finance-board.info15 Jun 2008 05:22 am

The promise of making a lot of money has been heard by many, and many have found out that it just is not as easy as they had heard. They lost money - sometimes a lot of it. They then turned away from the stock market and ended up totally disillusioned about it. The truth is, they may have been somewhat confused about it in the first place. They may have thought it would come to them just like it did to others - without knowing the why’s or the how’s. Here are some strategies that you can use in order to help you to avoid the common mistakes that others have made.

Get A Realistic View

By looking at the market with your eyes open, you can come to understand not only the profit possibilities, but also the possibility of losses. The truth is that the higher the possible gain there is, that it is always associated with the increased likelihood of loss. The safer investments always bring a lower level of profit, and the safest investments have attached to them the lowest levels of profit.

Understand The Market

One of the greatest benefits that you can have to help you avoid a lot of potential pitfalls in your investments is to understand the principles of investing. In other words, read all you can about the process, how to judge a good stock, etc. The more you know about it yourself, the wiser you will be able to invest your funds - and hopefully see a profit. You will also be able to develop a worthwhile investment strategy - both for the short term and for the long term.

Diversify

It is smart investing to place your available investment funds into a minimum of 6 different kinds of shares. Some suggest that you go as many as 20 in order to diversify safely. Spread your investments into different kinds of stock (sectors) that are not related. This way if one type of market does not do well, then the other ones should. This enables you to still make money from some of your investment.

It is usually a good idea to diversify into more than just the stock market - at least until you really understand what you are doing. The smart investor will take a portion of their investment money and put a percentage of it into secure investments like trust funds which are solid investments, and possibly also bonds, which are the most secure, but do provide less interest.

Seek Counsel From Professionals

Unless you have money to just throw away, it would be a real good idea to seek help from someone who understands the market better than you do. There are professionals out there, financial advisors, brokers, etc., that are more than willing to help you build a solid portfolio for your investments. Their expertise can spare you a lot of unnecessary loss, and get you on to the right track to some solid profit.

Make Your Investments For The Long Term

While there is different thinking about the markets and how to invest, the general idea is to make your investments for the long term. Experienced stock market experts tend not to watch the market everyday, but only check on it once a month and many of them only quarterly. Watching it everyday leads to a lot of anxiety - since the market normally fluctuates a lot from day to day. Overall, though, it generally moves upward.

Joe Kenny writes for the UK Loans Store offering loans for UK residents and offer more information on secured loans UK and other loan topics available on site.
Visit Today: http://www.ukpersonalloanstore.co.uk

Tags: Business, , , , , , , , , , , finance, invest, investor, market, money, price, profit, shares, stocks, trade
finance-board.info01 Apr 2008 08:37 am

The Christmas wrapping paper mountain keeps growing higher. Shining foil, patterned paper, bows large and small, ribbons of fiber and of fabric, torn cartons and Styrofoam packing shapes, are all stacking and spilling on one side of the living room. The children are shrieking with delight. They can not open the packages fast enough.

Suddenly the frenzy is over.

Christmas dinner or Christmas breakfast or a visit to the next house is on the menu. Hurry, hurry, hurry, the holiday so long awaited will pass so fast.

Toys are strewn everywhere. Several are already damaged.

A few were passionately hoped for. The rest are the product of worried parents, grandparents, friends and relations, who fled up and down the aisles, cramming shopping carts, asking themselves repeatedly, “Is it enough? Did I get them enough?”

——-

The pizza counter assistant from the local high school smiles at the customer as she rings up his charge. “That will be $14.05,” she says cheerfully. “Great,” says her customer. “Here’s fifteen dollars, and I’ll give you a nickel as well.” He watches in amazement as she begins to perspire in the air conditioning, struggling to figure out how much change she needs to give him. At last he gently leans over the counter. “The difference between $14.05 and $15.05 is one dollar, Miss. That’ll be just fine,” he whispers. He doesn’t want to embarrass her.

——

The young couple in the BMW dealership clearly wants the car. With the features they’ve chosen, the price tag will be $53,000. After the customer representative has done his paperwork, he pushes it across the desk to them.

“You just hold that car for us,” they tell him. “We’re going to refinance our condo and come back for it.” “Are you sure that’s a good idea?” asks the rep? He knows from his conversations and the paperwork that their joint income is less than the cost of the car…

——-

Alot is being reported in the general media today about how the richest society in the world is financially illiterate. “We know the price of everything and the value of nothing,” says Bruce Bradshaw, a financial advisor whose firm is headquartered in a wealthy lakes area in Southeast Wisconsin. Just look at these three little stories. Don’t you know a story just like one of these? The savings rate in this nation is at minus zero. Children who have so much often actually appreciate very little. What a sharp contrast that is to another story that a friend of mine told me recently.

She was reading women’s correspondence from the late 1800’s. A teenager was writing to her aunt thanking her for her Christmas gifts, which meant the world to her. “Thank you for the orange and the hair ribbons,” she wrote. “They made me so very happy and I will never, ever forget this Christmas and your generosity.”

“That young woman understood the value of the gifts given,” said Mr. Bradshaw. “It is my opinion that we adults MUST, MUST teach the children we love the values of a well lived lifevalues that carry no pricetag.”

Simone Nathan

Author of “Going for Gold after 50: An Illustrated Guide to High Probability Investing for The Plus Years”. Discover how to put the investing odds greatly in your favor at http://www.goldafter50.com

Personal, spiritual, financial, healthful life planning http://www.dreamcatcherprogram.com

Tags: finance, , , , price, savings, value

Close
E-mail It