Friday 21 August 2009

Stock trading strategy for newbies


Well I should set up a Buffettsim's gallery with all of his comics and pictures and nude pictures, lol. I put his pictures before posts because it might not the right place to put hot girl's pictures that in fact I am more favorable with.
OK now is the stock trading strategies for newbies.
Many people asked me which instrument to trade with at first, most people tended to trade future because they can trade 24 hours and it seems more quickly and more easily to get money.
The fact is: most newbies have no experience to search the chance to buy or sold, think about it, if most newbies learn easily how to sold or sell at the right time, then most people would get money so easily, it's not a balance in this market because in fact most people loss their money other than gaining money.
So for newbies, the best strategy is to choose stocks other than the other instruments because stock trading will give you much time thinking and learning from the past experiences.

5 comments:

  1. We’re going to break down stock trading training for beginners so it doesn’t seem scary. One of the first things you need to do when you start out is to pick a good broker. A stock broker is going to be where you do all your business. Picking one that has large commissions and fees can be detrimental to a beginner.

    An important second step is going to be learning how to read a stock chart. The stock chart holds all of the clues to which direction the stock is going to move. Watch our ThinkOrSwim video on charts setup.

    Another great resource for learning to read a chart is stockcharts.com. They have a chart school for any questions that you might have. Charts can look like Greek when you’re starting out. The more you look at a chart, the more you’ll understand it and be able to predict trends.

    ReplyDelete
  2. We’re going to break down stock trading training for beginners so it doesn’t seem scary. One of the first things you need to do when you start out is to pick

    a good broker. A stock broker is going to be where you do all your business. Picking one that has large commissions and fees can be detrimental to a

    beginner.

    An important second step is going to be learning how to read a stock chart. The stock chart holds all of the clues to which direction the stock is going to

    move. Watch our ThinkOrSwim video on charts setup.

    Another great resource for learning to read a chart is stockcharts.com. They have a chart school for any questions that you might have. Charts can look like

    Greek when you’re starting out. The more you look at a chart, the more you’ll understand it and be able to predict trends.

    ReplyDelete
  3. StockTrader.com provides weekly stock market recaps, 100s of educational articles, and a Trade Journal tool. Our mission is to empower the independent investor.
    website: stocktrader.com/blog "

    ReplyDelete
  4. StockTrader.com provides weekly stock market recaps, 100s of educational articles, and a Trade Journal tool. Our mission is to empower the independent investor.
    website: stocktrader.com/blog "

    ReplyDelete
  5. StockTrader.com provides weekly stock market recaps, 100s of educational articles, and a Trade Journal tool. Our mission is to empower the independent investor.
    website: stocktrader.com/blog "

    ReplyDelete