1) Buy strong companies with good dividends. I own the world wrestling entertainment (WWE) and even if the stock never moves I get a guaranteed 6% return.
2) Focus on proven stocks that are "on sale". Some times good PROVEN companies price falls because of one bad quarterly earning. The truely evolved will buy up these stocks because more than likely they will go back up.This is how Warren Buffet became a billionaire.
2007-05-03 12:52:25
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Before you actually start investing in stocks, it is extremely essential to understand that, there is no fully effective strategy to invest in stock market that can always guarantee success; otherwise all investors would be a millionaire. You have to accept the fact that losses are also a part of stock market just how profit is. However, it is possible that by practicing several factors from different strategies, utilizing your instincts along with common sense you will be able to achieve success and keep your losses limited.
2016-03-31 23:56:32
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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In order of the "sureness"
1.) US. Government securities like T-bills, T-notes, and T-bonds. Very low returns, guaranteed.
2.) US Corporate Bonds (AAA rated). Low returns, not exactly guaranteed, but close enough that you can't really tell the difference.
...but neither of these two are stocks.
If you insist on investing in stocks, then you're willing to hold your investment for at least 10-years, then a good bet is to dollar-cost average an S&P 500 Index fund, like Fidelity's Spartan, or Vangaurd's. Both charge insanely low fees, and track the S&P 500, which has never been down over a 10-year period.
2007-05-05 16:09:32
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answer #3
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answered by Volleyball Socrates Jr. 3
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Read "How to Buy Stocks without a Broker" by Chuck Carlson. If you buy stocks that pay dividends, it will pay you to own them. If you use "Dollar-Cost Averaging" to buy them, you buy more when the price is lower, automatically, just by investing the same dollar amount every month. It really works. You can also investigate the "Dogs of the Dow" theory, which he writes about, and it's also on the Motley Fool website: www.fool.com.
2007-04-28 11:45:49
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answer #4
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answered by Katherine W 7
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Just guessing ( not " proven") I would say a couple of " balanced funds...and some stock in " staples" Procter, Johnson & Johnson, Kroger.... even if times get bad, people buy food and maybe band-aids !!
2007-04-28 11:02:07
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answer #5
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answered by jebediabartlett 6
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You must learn to read technical charts. Once you know that, you would good.
In the meantime, you might want to visit website and gain (maybe)
Indian Financial portal providing information on
- Which shares to buy
- When to buy shares
- When to exit shares
- Which IPO to subscribe and which to ignore
- Which NFO (New Mutual Fund) to enter
http://www.vjondalalstreet.com
Bus Naam hi kaafi hain ...
2007-05-06 09:33:11
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answer #6
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answered by VJonDalalStreet 2
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Yes. (25% Annually)
2007-04-29 09:04:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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