Welcome

Often when people talk about trading and investing, they think of putting money into a company stock and holding it for a long time until they realize a significant gain. From this view, put simply, investing is to "buy and hold." In reality, people also use the term "invest" to describe mid-term and long-term stock acquisition. Mid and long-term investors will study stock fundamentals such as a company's quarterly earnings report, a company's relative strength in its industry sector, new product lines, technological innovation, or new management teams or strategies. They also look at stock charts and use basic technical analysis combined with overall stock market timing to determine an entry point. Then, having done all this, they may sit back without worrying too much about short-term market fluctuation, secure in their assessment of company performance prospects and in the reliability of their own research conclusions.

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  • Day Trading
    • Day trading can be extremely risky.
    • Customers should be prepared to lose all of the funds that they use for day trading.
    • They should not fund their day trading activities with retirement savings, student loans, second mortgages, emergency funds, funds set aside for purposes such as education or home ownership, or funds required for current income

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Investing Basics

1. Over the long term, stocks have historically outperformed all other investments.

From 1926 to 2001, the stock market returned an average annual 10.7 percent gain. The next best performing asset class, bonds, returned 5.3 percent.

2. Over the short term, stocks can be hazardous to your financial health.

If you thought the Dow's 554-point drop on Oct. 28, 1997 was rough, consider the 508-point drop 10 years earlier, on Oct. 19, 1987. The 1997 decline was a mere 7.2 percent, while the 1987 crash -- the worst one-day drop in stock market history -- chopped 22.6 percent off the value of stocks. More recently, the shocks have been prolonged and painful: If you had invested in a Nasdaq index fund around the time of the market's peak in March 2000, you would have lost three-fourths of your money over the next three years.

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Retirement

According to a survey by the American Savings Education Council (ASEC), more than half of all workers anticipate they'll need less than 70 percent of their pre-retirement income during their golden years – an estimate that's unrealistic for even the most disciplined budgeters.

"People often wrongly assume that their expenses are going to come down when they retire, but in fact they often go up," said Don Blandin, ASEC's president. "Depending on how long you live, the kinds of medical problems you have and the kind of lifestyle you want, you may need 120 percent of your current income during retirement."

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Stocks and Bonds

Onto the Stock and Bonds Page

Mutual Funds

Onto the Mutual Funds Page

 
   

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