What trade houses are you guys using?
What sites or tools are you using for research?
I understand some of the mechanics of how to valuate a company but not a lot about shorts, puts, and the trading lingo...
The big thing to keep in mind about the market is that you have to develop really, really strong nerves. Have a plan/strategy and stick to it. Know when to hold on and know when to cut your losses.
For research, your broker will likely have analyst reports and such available to you. Read them. In addition, though, I recommend Seeking Alpha. Lots of really useful articles (and a lot of trash, too) written by a variety of people. Great place to springboard your research. Finally, learn to read a balance sheet.
My MBA course taught me the ins and outs of a balance sheet, so I feel comfortable there...
Great point about nerves and strategy.
Thanks for the point in the right direction guys!
What trade houses are you guys using?
What sites or tools are you using for research?
Because the shareholders would've had to vote on that - and KCG didn't have that long? I'm guessing..
smartmoney.com - Best and Worst Brokers of 2012
I use a combination of Yahoo Finance (My Portfolios) and Google Finance for tracking stocks. Yahoo provides the creation of a list of stocks, or even several lists for various purposes. Google is good for day-tracking.
Kicking myself -
I bought NOK at $1.70 and sold at $2.00 - its up to $2.60 today. Who would have thought it would go up a buck in under a month.
UGH!
The nerves develop over time. I remember the first time I lost 2k off a bad earnings report...I felts like I was hit by a truck! Earlier this year, I was down over 70% on one stock (near 9k loss) and I didn't lose any sleep over it (now down about 20% and charging towards the black on it!).
What trade houses are you guys using?
What sites or tools are you using for research?
I understand some of the mechanics of how to valuate a company but not a lot about shorts, puts, and the trading lingo...
Maybe you can play one of the stock games where you can buy and sell fake stocks that follow real values. That way you can see how you would do without risking real money. I did that for 2 years and realized that I was not made for it. I have a broker that handles my investment and I just have a small fraction that I play with. I aim for 10% per year which blows a savings account out of the water and you can do without taking too much risks.
There's always the risk so only invest money that you can afford to lose.
What trade houses are you guys using?<br />
<br />
What sites or tools are you using for research?<br />
<br />
I understand some of the mechanics of how to valuate a company but not a lot about shorts, puts, and the trading lingo...
Free tip.
Avoid the whole single stock thing, stick to IWM and SPY.
Why put all your eggs in one basket. And those two Etfs are very liquid and they offer a diversified basket of stock and low cost.
Hugo has some great advice.
DIA is also a good one (at the right price!), as it pays out monthly dividends which you then can reinvest via drip - dividend reinvestment program. You could purchase (at the right price) and make $ a year later even if it was flat! Wait for the next 'oversold' cycle and get a small amount, set up the drip and be patient - add to investment if/when you decide its needed. I'd think up some tolerance levels on when to -consider- adding. Remember that reducing would only be feasible if the amount you'd gain is significant enough to forgo capital gains tax.
One thing is near certain, DIA is not going to go 'tits up'. Beware of leveraged etfs and especially etns - they are not buy and hold - they are trading vehicles to make a quick buck.
Check on something like morningstar to see if an etf is trading at an obscene premium to nav.
Also pick up lqd if this bond bubble ever bursts - it'll always beat the treasury.
UPRO doesn't seem to decay like the other leveraged ones.
Hugo has some great advice.
DIA is also a good one (at the right price!), as it pays out monthly dividends which you then can reinvest via drip - dividend reinvestment program. You could purchase (at the right price) and make $ a year later even if it was flat! Wait for the next 'oversold' cycle and get a small amount, set up the drip and be patient - add to investment if/when you decide its needed. I'd think up some tolerance levels on when to -consider- adding. Remember that reducing would only be feasible if the amount you'd gain is significant enough to forgo capital gains tax.
One thing is near certain, DIA is not going to go 'tits up'. Beware of leveraged etfs and especially etns - they are not buy and hold - they are trading vehicles to make a quick buck.
Check on something like morningstar to see if an etf is trading at an obscene premium to nav.
Also pick up lqd if this bond bubble ever bursts - it'll always beat the treasury.
