I'm surprised I'm telling a teacher this, but the best-kept secret of information is your local library.
2006-08-19 13:19:06
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answer #1
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answered by dredude52 6
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Investopedia.com , investorwords.com for terminology
WSJ.com, dowjones and edgar are good starting places
Kiplingers, Money, Barrons, Marketwatch, yahoo finance ......
and any number of investment sites/magazines....have rankings of the better/best online trading sites
Good luck
2006-08-19 10:20:13
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answer #2
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answered by Gemelli2 5
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yes, you should learn 3 things:
fundamental analysis( economic report,management,competition,... tell you what to buy
TECHNICAL ANALYSIS( CHARTS+ technical indicator) tell you what to buy
sentiment analysis (bull/bear ratio, put/call ratio) tell you how moody investor can affect your investment too
Yes you could learn invest by yourself. it is your money, you should know how to do with it. for starter check this site out.
http://www.pathtoinvesting.org/index_fla...
http://www.stockcharts.com
http://www.streettalklive.com>... university. a lot amount of information. It will serve you well
I accumulate in good amount in 401k at the young age.I could share with you. when consider invest in stock market. you should consider basic 3 things:
fundamental analysis==(economic data,finincial health, management, business model, competetion)>>what to buy
technical analysis==(chart+indicator)>> when to buy
Sentiment/schycho analysis==>>mood of investor, Contrarian point of view.
Market cycle===>> check out book Trader Almanac by jeff hirsch will give you inside stuff
When you combine 3 thing, It is one of the powerful knowledge goinh with you for the rest of your live
At the age of 32. my 401k is amassed 71,000.00 and 30000.00 in taxble account. by follow simple rule
2006-08-19 18:05:08
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answer #3
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answered by Hoa N 6
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Start with exchanges' websites. There's a load of info there - education, glossary, links and etc. Also Google "elitetrader".
2006-08-19 10:05:34
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answer #4
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answered by Alex 4
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You can try motleyfool.com, money.com, or wikipedia if you want it free. The best resource would be the bookstore however. If you are new, try the For Dummies books.
2006-08-19 10:16:34
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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investopedia.com
fool.com
2006-08-19 20:34:12
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answer #6
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answered by ulchka 3
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