-
Are there any online guides that can teach someone with no knowledge how to invest in stocks?
... these stocks? Best book guide ... Can someone teach me ... s there anyway you can make ... there math courses in university that teach you how ... teach me how to invest in ...
... eager to learn how to invest in stocks ... site as a comprehensive guide to trading stocks specifically for beginners. I can ... and misleading sites out there, make sure any ...
... want to increase my knowledge about the stock market and invest? Can I ... Can someone suggest a book that will teach me what company I ... students see that there's no such ...
The old adage, “Those who can’t do, teach.” is a ... There’s no one answer to the question of “how to ... How to Invest in Stocks; How to Make Money Blogging
Good article, but there’s a lot of things they don’t teach ... Its not guided in any way. There’s no ... that’s a lot of knowledge to learn! I didn’t know there’s ...
Attitude is no substitute for competence, and there's a ... system, or teach me how to crack? A: No. Anyone who can ... How can I get the password for someone else's account?
It is no hidden knowledge that getting a loan to finance your ... You will need someone to guide you as you start these ... ....And there's even more, THE FIRST 60 PEOPLE TO ...
You can go for online selling on eBay or any good auction or public sale. There are many ... comprehensive guide that will teach ... and networking knowledge. is there any ...
... You Can Be Using OTHER PEOPLE'S MONEY Just for the Asking! WARNING: No Matter What Any Real ... NO CREDIT! There's a secret to getting ANY property ... HOW TO INVEST FROM SOMEONE ...
This website is proudly powered by Hirby | Yellow Pages
torqueconverter 5:07 pm on August 11, 2010
Start by learning HOW to invest, determining WHAT to buy through Fundamental Analysis and determining WHEN to buy through Technical Analysis.
Start with Investors.com, it’s William O’Neil’s online version of Investors Business Daily. The How To Invest section is the best place to start learning the importance of Fundamentals and the basics of Technical Analysis. The site has the IBD 100, a cross index list of the market leaders, the Stock Checkup, a great tool for checking fundamentals on any stock, and articles and analysis of stocks and general market conditions. They also run various screens every day which in addition to the other lists, (IBD100, New America, stocks under $10, CANSLIM select, ect) are very helpful for finding investment ideas with solid Fundementals that are ready to move. The CANSLIM method alone is a very successful and popular trading system, but I prefer to use a combination of Fund & Tech Analysis, rather that just the rating system alone. This site is also extremely helpful in finding the leading industries and sectors as well as the leaders within those industries.
Yahoo Stock Quotes have excellent Company Profiles, Key Statistics, Current Headlines, etc. for deeper fundamental study and due dilligence.
From there you can move on to more detailed study of Technical Analysis.
Start with StockCharts.com, they have an excellent free Chart School which helpfully explains various chart patterns and Technical Indicators and overlays. Pay particular attention to the Chart Patterns section, and make sure you learn about Zig Zag patterns, Bollinger Bands, Moving Average, Volume, RSI, the MACD (Mac-D), The Williams %er, Stochastics, and the Chaikin Money Flow. Sounds complicated, but when you start chart reading you’ll want about a half a dozen or so of these overlays and indicators. I personally rely heavily on the ZIG-ZAG, MACD, Chaikin Money Flow, Volume, Moving Average and RSI.
StockTA.com is also an excellent Technical Analysis site, with charted Fibonacci resistance and support lines and will tell you if the stock is bullish or bearish in the short, medium and long run. The site also has an extensive Candle Pattern Glossary and a fantastic technical screener.
The above sites do have premium services, but all the services I mentioned are free. After you’ve absorbed some of the Technical information, do some reading on Fibonacci numbers and Elliot Wave theory, there are good links in the "School" section of StockTA.com. I’ve been using Elliot Wave and Fibonacci’s to help refine my in and out points. StockCharts.com’s "ZigZag" overlay helps me plot and count the waves and that helps determine where I am in the overall pattern.
So basically I’ll find interesting stocks through the screens on Investors.com or StockTA.com, run them through the Stock Checkup at Investors.com, if they measure up I’ll run them through the Analyisis & Fib Analysis at StockTA.com and do an extensive chart study, examining the 2 yr, 1 yr, 6 mth, 3 mth, 1 mth & 5 day. I’ll also do my due dilligence, studying the profile, key statistics, headlines, etc. through Yahoo Finance and web searches. If it all measures up and the stock is in a base or in a pull back and it’s starting a wave 1 or wave 3, it’s time to buy.
Remember, always protect your downside with a stop loss or a trailing stop loss. Once you have absorbed a few of the things I’ve mentioned, the fog will begin to lift and you’ll start seeing which stocks should be bought or sold and you’ll be able to do your own analysis on any stock.
If it’s all too daunting or confusing, stick with it, it takes time to absorb. Start by paper trading. Yahoo Finance lets you track portfolios for free, try picking a couple stocks and see how they do. Be realistic with your buy and sell prices if you paper trade, seeing for example if you can actually get in at the price you want during intraday trading. If Mutual Funds are more to your liking, the same principles mentioned above can be applied to those as well.
Good luck, hope it helps.
KiNGLATiNO 5:07 pm on August 11, 2010
You shouldnt invest in stocks until you have your finances in control. I like Suze Orman, and Money Magazine. Kiplinger is good too
http://www.suzeorman.com (shes also on yahoo finances)
http://money.cnn.com/magazines/moneymag/
http://www.kiplinger.com
languagelover 5:07 pm on August 11, 2010
Yes. Yahoo.com/finance is good, but I would reccomend About.com as a starting place.
They are great. They have newsletters you can sign up for and their guides are all very good.
Also just use the search engine Google, it will give you a bunch of answers.