- Wanted Advice -
Q: I am new to stock and have an interest in Net Stocks. Which internet stocks should I be taking a look at?
A:
How can one predict what may happen in the market?
Some pros seem to be very good at this. What can I
read to gain a bit of knowledge. Or should I just keep
viewing the market and see how the stock go up and
down?
Interesting. Since you are so well versed in stock market facts,
mind telling us the specific sources conducting the stud
you to logically reach that conclusion?
There should be quite a few citations at your fingertips since you
seem so convinced in your conclusions.
Don't forget all the specific qualifying and quantifying data.
We'll be waiting for your convincing scientific information.
Can you give me some URLs to look at?
I would like to get a regular subscription
to a source that offers me the same
advice and reading as you seem to be
doing. Do you trade for a living?
Nothing, I suppose will give me
an investment education faster then
putting someof my own money on the line,
but is there such a thing as simulated trading?
I read that this is a cheaper alternative to
learning the ropes.
Is there investment games that might offer
cash prizes? I would like to find sites that
offer users to practice long-term investment
strategies. Most sites I hear delete accounts
and participants have to start off from scratch.
Are there sites which will let users establish
and track virtual accounts with out wiping them
clean every month?
When did you start trading in stocks. How much did you invest?
How long did it take for you to see a return?
I would like to hear other opinions related to the Y2K Fears.
What companies do you think will take the biggest hits.
Maybe this would be the time to purchase the stock.
How easy is it to sell your stock when you see it going down.
How fast in the turn over.
That is not quite what they say. They say that it is almost impossible
to do a better jobs of picking stocks than the average of the picks
made by the other pros (since this is what the index measures).
By ignoring the factors that those pros look for (profit levels,
growth protential, management ability) it is quite easy to do
far worse than than the index.
Not quite. The stocks in the indexes are not given by god. The index
reflects the common picks made in the market, and most of that is
trading by pros. I.e. the index is reflecting the past behaviour of
the stock pickers.
