Books are way long and usually out of date,
I recommend the Yahoo Finance education 101 (scroll down on the left)
http://finance.yahoo.com/education/begin_investing
then the Motley Fool has some interesting takes on things and there are several columnists whose columns are good
http://finance.yahoo.com/columnist/allbios
http://www.fool.com/index.htm?ref=topnav
2006-11-02 08:31:53
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answer #1
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answered by kate 7
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I have 2 books that I would recommend: "The Coming Economic Collapse", and "The Little Book That Beats the Market". This 2nd book discusses a magic formula to find stocks that meet 2 important criteria: low PE and high return-on-capital. There is a website that supports the book: magicformulainvesting.com.
You might want to look at the following portfolio, which invests in stocks that meet the "Little Book" criteria. The user is called "magicformula" :
http://www.top10traders.com/ViewPortfolio.aspx?userID=92
This portfolio is from http://www.top10traders.com - this is a free site that lets you create a portfolio of stocks with $100,000 in "play" money. Each day the site ranks the best performing portfolios, so you can see how your picks perform compared to other investors. You can also read posts on investing from the best traders, as well as share your own investing ideas.
Here are this month's best traders:
http://www.top10traders.com/Top10Standings.aspx
2006-11-02 12:03:48
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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The Complete Idiot's Guide To Making Money On Wall Street
2006-11-02 10:37:50
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answer #3
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answered by derek 4
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Must Read Stock Traders Almanac by Jeff Hirsch
2006-11-02 15:17:05
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answer #4
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answered by Hoa N 6
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See if the financial company you utilize has a cyber web brokering provider; that's much less complicated shifting money to the account you will would desire to establish. yet examine their expenses first. i does no longer advise Etrade. they have too many ongoing expenses. if your financial company does not have a provider, look to a pair different financial company, yet lower back examine their expenses, bothe purchase/sell expenses and any account retaining expenses. earlier you purchase any shares, spend some months staring on the industry, and analyze any companies you have an pastime in. Be arranged for a inventory to bypass down once you have bought it, yet once you have picked a stable stable organization, in time the cost will upward thrust lower back. remember, even the professionals can't continually are looking forward to how a organization or the industry customarily will bypass. do no longer anticipate to make great returns.
2016-10-03 05:25:25
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answer #5
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answered by shimp 4
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