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9 answers

It is never time to jump with both feet into the stock market. Getting into the stock market is something that should always be done slowly.

2007-08-30 14:17:12 · answer #1 · answered by StephenWeinstein 7 · 0 0

It is never the right time to jump in with both feet. Learn about the stock market first. Read and learn about technical analysis. When the time is right for a stock, then buy it. It is easier to loose money in the market than to have gains. The market is rigged to try to take your hard earned dollars. Be patient. Test your trading strategies. Learn how to sell when your investment decision is incorrect. Best of luck to you. Having luck is executing with a prepared mind.

2007-08-30 22:09:46 · answer #2 · answered by trader 4 · 0 0

Regardless of what the market's doing and what "experts" are saying, it's always a great time to get into the market. That said, you should invest slowly, over time. How slowly will depend on your specific situation. Vanguard allows you to invest as little as $100 per month in a mutual fund (which is where you should start-in mutual funds). Open an account, do your research, and make consistent periodic investments. Make sure you diversify according to your risk tolerance and investment horizon.

2007-08-30 22:14:35 · answer #3 · answered by jirocpa 3 · 0 0

Not unless you're hanging onto the fence. Investing in the stock market is a calculated thing, not a run hog wild. You need to investigate various stocks and see what's doing before you plunge into hot water. Get some expert advice and stick a toe in first. :-)

2007-08-30 21:18:47 · answer #4 · answered by magnolia 5 · 0 0

Ah, just this summer there was a young man in my state that went to a lake and dove in from a cliff--just as others were doing--but he hit a rock and died. The others, for the most part, knew of the rock and avoided it. Those that didn't were simply lucky.

Always know where you jump--and why.

2007-08-30 22:58:53 · answer #5 · answered by Rabbit 7 · 1 0

As long as you have atleast ten years to invest, now is always a good time. Never try to time the market.

2007-08-30 21:21:51 · answer #6 · answered by jeff410 7 · 1 0

Better to *jump* in with both feet than to *dive* in head first.

I would advise against going directly into the stock market. The late Malcolm Forbes used to tell this joke about guy, fresh out of college, who was hired as a stockbroker, and on the first day of work, there was a company outing at the yacht club. The head of the company walked him around, saying, "Now that is my yacht, and that is the yacht belonging to the head of research, and that yacht belongs to Jim the broker, and that yacht belongs to Joe the broker" etc., and after about ten minutes of this, he said, "You seem to have a puzzled look on your face. What are you thinking about?"

"I'm just wondering," the new broker said, "where are all the yachts of the *customers*"?

Statistically speaking, it's almost impossible to outguess the market. There are lots of mutual funds with professional stock pickers, people who make picking stocks their life's work, and you'd think they'd eventually get good at it, but it's pretty rare for stock pickers to do even as well as a monkey throwing darts at the stock market listings in the newspaper.

So they've developed index funds, funds where the underlying stocks are picked automatically by computer.

Warren Buffet stated in a February 1996 investment letter to his Berkshire Hathaway shareholders: “…the best way to own common stocks is through index funds….” In his 1997 letter he writes: “Let me add a few thoughts about your own investments. Most investors, both institutional and individual, will find that the best way to own common stocks is through an index fund that charges minimal fees. Those following this path are sure to beat the net results (after fees and expenses) delivered by the great majority of investment professionals.” In February 2003 he gave this advice to investors in his shareholder letter: “…those index funds that are very low cost (such as Vanguard’s) are investor friendly by definition and are the best selection for most of those who wish to own equities. And, his February 2004 letter states: “Over the [past] 35 years, American business has delivered terrific results. It should therefore have been easy for investors to earn juicy returns: All they had to do was piggyback corporate America in a diversified, low-expense way. An index fund that they never touched would have done the job. Instead many investors have had experiences ranging from mediocre to disastrous.”

So I'd recommend Vanguard, the papa of all index fund companies to you. They service customers well, and their management fees are very minimal, which means more money goes to you.

I'd recommend value funds. Buying a company in bankruptcy is risky. You shouldn't throw your life savings at a company that could be liquidated tomorrow, with nothing going to the shareholders. But value stocks are incredibly cheap. Consequently, buying a market basket of 1000 or 1500 stocks is one of the best moves on the street. Some of the companies will go pfffft. Most of them will recover modestly. A few of them will skyrocket. And because you're buying stocks that are incredibly cheap, your overall return reliably beats the market as a whole.

Small companies are bargains, too. The big mutual funds figure they can't bother with small companies, because it takes as much work to follow a little company, in which they can invest only a little, as to follow a big company, in which they can invest a lot. Because they refuse to buy the stocks of small companies, these are also cheap stocks.

But most of the job growth, which is to say economic growth, in America comes from small business. Small businesses take risks and sometimes they win big. Big businesses mostly buy small businesses, and invest in them, automating their production and getting rid of labor. There's more profit in developing the hula hoop, than in wringing the last few pennies out of producing it.

So the best investment tends to be small-cap value index funds.

If you're going to jump in with both feet, you still oughta investigate before you invest.

2007-08-30 21:35:39 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

jump in when the dow is at 11000 and definitely 2008. It is going to be a bloodbath right now.

2007-08-30 21:57:15 · answer #8 · answered by breastfed43 3 · 0 0

Yes. (With the help of a Portfolio Manager with over a decade of experience like myself)

2007-08-31 00:12:29 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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