Stocks & Mutual Funds

Articles and Information about Stocks and Mutual Funds

NetFinancial | Institutions | Loans
Colleges and Universities | Search Engines

Evaluation II


As I said in Part I everyone in the insane asylum looks normal, but at least the doctors are sane. Unfortunately, in the insane asylum known as the stock market all the doctors (brokers) are also insane.

The doctors in the insane asylum went to medical school to learn how to treat the patients so the could get well. On Wall Street you go to the doctor (broker) who is supposed to help you become financially well, maybe wealthy. Almost none of these Wall Street experts ever learned their profession. They have all been taught the three great prescriptions that make no sense at all: Do Your Research, Buy and Hold and Dollar Cost Averaging. This is what the brokerage houses teach.

As I said previously research is worthless, as it will not tell you if a stock is going to go up. Buy and Hold is taught the wrong way. It is OK to Buy and Hold as long as the stock is going up, but not when it goes down. No broker is taught how to protect a customer's money.

When I was a floor trader I learned in a hurry not to hold on to something that was losing money. The very simple prescription for this is called a Stop Loss Order. Brokers hate them and will discourage you from entering them. Why? Because it means he will have to watch your account because if a stop order is not properly and timely executed he must pay it out of his pocket.

Brokerage houses do not teach brokers how to use this simple method to protect capital. The house does not want to become known that it will sell a company's stock when it turns weak. The brokerage company makes more in good will from the poor performing company than they do in commissions from you because if they ever encourage selling it means they will not get a chance to handle an Initial Public Offering (IPO) for that company. Suppose they did have a stop protection policy for customers and they then had an IPO that came out at $30 per share, but instead of going up it went down. The customers would not lose more than $3 or $4 per share because of their protective stops, but the house would then be stuck with all the unsold stock. It is OK for you to have this money-losing dog, but they sure don't want it in their inventory. You can see how logical this is, but you won't hear it from a broker. Stop orders are not insane.

The insane conventional wisdom that both brokers and customers have been taught cannot remain once it is exposed to truth.

You must take the initiative with the stocks you own to protect yourself from loss of capital. If your broker argues with you there is one solution - fire him and find a good broker who will protect your money. Just because he has learned an insane system doesn't mean you have to be nuts too.

Al Thomas' book, "If It Doesn't Go Up, Don't BuyIt!" has helped thousands of people make moneyand keep their profits with his simple 2-stepmethod. Read the first chapter athttp://www.mutualfundmagic.com and discover why he's the man that Wall Streetdoes not want you to know.

Copyright 2005

al@mutualfundstrategy.com; 1-888-345-7870


MORE RESOURCES:

Money Tip: ETFs stable in turbulent markets
Baxter Bulletin, AR - 38 minutes ago
Trading in exchange-traded funds has been stable and strong despite recent troubles in financial markets. Like mutual funds, ETFs are single investments ...


www.RaagVamdatt.com Opens Up Premium Advertisement Slots
PRLog.Org (press release), Romania - Jul 21, 2008
Therefore, the website can be a very good fit for products and services related to stocks, mutual funds, banks, credit cards, insurance, loans, real estate, ...


Brokerages try to reach out to NRIs and PIOs
Economic Times, India - Jul 19, 2008
Though data on NRI investments is hazy, preferred asset classes are stocks, mutual funds and property, experts say. According to RBI data, $3.9 bn of NRI ...


On the offence: Where to invest in a down market
Globe and Mail, Canada - Jul 19, 2008
Long term, well-chosen stocks, mutual funds and exchange-traded funds bought today should beat that return by a huge margin. For some guidance on where to ...


After IndyMac: How safe is your money?
Daily Home Online, AL - Jul 16, 2008
The FDIC also does not cover what it calls “non-deposit investments and insurance products,” such as stocks, mutual funds, life insurance policies and ...


Our View: Bulletin Remade: paper’s new look inspires passionate ...
Norwich Bulletin, CT - Jul 19, 2008
One of the major changes with the redesign was the elimination of the page in which we report stocks, mutual funds and commodities. ...


Here are a dozen ways to get a down payment
Seattle Post Intelligencer - Jul 4, 2008
Liquidate stocks, mutual funds, savings bonds or other investments. Take a loan from your 401(k) retirement plan and repay yourself with interest. ...


Technical Outlook: Consider This TIP
TheStreet.com - Jul 4, 2008
The key is to do your research and look for stocks, mutual funds or ETFs in the top-performing sectors of the market and then diversify your holdings among ...


Bond, mortgage insurers mixed after Russell move
Forbes, NY - Jun 30, 2008
That index is then broken down into 26 smaller indexes, including the widely watched Russell 1000 index of large-capitalization stocks. Mutual funds and ...


Financial intelligence makes you wealthy
Hindu, India - Jun 28, 2008
“It is not the real estate, stocks, mutual funds, businesses, or money that makes a person rich. It is information, knowledge, wisdom, and know-how, ...

Stocks-Mutual-Funds - Google News

Currency Trading | Investing | Leadership | Negoatiation | Real Estate | Stocks and Mutual Funds | Taxes
home | NetFinancial | Institutions | Loans | Colleges and Universities | site map
Search Engines | EZmatic | 0pops | GetSonic | TrafficFish | Health
© 2006