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1)what i wanna know is if i place $100 on a stock, and the next day it decreases 13.41 is that $13.41 being taken from the $100?
2)If it increases in that amount is that amount added to the $100?
3)how do i research certain stocks that i may bid on?
4)if i buy it, how do i sell it?
thanks to those who are healping me, i'm from katrina and i'm trying to find a way many ways of investing my money.

2006-12-25 15:04:40 · 6 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Investing

6 answers

1. Yes
2. Yes
3. There are many sites, including ameritrade and etrade. also msn.com
4. With an online account, such as at etrade or ameritrade.
However, if you are new to investing you should stick with mutual funds. The best are no load funds.

2006-12-25 15:14:22 · answer #1 · answered by Lee T 2 · 1 0

1) Yes.
2) Yes.
3) www.fool.com ; www.aaii.com ; www.morningstar.com
4) A discount broker lets you easily buy & sell stocks, bonds, other things too. (I have Scottrade - $7.00 to buy or sell) If you can use YA, you can use one of them. There are research screens that you can look at the price history of the stock you are interested in. Yahoo Finance is also very educational & helpful - I use them all the time and they are free.

I must recommend the Motley fool site, I learned alot there. There are many good, informative sites.

The only ones that I would avoid are the ones that use GIANT HEADLINES to try to get you to BUY this stock BEFORE ...... HAPPENS !!!!!! You will know. Never buy from them. The serious sites might have a service you can purchase of monthly recommendations, or a model porfolio you can look at.

First thing, learn something about the market. Get a basic investing book (there are lots at the local library) and then A RANDOM WALK DOWN WALL STREET by R. Malkiel which readably describes what the market actually is and how it works the way it does.

Also, look at CDs at www.bankrate.com

Good Investing to you!

;-)

2006-12-25 15:24:12 · answer #2 · answered by WikiJo 6 · 0 0

Do not.. I repeat.. Do not put 100$ into the stock market. You're better off putting it into a CD until you learn what you're doing.

Firstly Id recommend learning something first. Any book by Peter Lynch is a great read and will teach you A LOT.
Secondly, most brokerage firms charge commission on all trades. I believe one of the cheapest is Scottrade with $5 per trade. And with 100$ commission will KILL you. You should go into the stock market with at least a minimum of 1500$ to have any positive effect. Trust me, Ive been in the same position as you, except I had about 1000$, and had to learn the hard way.

Yahoo finance is a good place to research stocks, I use it daily.

GOOD LUCK and Happy Investing!

2006-12-25 15:16:16 · answer #3 · answered by The Red One 1 · 1 0

If you do not have a lot of money to invest, put it into mutual funds. It is set up for novice investors. Get to know the basket of investment products it is made up of. As you track their movements you will get a better understanding of how the stock market works. Then you will be in a better position to invest in one particular stock only.
Remember any profits you make from the sale of a stock is taxed.

2006-12-25 15:39:36 · answer #4 · answered by Alletery 6 · 0 0

1. your stock goes down by $13.41 but it will not be taken away from your investment unless you sell the stock.
2. again, not unless you sell it.
3. you may want to know the basics of stocks and other investments thru investopedia.com
4. it depends on how you bought it. if it's from an agent/broker, you can sell it thru him too.

2006-12-25 15:19:34 · answer #5 · answered by Babye 1 · 0 0

universal in a be conscious, advantageous return. it surely relies upon on your diversification and your propensity to possibility. often, averaged over the years the listed S&P yields style of 8% each year. no longer undesirable. My 401K from 2003 to this factor has yielded approximately 10 share pts each year. Plus i've got toyed with some Sirius inventory and replaced into fortunate sufficient to be interior the black. attempting to start, I recommend Jim Cramer's e book Mad money, very digestable and a reliable study.

2016-10-18 23:54:00 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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