preprogrammed with trading rules enabling them to make trades with minimal user input. These software modules, designed by third party vendors to operate under existing platforms, are based on algorithms that identify price trends and market turning points. Since their accuracy is limited by the presumed market volatility, an algorithm is needed to recognize when market volatility falls outside the envelope for which the software rules were designed. The quality of a set of rules can be estimated from historical back testing on past market prices stored in a database. It is often pointed out that back testing lacks the realism of real time emotional stress and that past performance is not an indicator of future performance. While the latter is valid in all cases, the nature of trading system rules reduces emotional stress to the degree that the rules are consistently followed.

In any case, it is the rules themselves that comprise the trading system. In their purest form, trading systems take the form of a compact set of rules written on paper.

The ability to consistently make error free decisions amid changing prices in an environment of fear and greed is unlikely without the discipline that rules provide. It does little good to have all the price monitoring, charting, order submission and routing infrastructure if one does not have a consistent set of rules for making trades. Most of us find this out the hard way, judging from the statistic that only about 12% of stock traders are successful. For futures traders the number is closer to 5%. It is not just a coincidence that the percentage of traders that rely on a proven trading system is near these same levels. The consistent use of a proven trading system can be most beneficial to traders with all levels of experience.

Seeing the difference between trading systems and platform infrastructure makes the characteristics of a good trading system more obvious. A good trading system explains when trading should not be attempted, thereby, avoiding forced trading under inopportune conditions. It should specify how to independently generate a strong watch list of candidate trades to eliminate the need to chase after the latest hot tip from an advisor. For obvious reasons, a trading system should be easy to use, totally objective, take little of a trader’s time and make consistent profits. It should also avoid large draw downs and give clear trading signals.

A trading system is best learned from a master trader who remains actively engaged in teaching. The master can help the student tailor the system to his personality, financial means, risk tolerance and skill level. The next best approach is to simply read what has been written and adopt it to one’s personal situation. But under no circumstances should one try to wing it without the support of a set of trading rules. The advantage of rule based trading systems lies in their objectivity and consistency. When followed consistently, emotional trading and its associated errors are removed from the equation. As an investment, trading systems more than pay for themselves, not only in profits gained, but also in the amount of capital preserved. This is true not only for advanced automated trading systems but also for a compact set of rules on paper.

James Andrews publishes a newsletter at http://www.wisertrader.com where one can read about compact trading templates and advanced automatic trading systems. © 2005 Permission is granted to reproduce this article, as long as, this paragraph is included intact.

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10 Simple Tips To Help You To Be Successful At Stock Investing

Wednesday, July 18th, 2007

10 Simple Tips To Help You To Be Successful At Stock Investing
By Roger Overanout

If you’re looking for success with stock-market investing then you should apply these 10 simple tips to help you.

1. There’s an old Chinese proverb that goes something like this “Prophecies are hard, particularly with regard to the future!” The one fundamental thing you have to accept when you are investing in the stock market is that you cannot predict what is going to happen. No matter what software you use, or which Guru you follow it is impossible to predict what the stock market is going to do next.

2. At the end of the day all that really matters is the price of the stock, everything that is known about the stock, everything that is thought about the stock and everything that is hoped about the stock is in the price. The price is what the market is prepared to pay for that stock right now .

3. If you want to make money as a personal stock investor you’ve got to think in a different way to the big stock investors i.e. the insurance companies the money funds etc. Big-money funds usually follow the index, because of their size is very difficult for them to do anything else. As a private investor you have the ability to pick out individual opportunities which are too small for the big institutional investors. You can be in and out of the market for a quick profit while the big funds are still thinking about how a particular trade will fit in with their overall investment strategy.

4. Technical analysis of stocks and shares is great fun and it produces some very pretty charts, but at the end of the day most of it is a load of rubbish. On any chart it is usually possible to see examples of why a particular system works and also why it doesn’t work both at the same time. Charts are useful, it is well-known that a picture is worth a thousand words.The best way to use stock charts is to look at them and study what you are seeing and then apply that information to your trading.

5. Always ask questions, never accept anything at face value particularly stock-market tips.

6. If you are unsure about any stock you are holding then you shouldn’t be holding it. If you have any doubt about an investment you have made or you feel you have to ask somebody else’s advice about whether you should carry on holding the investment then is time to get out of that trade.

7. You are investing in the stock market for one reason only, to make money, you cannot beat the market go with the flow, in a bull market anybody can make money but be prepared to sell your stock and put the cash in the bank if conditions change, don’t give your profit back to the market.

8. It’s a fact that some people do not have the temperament to take part in stock-market investing. If you find you’re always worried about your investments if you’re more worried about losing than you are excited about winning then perhaps stock-market investing is not for you.

9. The market is always.

10. There is life outside the stock market, trading the stock market is not the be all and end all of everything, the only reason for making money is so that you can enjoy it with the ones you love.

For more exciting fresh information about all aspects of Stock Investing visit http://www.stockinvestingforbeginner.com

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Trading Is Not Rocket Science!

Tuesday, July 17th, 2007

Despite what some people may lead you to believe; day trading, swing trading and trend trading is not anywhere as difficult as they would like you to think. It really boils down to two key components.

First, you have to have an approach that helps you identify trades that have a consistently high probability of making money. Once you have this you must exploit this “edge” over and over again.

The only way to do this is to use the necessary discipline to never deviate from your system. The minute you start tinkering or tweaking things is when you will lose your edge!!!

You will most likely be tempted to do this after you have had a few losers. This is the time however to keep your focus and remind yourself that your system has a statistical advantage that has held up over time.

Think about this for a moment? If you go gambling in Las Vegas and can even gain a 1% advantage over the house you can make a literal fortune by exploiting this edge. That little one percent advantage can make the casino lose a whole lot of money over time. As a matter of fact the minute they notice that you have a viable system they will label you a cheat and ban you from the playing. It sure is a good thing that can’t happen to traders!

Now consider what happens if you have a trading strategy that produces trades that go into the money more than 60 to 80% of the time?

Now the second step to success is to manage your emotions. Two of the biggest indicators of a trader who is not managing their emotions are FEAR & GREED. These two emotions will wipe out every trader over time, both experienced and inexperienced alike.

Let’s talk about them for a minute…

FEAR: Fear of losing money or fear of being wrong is what causes traders to have this emotion.

“Trading with scared money” often causes the fear of losing money. This is when a trader is risking money that should be used for the rent, food, children’s education etc. If this is the case the only solution is to find additional funds that you are willing to put at risk. This helps to put the mind at ease and reduces the fear.

Fear of being wrong is simply the part in all of us that just doesn’t like to be wrong. The cure for this is to simply realize and accept that losses are part of this game. Think about this? A baseball player only need hit the ball once for every three times at the plate and this will get him into the Hall of Fame.

I feel this every once in a while and remind myself that… My approach for trading has both historically and real-time produced consistent winning trades. This gives me the confidence to step up to the plate and keep swinging. Also I tell myself that the only way to earn the big money is to get into the game.

GREED: Traders who are greedy are often the exact opposite of the ones who are fearful. They have no fear and this can get them into trouble. They will tend to over trade, not follow the rules and basically “wing it”. Sometimes this will work, but it always ends up back-firing.

One of the biggest problems when greed sets in is the inability to know when to take profits. These traders are so bent on making a killing that they are never happy. If they are up 10, 20 or 30% they don’t even think about cashing out, as they want more. This often leads to the inability to see the trade turning against then and they will allow winning trades to turn into big losing ones.

One solution for this is to realize that making 3, 5, 10 or 15% on a regular short time basis adds up really quick. I know for me personally, once I was confident in my methodology, I no longer felt the occasional feelings of greed. Now I don’t worry about “going for broke” as I know that there is always another good trade waiting for me.

Dr. Jeffrey Wilde, a trading veteran with 16 years of experience is a trading coach to over 3500 traders in 63 countries. His new blog http://www.askjeffwilde.com offers free trading articles, tips and advice. He also teaches a variety of courses found at http://www.win-at-trading.com and http://www.fastforexprofits.com

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