A thousand bucks is not a bad nest egg. I started with $20 when I was 17. I retired at 45. In the course of that time I did not go steadily up the ladder to rertirement. I had ups and downs and went broke more than once. I never declaired bankrupcy but came close to it once. I worked my self into the ground to get back on my feet again after the divorce. I raised 5 kids by my self and still managed to invest.
Here are some suggestions. Invest in a dividend paying stock. Look around and find one that is paying well and regular.
Don't ever take less than a 10% return. If the dividend is not at least that ammount, move on and look for another.
Once invested, the price of the stock does not matter. In fact if it goes down you can celebrate. It means that when you get your dividend payment, you will by buying at a reduced price. The only thing that matters is if the dividend goes down. You want it the same or to go up.
On payday feel free to add to your nest egg. Even if only a little at a time.
Once you have at least 500 shares of stock in a dividend paying company, find out if the stock is optionable. If you can get options on the stock begin writing calls against your stock. Use this money to buy still more stock. When you have 600 shares of stock you can write even more calls. Warren Buffet used this method to build about half of his fortune. This is a conservative approach. As you get more comfortable with options you can begin to buy options if you wish. But I'd wait on that till much much later.
Get some books and do some reading. Learning to trade is the single most profitable thing you can do. If and only If you know what your doing and do it well. That means learning. The only dangerous investor is the ignorant one.
Get some books by wade cook. Don't buy any of his stuff. Just read the books. Also stay away from margin investing as he suggests. There is a reason he makes his money selling wade cook instead of investing. (readers digest outed him)
You can however gain a great understanding from his books so visit your local library. Never by the books unless you have to.
Next get a book called Your money or your life by Joe Dominguez and Vicki Robin. It will help you budget so you can do more investing faster.
There is another book called heads you win tails you win but I can't remember the author.
There are in fact a good many books on the topic. Visit any book store and you will find whole sections on the topic.
You may also find that most of these books are a total snore, (see using technical Analysis by Clifford Pistolese) and you may find your self dozing off after the first 3 sentances. If however you can force your eye lids to stay open, and you begin to absorb some of the information, it will begin to help you. After you score a few wins and you see your nest egg grow, you will find it less and less difficult to do the reading. However you just wont find it all that interesting till AFTER you see the power of what you have learned and put to work. Thats why most people never get into investing. It is just too dull to get started into the stuff.
My first investment was 20 bucks in the highschool candy store. At the end of the school year it was worth $80. I was hooked. Back in those days I was making 2 bucks an hour. Do you have any idea how long it took me to make $80 after the government took all the taxes from a kids check when the kid had no deductions? That was over a weeks pay. WOW a weeks pay in 9 months with $20 seed money. Once you learn what your doing and you start to see your nest egg grow it gets in your blood and you can't quite. I may be retired, but I'm still hot for investing. Its my hobby now. Make investing your hobby, see how far it takes you
If you want to do something more sophisticated and can't get enough money together to do it (like selling covered calls) get some friends together and start an investing club. My sister did that for over a decade. They liquidated the club and every one walked away with 10's of thousands of dollars. As a club they did really well. Every one in the club reported on one or 2 stocks. No one tried to be an expert on everything. So every one was assigned 1 or 2 stocks and thats what they followed and read up on. As a result in a 10 year period of time, they raked in the cash. Every one took turns doing book reports as well. As a group they did lots of reading. So should you. Sorry no romance novels. Just investing books. Go for it.
2006-10-10 17:47:33
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answer #1
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answered by john d 3
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to get a good return for your money and make it faster than any other way that i know off, yes the stock market is for you. If you want to buy shares that are safe then blue chip shares are the only way that your money will stay reasonably safe. The return on these is slower and not as high and they will cost you more to invest in. If you are only going to play around with $5000. then split it up, put some in blue chips and some in companies that are a little risky er. Watch the market for a few days in the places you are looking to invest in. Do your research. You can win or loose you need to watch it and sell at the right time. Don't get greedy to much, if you see the shares rising think about when to sell, as if you leave it to long they may just drop down again.
2006-10-11 00:12:26
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answer #2
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answered by jodie r 1
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It is not insane though playing is a term people use because they can not understand how the market works. No play involved. If you have no emergency $$ then can't commit it to stock market. If you do then buy a S&P 500 index fund or the like & forget about it. Can put it in an IRA. Just have to be serious enough to leave it alone once bought til truly needed.
2006-10-11 09:13:02
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answer #3
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answered by vegas_iwish 5
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Go to www.fool.com for many answers. Investing in dividend-paying stocks with a small amount of money might be the best step to take, or better yet invest in an index fund. "Playing" the stock market is not the right idea - educate yourself, and read books such as "One Up on Wall Street" by Peter Lynch and "The Intelligent Investor" by Benjamin Graham.
2006-10-11 00:02:35
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answer #4
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answered by KatGuy 7
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Hi, i suggest a great site with plenty of Issues related to your investing and everything around it. it also provide clear and accurate answer to many common questions.
I am sure that you can get your answers in this website.
http://investing.sitesled.com/
Good Luck and Best Wishes!
2006-10-11 09:27:27
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answer #5
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answered by stock.geek 2
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Play the stock market! My dad did that and made tons of money. And he aint that smart!
2006-10-11 00:00:34
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answer #6
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answered by Howdy 2
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talk to the company with whom you have the IRA; they should be able to recommend something for you at the level that you want.
2006-10-11 00:00:29
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answer #7
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answered by KJC 7
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you can do alot on the market! do it i recently bought 900 shares at 1.50 each... before it went public
i have already made 10xs what i put in!
2006-10-11 02:05:34
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answer #8
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answered by areyoureadyb? 2
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savings, term deposit, yes
2006-10-11 00:05:20
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answer #9
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answered by metallhd62 4
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