Monday, June 13, 2005


Don't Buy Worldcom! A Guide to Wise Bottom Fishing
Over the past few months, several investment professionals have brought up the topic of the down and out company of the day and whether to buy now as a speculation. Last year, K Mart was the big news, and everyone wanted to know whether this was a good stock play. Today the news is focused on WorldCom and its downfall. Thus, some people are pondering this stock for quick profit potential.

Definitions of Risk
You don't need to consult a bookmaker for evidence that the odds of a solid return from stocks have been in flux since September 11. As soon as trading resumed on September 17, both the Dow and the NASDAQ promptly shed about 10 percent of their values, and in the following weeks they saw heightened volatility. Although the major indices were again approaching their pre attack levels only a month later, it's quite clear that investors were still in the process of reevaluating the risks in their equity portfolios.

Online Investing&Stock&Share Trading: 4 Reasons Why Most Online Investors&Traders Go Broke
Most people are attracted to the idea of being in control of their financial future, but confused about how to start investing in the stock or share market, while avoiding costly mistakes. The surprising facts are that very few online investors actually make money long term.In this article John Atkinson, author of '10 Ways Not to Lose Your Home in the Stock Market' and 'The Atkinson Guppy Articles' shares four very valuable lessons that he's learnt the very hard way

Investment Attorneys and Garbage Stocks
How is it possible that trash Companies are posting less than expected results? Trash Companies are thought of by prudish investors as some of the safest stocks to own. Ask Warren in his Buffet of Essays on Corporate America. Companies which service the needs of the people tend to stay afloat longer and respond very little to economic down turn.

Big Buildings Can Mean Big Economic Disaster
AS BUILDERS BEGIN WORK ON THE FREEDOM TOWER in New York City, to be the world's tallest building, economist Mark Thornton offers a history based theory of the relation between super buildings and the economy. Thornton surveyed economic performance worldwide following the completion of each of the world's tallest skyscrapers, and suggests what these events foretell.

Seecrets on Investment: Tired of Making Huge Losses in the Stock Market � Part 2
Introduction to Stock Market Investing Part 2

Hot Stock Trader: How to Pick Momentum Stocks with Ease and Simplicity
Momentum stock trading can be extremely profitable when done correctly...

Laws and Efficiencies and Theories of Diminishing Returns
In aviation there is a hyperbolic curve with coefficients of drag that makes aircraft design nearly obsolete when dealing within the boundaries of the atmosphere with the relationships of time, speed and distance equations. Will a particular stock go up forever?

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