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company symble
current price
52wn hi/lo
market cap
day dollar volume
sales
net profit
cash
total debit
sales
net profit margin
cash
total debt
sales per share
cash flow per share
earnings per share
dividend yield
return on equity
insider buys/ownership
stock buyback

thats only half of what i need in my stock watch sheet. i looked in yahoo finance bout culd not mark every thing i wanted to watch.

2007-01-31 15:52:03 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Business & Finance Investing

3 answers

Yahoo has 90% of it in the profile and stats section.
If you must have it all, your brokerage should provide it.

And FYI, you try to watch ALL that and the resulting headache will have you in migraine city. Pare it down 50% to the really significant issues, then use some common sense and watch CNBC or something.

2 playboy playmates recently beat professional fund managers using less data and intuition . . .
Think but don't over think (like that list suggests)

2007-01-31 16:03:04 · answer #1 · answered by kate 7 · 0 0

Because you are asking this type of question, it seems as though you are new to investing. Experience will tell you that knowing all of the items in your list will take forever and it will not tell you whether a stock is a good or poor buy. Many stocks have great fundamentals, but their share price is either stagnant or goes down. There are many influences on a company (e.g. insider trading, or undeclared options) that will cause a share price to fluctuate, while the numbers remain "positive". Learning how to beat the market requires education, not simply watch lists. I would suggest that you'll do far better to invest in an inexpensive index mutual fund from Vanguard or Fidelity, and then spend time learning about the market and how to invest. Your local library, Barnes & Noble, or Borders all have great books that will teach you.

2007-02-01 03:11:15 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I have been quite familiar with investopedia.com.
you got a chance to work with the real stock data and invest your virtual money.
Your performance is also measured in terms of ranks.
So it may work just good for you.

www.investopedia.com

2007-01-31 16:00:40 · answer #3 · answered by waamax 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers