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2006-09-12 05:27:46 · 5 answers · asked by Judith L 1 in Business & Finance Investing

5 answers

Reuters is what most people use as their peer grouping. Many websites offer this data as a subscription.

investools.com
investors.com
prophet.net

are a few of them. You can also go to amex.com or holders.com to see some sectors containing many groups of stocks.

By tracking those sectors, you'll be better equiped to deal with trading the stocks within them!

Hope that helps!

2006-09-15 18:37:24 · answer #1 · answered by Yada Yada Yada 7 · 1 0

Yahoo's is kind of a limited list though - sometimes it lists only one or none.

May I suggest Barcharts. Enter the ticker in the box on the left labelled "Sector Finder" and then you click on that sector and see EVERY stock tied to it. The link is at:
http://www2.barchart.com/sectors.asp

Good luck to you! Peer groups of stocks are very important - from there you can learn to spot "best of breed" (as Cramer calls it) and also the weakest of the bunch - which leads to "pair trading" where you go long the good one and short-sell the flunky one.

2006-09-12 13:56:47 · answer #2 · answered by alien~ 5 · 0 0

Yahoo provides a very limited peer group under competitors. Hoovers.com does also, a more complete listing. My favorite is provided by Reuters Pro Vesters report. It provides a very complete list of competitors. This report is available from several on line brokers, Fidelity being one.

2006-09-12 16:04:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Go to yahoo finance and type in the ticker. Then go to competitors on the left hand column under company.

2006-09-12 12:32:43 · answer #4 · answered by chadspolka.matrix 2 · 0 0

moneycontrol.com

2006-09-14 09:14:43 · answer #5 · answered by shuk_anil 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers