• Sponsored links

  • Categories

  • Pages

  • Tags

    $$$ 1929 ASB Australian bank banking Basic Black blue Business careers Charts chips crash credit crunch day Daytraderrockstar Depression deutsche DJIA finance financial google Great internships JP Kathy Market Morgan NYSE quote recession Rockefeller School services stock stocks Street trading Tuesday UBS UNSW Wall Walsh
  • Archives

  • Meta

  • What stocks will be a wise investment to hold long term?

    Posted by admin on May 15th, 2010 and filed under stocks | 4 Comments »

    I am sick and tired of seeing my stock portfolio sometimes decreasing a few thousand dollars in one day. I am always looking for new stock investments. Which large corporate stocks are still available that have always made a profit and still have profit growth, have a low PE ratio, pay a dividend that will not be cut, have little or no debt on their balance sheet, and will be safe in this bad economy that we are facing. Provide the ticker symbols of these stocks and the reasons why the stock of these companies should be purchased.


    You’re looking for a lot of things that others are looking for, however, there is very little out there that meets your requests. Of anything, I would suggest companies like Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Altria (MO), Walmart (WMT) and Procter & Gamble (PG). I would avoid the pharmaceuticals despite their high yields and relative stability as there is question regarding the drug policy of Obama, who will likely push generics. Therefore, you are stuck looking for companies in the consumer staples arena for the most part, and then very select companies outside that arena that will do well in either a strong or weak economy. However, for the long-term, I would definitely encourage people to invest in commodity-related industries (such as oil, metals, fertilizer, etc.), as they have fallen off a cliff because of our deflationary environment. However, with the substantial monetary stimulus that the government has been injecting into the financial sector, our country will emerge from this in a much weaker financial state than the likes of China (using a fiscal stimulus versus a monetary stimulus) or Japan (has a strong budget surplus, just lent the IMF $100 billion). Therefore, I expect inflation to take a toll on the economy going forward, which may prolong this recession, as it will likely begin its rampage once the economy begins to recover, and will likely exceed the levels we saw earlier this year (oil at $140+). In regards to timing, I can’t help but continue to be bearish on the broader markets. The markets broke my previous expectations of S&P 500 to the 800 level, and I have revised my expectations to S&P 500 to the 575 level. I have done so as the market just broke a long-term support line (from the 2002 market bottom) today, and broke a bearish descending triangle pattern yesterday, which was confirmed today by a failed retest of the previous support line. Therefore, if you do enter any of these companies, do so only with the long-term in mind, and create a dollar-cost averaging strategy to build your position and strictly adhere to it. At some point, there will be a recovery in the markets, but there is little fundamental or technical reason to consider entering the market aggressively now. Just my opinion, I hope it helps.

    Best of luck!

    Day Trading Stocks Rockstar intro on Basics

    Posted by admin on May 15th, 2010 and filed under stocks | 25 Comments »

    1st in a series of videos outlining the basics of Day Trading, Showing how an average joe can open an account with 5-20k and make $500-$1000 a day trading the market. Will show you how i do it, and answer any questions you have. Each day.

    Duration : 0:9:46

    Read the rest of this entry »

    Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

    STOCKS?????????????????

    Posted by admin on May 12th, 2010 and filed under stocks | 4 Comments »

    How do you invest? What is the best website? what are stocks all about? how do you make money from them?

    As the answer below states, you should start at investopedia.com. They are a very good resource for starting out. If you have cable TV in the United States (or elsewhere), you should find CNBC on cable TV. They have a major US cable station and CNBC worldwide, that follows stock markets in Asia, Europe and the United States. You can also follow them on their website for all kinds of financial and political news that affects the financial markets.

    I have also included a few more, marketwatch and smart money.

    http://www.investopedia.com/university/beginner/
    http://www.investopedia.com/university/stocks/
    http://www.cnbc.com/
    http://www.marketwatch.com/
    http://www.smartmoney.com/

    The next thing you will need is to find yourself an online broker. Smartmoney magazine runs a survey every year and below is their results for 2009.

    http://www.smartmoney.com/investing/stocks/smartmoney-2009-broker-survey/?page=8

    Good luck in your investing! I’m not sure that my answer is the answer you were looking for, but investing in stocks is something you will have to read about online. All of the websites I have listed have tutorials and very good information to help you get started.

    Happy investing!