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Hey! You have done well. You have a good split between domestic equities and foreign stocks, but I think you should look into some small cap growth and small cap equity mutual funds.
Have you looked at the American Association of Individual Investors?
If I were young or even middle age, I would be investing in small cap growth mutual funds or stocks. Go here for excellent low cost advice (http://www.aaii.com/aaiiportfolios/commentaries/stockportfolio/200701comment.cfm).
Don't be alarmed at the low cost – it has some of the best financial advice on the Web.
If you have lots of time before retirement the magic of compound interest will just keep building and building. It really works and if you keep investing and re-investing your proftis every year, in 10 or 15 years you will be surprised at how it mounts up. In 30 years you could be a millionaire which probably won't amount to much in 30 year owing to the the ravages of inflation. But stocks are a good hedge against inflation.
By that time you may need a money manager to manage your money – probably before when you reach the $500,000 mark. Heck! If you have achieved that much, you probably don't need a money manager – you are the best judge of where to invest your money by that time.
And that's the primary reason to keep investing in small cap growth stocks – they will flog inflation to death.
When investing in mutual funds, select the no-load funds only. Do not invest in mutual funds with a "load", an up front commission that you have to pay before when they sell you the mutual fund. Some charge as much as 10% which is a rrip-off. Many studies have shown that the no-load funds do as well as the load funds and sometimes a lot better.
Look at the AAI Shadow Stock Portfolio. I would try and emulate that portfolio if you want to invest in stocks. It was up 25% as of November 2006. The Vanguard Index fund is only up 14%.
AAII has some of the best financial advisers and the cost is very low. They have excellent guides and advice.
You may need a broker so go to e-Trade or Scottsdale who have low commission rates.
Do your own due diligence. Your own ideas are the best. Do not depend on someone else to select investments for you. Learn about investing so you don't have to ask what stocks to invest in.
Be self reliant.
Remember what Emerson said: A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines. With consistency a great soul has simply nothing to do.
Find stocks that have steadily rising net profits (earnings), low debt, and good P/Es, lots of cash, companies buying back their stock..
What interests you? Find stocks that pique your interest and passion.
You need fast growing good stocks with good earnings and in good sectors. You need to learn more about the stock market before you even think about investing in it.
The stocks world is divided into 12 sectors such as energy which chevron belongs to. It is next to last in the sectors list today.
Technology is numero uno, but things can change in a new york minute, but within the sector, the fastest growing are computer services, not Microsoft. Then, Electronic Instruments and controls. Next is computer storage devices.
The next hot sector is Healthcare, but heed the warning below. Go here for sectors: (http://clearstation.etrade.com/cgi-bin/Itechnicals?Event=srp&Section=redge&Refer=/redge.html)
The best software is Vector Vest if you can afford it. It has sector investing.
Here is a free Web site for charting stocks: (http://www.incrediblecharts.com/).
First of all, stay away from "professional brokers" and tips coming to you via e-mail or friends and acquaintances. And tips at Yahoo! Answers. And e-mail tips. Do your own due diligence – don't rely on someone else. Read Emerson's essay "Self Reliance.
Hey! They will say anything to get you to buy their junk. If it's too good to be true, it is.
Remember this, they are just sales people trying to sell you what their firm is pushing. They are not security analysts or financial planners, not even financial advisers. Trust me, I know from experience that they cannot be trusted especially with a million dollars. You risk losing it all. A million dollar account is known as a "whale" and they would love to get their greedy little paws on it and suck it dry. They just want to make commissions on what they buy and sell for the suckers, err…clients..
Get this book: The Market Gurus: Stock Investing Strategies You Can Use from Wall Street's Best (Paperback)
by John P. Reese (Author), Todd O. Glassman
Risk avoidance is the name of the game.
Remember, the harder I work, the luckier I get.
Penny stocks are highly speculative. I would avoid the ones under a dollar a share. For example, Best Buy started at less than $5. So there are some good companies, but it takes a lot of digging to find the good ones. You are looking for companies with good earnings, little debt, low capitalization, and good P/Es. For stocks under $5, very few will meet these requirements.
Stay away from the pharms unless they have patented drugs – do not invest in generic pharms, no growth there.
Check out which business sectors are the most popular and invest in the companies in those sectors. The number one, two and three are: technology, health care, and cyclicals (retail). These change periodically so keep current.
Go here for a list of growth stocks: http://www.thestreet.com/_googlen/newsanalysis/ratings/10345212.html?cm_ven=GOOGLEN&cm_cat=FREE&cm_ite=NA
There are these lists all over the Web – you pays your money and takes your chances.
Watch CNBC, but don't pay too much attention to the talking heads, except for Jim Cramer, the wild man – but he tries to teach you how to invest and has some great advice.
Get Jim Cramer's Real Money: Sane Investing in an Insane World by James J. Cramer
Listen to Jim Cramer on CNBC.com
Go to Clearstation for quotes and tutorials on investing at (http://clearstation.etrade.com/). Sign up is free. Look up a few stocks. Do their tutorials. Check out the sectors.
Get this book: Value Investing: From Graham to Buffett and Beyond (Wiley Finance) by Bruce C. N. Greenwald, Judd Kahn, Paul D. Sonkin, and Michael van Biema.
Another good book: The Motley Fool Investment Guide for Teens: 8 Steps to Having More Money Than Your Parents Ever Dreamed Of (Motley Fool) by David Gardner, Tom Gardner, and Selena Maranjian
Jim Cramer's Mad Money: Watch TV, Get Rich by James J. Cramer and Cliff Mason
I Want to Make Money in the Stock Market: Learn to Begin Investing Without Losing Your Life Savings! by Chris M. Hart\
Sensible Stock Investing: How to Pick, Value, and Manage Stocks by David P. Van Knapp
Stock Investing For Dummies (For Dummies (Business & Personal Finance)) by Paul Mladjenovic
All About Stock Market Strategies : The Easy Way To Get Started by David Brown and Kassandra Bentley
The Motley Fool Investment Guide and their Web site (http://www.fool.com/).
The Little Black Book of Microcap Investing: Beat the Market with NASDAQ/AMEX Microcap Stocks, OTCBB Penny Stocks, and Pink Sheet Stocks by Dan Holtzclaw
How To Make Money In Stocks: A Winning System in Good Times or Bad, 3rd Edition by William J. O'Neil
Trading for a Living: Psychology, Trading Tactics, Money Management by Alexander Elder
Big Trends in Trading: Strategies to Master Major Market Moves (A Marketplace Book) by Price Headley
Extraordinary Popular Delusions & the Madness of Crowds (Paperback)
by Charles Mackay (Author), Andrew Tobias (Foreword) This book talks about the Tulip craze in Holland where people would mortgage their homes to buy Tulip bulbs. Same thing happened in 2001 – 2002 with the Internet bubble that brought the stock market to its knees. The dot com companies were the Tulip bulbs.
Buy Investors Business Daily. It has lots of tutorials and I like it better than the stodgy Wall St Journal.
Money Game by Adam Smith
Common Stocks and Uncommon Profits and Other Writings (Wiley Investment Classics) (Hardcover)
by Philip A. Fisher. Recommended by Warren Buffet who took $100,000 and grew it to $34 billion!
Value Investing with the Masters by Kirk Kazanjian
Valuegrowth Investing by Glen Arnold
The 5 Keys to Value Investing by J. Dennis Jean-Jacques
The Intelligent Investor Rev Ed. (Collins Business Essentials) by Benjamin Graham. Warren Buffet was his student at Columbia.
The Money Masters by John Train
The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing by Taylor Larimore
Common Sense on Mutual Funds: New Imperatives for the Intelligent Investor by John C. Bogle
Why Smart People Make Big Money Mistakes And How To Correct Them: Lessons From The New Science Of Behavioral Economics by Gary Belsky
Rule #1: The Simple Strategy for Successful Investing in Only 15 Minutes a Week! by Phil Town . See his Web site at (http://www.ruleoneinvestor.com/). Free sign-up. I got the book at the library.
Listen. You don't have to spend a lot of money on these books – most can be found at your library and those that your library doesn't have they can usually get from other libraries in your state.
Most of these books talk about stock and mutual fund investing, but for a good introduction to other forms of investing Gerald Appel has a great book called Opportunity Investing – How to Profit When Stock Advance, Stocks decline, Inflation Run Rampant, Prices fall, Oil Prices Hit the Roof and Every Time In Between.
First, Break All the Rules: What the World's Greatest Managers Do Differently by Marcus Buckingham and Curt Coffman Not a book on investing, but it's a nice segue into the next book.
Now, Discover Your Strengths by Marcus Buckingham and Donald O. Clifton
Go Put Your Strengths to Work: 6 Powerful Steps to Achieve Outstanding Performance by Marcus Buckingham
Finding your strengths is important when investing. These books teach you to build on your strengths, what you a good at. Everyone is good or passionate about something. Why not get better at what you are good at?
Another good book is: Opportunity Investing: How To Profit When Stocks Advance, Stocks Decline, Inflation Runs Rampant, Prices Fall, Oil Prices Hit the Roof, … and Every Time in Between (Hardcover)
by Gerald Appel
Most mutual funds do not even keep up the the return on the S&P. That's like 99% of them.
Vanguard Index funds are a no brainer.
A CD is better than a savings account. They range from six months to several years. You cannot touch your money tho until the time limit is up.
Check out this Web site on Direct Investment Plans where you can buy shares directly from companies: (http://www.fool.com/School/DRIPs.htm). Usually no fees and you can buy one share at a time.
Bonds are probably the safest. But they are not for the young. You might try a bond fund. They might return 5 or 6 percent. At 5% a million would return $50,000 a year – not a bad income. Remember, you have to pay taxes on the $50,000.
There are also municipal bonds and the income from them is taxfree especially if you buy them in a state that offers them, but they only pay about 3%, but it's mostly taxfree.
Look into Fidelity sector funds. Buy the top three, then in six months look how they are doing and if not so hot, select the next three that are best. Do this for a few years and you will make lots of money.
Kindest Personal Regards,
Walt Brown
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P.S. This is a life-long learning process. Reading these books and applying the rules to analyzing stocks that may be good It takes time. Be patient and keep reading and listening. Don't be a sucker and follow someone elses advice. Be your own man or woman. Depend on no one except yourself. You can only get smarter and stronger that way.
P.P.S. Internet has lots of good stuff, for example (http://stockcharts.com/school/doku.php?id=chart_school:technical_indicators:moving_average_conve
Stockcharts.com is very good and their discussion of MACD is one of the best, barring its originator, Gerald Apple, but now we are getting into Technical Analysis and that is not for beginners. But it is an important factor in finding good stocks that are going up and growing. Remember, tiny acorns grow into mighty oaks.

If the stock price does not move as I expected I sell and walk. If no stocks appear in my programs as buy / sell I do not even turn on my computer. I never buy after 11:45AM.
All said I only trade 4 days a month.
Read against the Gods by Peter L. Bernstein.
Another book Jesse Livermore: World's Greatest Stock Trader. By Richard Smitten.
Kindly also tell me helping sites name if you know.


Day trading IS a gamble. I know because I day trade, successfully.
Your two responders are not traders.
First if you use stops, you will many times get stopped out before it turns right around. I would have happened to me on LEH on Tues. I took a very nice profit.
Second you HAVE to have NASDQA Level 2 quotes. *this is how I knew NOT to get out of LEH on Tues. I got caught in a bid/ask spread that was to wide with a thin bid.
You have to see the whole market. You have to know that there are many buyers or sellers. Level 2 gives you that look.
Third take small nibbles. My goal is $300 to $500 a day. I leave a lot on the table.. but I am usaually in and out first 1/2 hour of trading.
I am in and out because day trading in many ways is like gambling and either you control the beast of the beast eats you alive. You can easily become a servant to the adrenalin rush Do that and you begin trading because you have to trade, not that there are good trades to be made.
Timing is everything. You will need to learn when a market order is prudent and when you need to use limits.
I bought 500 V today at about 59 .. I had to leave so I put in a limit to sell at 61. I thought that would give me time to come back and watch. LOL. It went to 61 and I was out. Now do I wish I had made more? Not really because I netted just shy of $1000 for the day.
That brings me to another thing. Day trading is a FULL time job. You can't expect to put in an order and then go to work. My full time may only be the first 30 minutes to an hour of trading but I don't leave the computer in that time.
The day IBM announced the buy back, I had thought I would be a buyer at 109.. I had to go to the bathroom. I hadn't put in the buy ( it was trading at 108.50 so I would have been filled. Three minutes later it was trading at 114 because of the announcement.
I rarely do like I did today and even rarer is holding a position over night. Particularly in this market. Up 400 down 200 up 300 etc.
Good luck and good trading

It is not a casino. It requires a good deal of knowledge, and requires the trader to have nerves of steel and be very nimble, in and out quickly, not afraid to take a loss.
At your age, you can start by learning about business and the stock market, and you need to save up some pretty good money.
No special equipment is required. Trade from your computer at home with an on-line discount broker.

For today, the first halt is at 1350 points down on the Dow, but at 2% there are some limits placed on program trading (trading done by computers for large trading firms).

Inability to See or Act Upon Quotes. Some firms only allow investors to view quotes from the one trading system the firm uses for after-hours trading. Check with your broker to see whether your firm's system will permit you to access other quotes on other ECNs. But remember that just because you can get quotes on another ECN does not necessary mean you will be able to trade based on those quotes. You need to ask your firm if it will route your order for execution to the other ECN. If you are limited to the quotes within one system, you may not be able to complete a trade, even with a willing investor, at a different trading system.
Lack of Liquidity. Liquidity refers to your ability to convert stock into cash. That ability depends on the existence of buyers and sellers and how easy it is to complete a trade. During regular trading hours, buyers and sellers of most stocks can trade readily with one another. During after-hours, there may be less trading volume for some stocks, making it more difficult to execute some of your trades. Some stocks may not trade at all during extended hours.
Larger Quote Spreads. Less trading activity could also mean wider spreads between the bid and ask prices. As a result, you may find it more difficult to get your order executed or to get as favorable a price as you could have during regular market hours.
Price Volatility. For stocks with limited trading activity, you may find greater price fluctuations than you would have seen during regular trading hours. News stories announced after-hours may have greater impacts on stock prices.
Uncertain Prices. The prices of some stocks traded during the after-hours session may not reflect the prices of those stocks during regular hours, either at the end of the regular trading session or upon the opening of regular trading the next business day.
Bias Toward Limit Orders. Many electronic trading systems currently accept only limit orders, where you must enter a price at which you would like your order executed. A limit order ensures you will not pay more than the price you entered or sell for less. If the market moves away from your price, your order will not be executed. Check with your broker to see whether orders not executed during the after-hours trading session will be cancelled or whether they will be automatically entered when regular trading hours begin. Similarly, find out if an order you placed during regular hours will carry over to after-hours trading.
Competition with Professional Traders. Many of the after-hours traders are professionals with large institutions, such as mutual funds, who may have access to more information than individual investors.
Computer Delays. As with online trading, you may encounter during after-hours delays or failures in getting your order executed, including orders to cancel or change your trades. For some after-hours trades, your order will be routed from your brokerage firm to an electronic trading system. If a computer problem exists at your firm, this may prevent or delay your order from reaching the system. If you encounter significant delays, you should call your broker to determine the extent of the problem and what you can to get your order executed.
So in a nutshell depending on your broker you may not be able to sell overnight. If everyone is trying to sell then there may not be enough buyers to actually fill all the orders. You have to ask your broker for the information that specifically pertains to you and the after hours policy.

I know that from time to time the stock market crashes and many people lose their shirt. My family always said to not invest unless you have that money to lose. So I assume that "luck" too plays a part in investing. You have to have the time to do it too, stay on top of it, and have a good broker. I'm told that a mediocre broker can lose you money by not investing quickly enough to get you a good deal.
It is about 3 months that I'm studying hardly forex. I have a good underestanding cause my previous job was "pragramming C#" and I left it to enter to trading world. but unfortunately I have not come up with a trading system that really works and make profits.
I'm in stress cause I should start my real trading as soon as possible. I prefer my positions be open for several days or more cause I don't want new stresses. Please elaborate me your system that you have experience of working with it.
I am 37 and I want to open my real account with about 2,500 US $.
Please introduce me a trustable broker in advance cause this is second problem that has confused me.
European brokers are much preferred. I let you know my experience in future and will send you post cards to appreciate your useful answers.
You can really help me

You're probably wanting to do it for the money, not for the process of trading. Or maybe you're good at analyzing the markets and setting up the computer to analyze and evaluate, but that doesn't make a trader.
If you're just doing it for the money, you will not approach the market properly, you will be impatient, and you will tire easily. Really, there are lots of better ways to make money. You probably already expect to earn an income from such a small investment of $2,500. If these are true, you have unrealistic expectations, and you will not succeed.
PremiereTrade is one of the best trading platforms for the Forex beginner, because they have such a great community of others to help you get going. It costs $3,000. But they will tell you up front to paper trade in the Demo Account for a year before you actually commit money.
Neither does a brain surgeon walk out of school and pick up a scapel and begin operating, or an engineer walk out of class and begin building skyscrapers. And you have not even begun to learn, let alone apply the rules of trading, or to master your fears and emotions, or even know what they are.
I think most people come to trading expecting to "Get rich quick." Doctors and lawyers are the worst traders in existence, because they are used to being in control. Almost all professionals do poorly at first, because they have succeeded elsewhere, and expect it to be easy.
Trading is the most difficult challenge you will ever face. If it were easy, we would all be rich. But instead, 80% of all traders blow out their account within the first year.
Personally, I have lost everything three times, trading the stock market index futures. Now I have finally settled on Forex, and am doing quite well after 17 years of learning.
If you buy PremiereTrade, they will charge you $100/mo for the data feed. For one year, that is another $1,200. You can trade a simulator for free here and learn as you go:
http://www.expertworx.com/pm/Forex%20Market%20Educational%20Game.htm
Here is the broker I use:
http://fxdd.com/




