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Does Your Life Include a RIPE Plan?—Planning Tips for Retirement, Investing, Protection, and Estate Planning – Part 2 (Investing)
Does Your Life Include a RIPE Plan?—Planning Tips for Retirement, Investing, Protection, and Estate Planning – Part 2 (Investing) by: Janet L. Hall After reviewing your retirement plan, or lack of one, you might have had a huge eye opener to the...
Index Funds - Are they right for you?
Index Funds - Are they right for you? by Gabriel Nijmeh Indexing is an investment approach that seeks to match the investment returns of a stock or bond index. An investment manager tries to duplicate the target index by holding all the securities...
Quicken Investment Recordkeeping Tricks
Quicken provides powerful investment record-keeping tools for
individual investors. Unfortunately, once you step beyond
investments like stocks, bonds, and mutual funds, the mechanics
can get a little tricky. Here are some tips for handling...
Stock Trading with an Offshore Brokerage Account
With an IBC (International Business Corporation), trading
offshore can have many advantages. Your offshore brokerage
account can be under your IBC company name, which ensures
privacy while trading because your personal name is never
revealed....
The Big Lie: What Wall Street Does Not Want You to Know
Learn more at: www.tradetofreedom.com Trouble in Paradise Kenneth Lay, Andrew Fastow, and Jeffrey Skilling of Enron are the preeminent poster boys for corporate greed, but by no means are the trio unique. In the back alley game of “Fleece the...
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Thomas Edison and the Stock Market
Thomas Edison and the Stock Market Thomas Edison gave his definition of insanity: “Endless repeating of the same process, hoping for a different result.” We are now seeing the stock market head down again as it did in 2000. Brokers, mutual fund managers and financial planners hopefully will not be repeating their same errors that cost investors seven (7) trillion (with a T) dollars. Unfortunately they will be working with the same deficient knowledge as before. The financial brethren have been taught to invest by the Wall Street tribe that has proven to allow huge losses for the small investor. Small is considered less than a 7-figure account. Any customer with less than $100,000 does not show on the radar screen. The old saw that brokers tell their clients that they will watch their account is pure horse hockey. The average broker has 300 accounts and only those in the seven figure range get their attention. Wall Street tells brokers to buy and hold. This obvious prevarication has been told so many times that is has become conventional wisdom. Just about every broker and financial planner believes it. If you are to make money in the stock market you must learn a new way to invest. Tom said you can’t keep doing the same thing. And I’m sure you don’t want to go thru those terrible declines that happened five years ago. Did you have a stock or mutual fund that dropped from its high 40, 50, 60% or more? I hope not. The top 50 mutual funds crashed 42%. Each $10,000 in your portfolio became worth $5,800. You could have saved most of the $4,200 if your broker had
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recommended a trailing stop loss order. When you bought your stock or fund did you have an exit strategy? Most folks don’t. Edison was always trying different approaches and when they did not work he quit them and tried something new. That is what you must do when investing in the stock market. If your equity goes down it is not working for you so you sell it to find one that does work for you. There are times when nothing is going up and that is when you will have sold everything and stand aside with your funds in a money market account. It may not make much, but at least you won’t let the market steal your equity. You don’t need to be as brilliant as Tom Edison to find a good stock during a bull market, but during a bear market it takes a super genius. During a bear market even the best stocks go down and many do not recover, Bernard Baruch, one of the greatest traders of all times, said the secret to his success was that he got out too soon. That may seem very simple, but he had the greatest gift of all traders. He had an exit strategy. Don’t join the other inmates in the Wall Street sanatorium by continuing to hold your equities as the market goes down. Learn to do something different to protect your investments.
About the Author
Al Thomas' best selling book, "If It Doesn't Go Up, Don't Buy It!" has helped thousands of people make money and keep their profits with his simple 2-step method. Read the first chapter and receive his market letter for 3 months at www.mutualfundmagic.com and discover why he's the man that Wall Street does not want you to know. Copyright 2005
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