Small cap stocks are the stocks of smaller capitalized companies.
www.upsidestocks.com sells a newsletter about the best small cap stocks in the US.
2007-01-14 04:09:10
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Hi there,
You should try with Penny Stocks Trading (you can find more info here: http://pennystocks.toptips.org )
Penny stocks, also known as cent stocks in some countries, are common shares of small public companies that trade at low prices per share.
I've been subscribing to this PennyStock web site for about a year now and have loved the objective advice they give. He really does look for quality stocks and I've made some pretty nice profits on a lot of his suggestions. Being still fairly new to investing I have been dabbling a lot in penny stocks to try and grow my account. I may not have a big account, but it's a lot bigger than it was a year ago. On just one of Nathan's picks this year I managed to make my investment back ten-fold! Be careful! Penny stocks are notoriously risky but if you follow the right method the risk is almost 0. I suggest to invest only little money first and then reinvest the profits. This is the site I'm using: http://pennystocks.toptips.org
2014-09-22 16:19:51
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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"Caps" refer the the "capitalization" of a company, i.e. the value of a company. It's calculated by multiplying the current share price by the number of outstanding shares.
Definition of what a small-cap company is varies over time and by broker, or financial analyst.
Investopedia currently categorizes caps as follows;
Big Cap - Market cap of $10 billion and greater
Mid Cap - $2 billion to $10 billion
Small Cap - $300 million to $2 billion
Micro Cap - $50 million to $300 million
Nano Cap - Under $50 million
You should be able to run screens on many of the financial sites, including yahoo finance, to find companies that meet a small cap definition.
2007-01-15 01:54:54
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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How does Trading Work? I can say you that take a look at this site ( http://forexsignal.kyma.info ) may be it can help you. It 's one of the best course about trading. It seems like Trading is almost totally based on Macro-economics. It also strikes me that since there are not nearly as many currencies as there are stocks/bonds/derivatives etc etc, there must be a large number of market players in each currency bracket. So logically, currencies must be very liquid true? Also, what is the risk of Currency trading, high or low? When I read the business section every day I notice that the Canadian loonie moves hardly a tenth of a cent on a regular basis (in comparison to the US dollar). So it seems like theres very little room for growth in currencies unless you leverage. On that note, whats the maximum leverage permitted for forex trading. I know in stocks its x2, and in derivatives its x10. Anyway the only way to know how to start a profitable buisness is by following some methods like the one that I suggested.
2014-10-04 04:29:35
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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I would guess that small-cap companies have small-cap stocks, but what do I know?
2007-01-14 11:49:08
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answer #5
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answered by Yardbird 5
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